![]() Pointing out artistic license is not bad-mouthing a work. Someone listing an event of artistic license does not mean the work or use of this trope was bad. When reading about artistic license on a page, keep in mind that Tropes Are Tools. It will allow violations of External Consistency, and sometimes Genre Consistency, but usually not Internal Consistency. It also doesn't excuse Falsely Advertised Accuracy. This cannot be used to excuse Character Derailment or Contrived Stupidity Tropes. People still expect characters to be consistent. The license also doesn't allow every kind of inaccuracy. Another major downside is that this trope is often used negatively in an Author Tract, usually to construct a Straw Character or deliver a straw argument in favor of, or against, something. There isn't a complete consensus, of course, about which stories are on the right or wrong side of Sturgeon's Law. Not on purpose for the sake of the story but simply getting their facts objectively wrong, which is a flaw in the story. This is where the second type comes in the writers making the mistakes A bad story will often look worse for its inaccuracies. ![]() For the license to work, the story has to be good. These are changes to ensure Emotional Torque. If things have to be sped up to stay interesting, they will be. Truth isn't." If some things have to be fudged for the sake of a good story, then they will be fudged. note It's actually part of a longer quote by Mark Twain the full quote is, "Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Besides, whoever first said "truth is stranger than fiction" didn't know what they were talking about. It's about putting the story first - after all, the most important thing in fiction is telling a good story. In some cases, the research couldn't be done because information was lacking, so the artist made an educated guess. Sometimes, it's because it's the way it's always been done in show business, and, even if they themselves know the truth, the audience still wouldn't believe it otherwise. Often they know that what they are writing is off, and wrote it anyway. ![]() It's easy to assume that the writer didn't bother with research. ![]() The history is wrong, or the science is off, or something else. One, the writer is aware that some parts of the show are inaccurate. In a nutshell, there are two forms of this trope. McNinja Ch 14, p 17 Alt TextĬreators are allowed to be inaccurate if the inaccuracy serves the story better than accuracy would. ![]()
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