In honor of Madi, dailyblacksails brings you Madi Appreciation Week. Starting March 19th – 25th lets show our love and never forget this amazing character.
Monday – Favorite Scene
Tuesday – Most Memorable/Favorite Quote
Wednesday – Favorite Relationship
Thursday – Hair/Outfit/Anything Appreciation
Friday – Most Empowering Moment
Saturday – Favorite Episode or Season
Sunday – Free Choice
You can participate however you want, but please do not use someone else’s work.
Please tag posts with #madiaw so that I can find your work. If you have any questions please ask.
i cant believe its daylight savings time and i havent seen the “hello its me your cousin oskaar from iceland” video on my dash yet you are all slackers
i guess i have to do all the work around here dont i
when rogers unexpectedly mentions thomas to james and you think ‘that’s it, that’s the one time gay icon captain flint cuts a bicth’s tongue out’ but then he just looks sad and like someone he shouldn’t be in that moment
Someone is sad????? I want to help oh gosh I hope she feels better. Here, take my attempt at these two and maybe it can add some fluff and sweetness into things. Also, I am going to have to look for more with these two that is an interesting dynamic to consider.
Weddings are, in most cases, joyful affairs. They are also long and make your feet hurt from dancing and standing and walking from the buffet table to your seat and back to the buffet table.
As the happy couple dance, their foreheads pressed together (and Madi is sure they’re both crying; Thomas cries at every wedding no matter who’s it is, and James just cries when Thomas cries) she nibbles on a cracker and sways to the soft music she’s never heard before. The service was beautiful and the reception was just as beautiful if more so because of the laughter and joy it brought.
“They’re going to be doing that all night, aren’t they?” A gruff voice says from the chair next to her.
She hums in agreement and turns, seeing a long haired man with sharp features sitting in a chair completely the wrong way. He looks far too comfortable in that position for her to say anything so she looks back at the happy couple (currently rubbing their noses together – and how is it possible to be that in love?).
“If they weren’t such good people I’d be making gagging noises,” the man continues and Madi can’t help the laugh that tumbles from her lips.
“You know them well?” She asks, curious about this sharp white man and his ridiculously tight shirt open far too wide to be proper.
He nods and gestures to the grooms with a tilt of his head. There’s a light jingle as beads knock together somewhere in his dark mane. “James and I are related on paper – his father knew my uncle before he died, took me in when we were kids. We hated each other on sight but…. well, thick as thieves now. You?”
She took a moment to take in the words, imaging young James and this man tussling on the expensive hardwood floor of some London townhouse. Somehow it didn’t fit.
“I work with Thomas teaching Politics, though I focus more on post colonial Africa and the impact of abolition on cultural interactions than Left Wing and Right Wing.”
He blinks and nods once, his striking eyes squinting as he takes in the words. “I’m a personal trainer with a criminal record. No wonder we haven’t met.”
It shocks another laugh out of her and the smile it brings to his lips is wolfish but more than a little attractive. “We don’t exactly run in the same circles,” she says with a quirk of her lips.
His smile becomes a grin and he holds out his hand. “I’m Charles; Charles Vane.”
“Madi Scott;” she takes his hand and holds back the gasp as he raises the hand to his mouth and kisses the back delicately. His lips are surprisingly soft, his breath warm.
Her hand is warm when he releases it and their attention drifts back to the dance floor where more people are starting to dance.
“Wanna dance?” Charles asks suddenly, his long legs moving impossibly to extricate him from the chair. She shocks herself by standing and moving out to the dance floor, turning to raise an eyebrow when he doesn’t catch up fast enough.
They spend the next two hours dancing, talking, losing themselves in one another’s company. Madi doesn’t feel all that surprised when he slips his number scrawled hastily onto a stray name tag into her hand at dawn.
She calls him a few days later and asks him on a date. He says yes.
1. Favorite place to write.
2. Favorite part of writing.
3. Least favorite part of writing.
4. Do you have writing habits or rituals?
5. Books or authors that influenced your style the most.
6. Favorite character you ever created.
7. Favorite author.
8. Favorite trope to write.
9. Least favorite trope to write.
10. Pick a writer to co-write a book with and tell us what you’d write about.
11. Describe your writing process from scratch to finish.
12. How do you deal with self-doubts?
13. How do you deal with writers block?
14. What’s the most research you ever put into a book?
15. Where does your inspiration come from?
16. Where do you take your motivation from?
17. On avarage, how much writing do you get done in a day?
18. What’s your revision or rewriting process like?
19. First line of a WIP you’re working on.
20. Post a snippet of a WIP you’re working on.
21. Post the last sentence you wrote in one of your WIP’s.
22. How many drafts do you need until you’re satisfied and a project is ultimately done for you?
23. Single or multi POV, and why?
24. Poetry or prose, and why?
25. Linear or non-linear, and why?
26. Standalone or series, and why?
27. Do you share rough drafts or do you wait until it’s all polished? 28. And who do you share them with?
29. Who do you write for?
30. Favorite line you’ve ever written.
31. Hardest character to write.
32. Easiest character to write.
33. Do you listen to music when you’re writing?
34. Handwritten notes or typed notes?
35. Tell some backstory details about one of your characters in your story ________.
36. A spoiler for story _________.
37. Most inspirational quote you’ve ever read or heard that’s still important to you.
38. Have you shared your outline of your story ________ with someone? If so, what did they think of it?
39. Do you base your characters of real people or not? If so, tell us about one.
40. Original Fiction or Fanfiction, and why?
41. How many stories do you work on at one time?
42. How do you figure out your characters looks, personality, etc.
43. Are you an avid reader?
44. Best piece of feedback you’ve ever gotten.
45. Worst piece of feedback you’ve ever gotten.
46. What would your story _______ look like as a tv show or movie?
47. Do you start with characters or plot when working on a new story?
48. Favorite genre to write in.
49. What do you find the hardest to write in a story, the beginning, the middle or the end?
50. Weirdest story idea you’ve ever had.
51. Describe the aesthetic of your story _______ in 5 sentences or words.
52. How did writing change you?
53. What does writing mean to you?
54. Any writing advice you want to share?
One of my favorite kinds of redemption arc is the one where the villain is like “only i get to beat you” to the hero and grudgingly helps them fight an even worse villain, but then over time it gradually devolves into “of course i have make sure you get enough sleep and eat breakfast. I cant have you collapsing when we’re fighting” and keeps it up as a very poor villainous excuse for watching out for their new hero friend who they wont admit theyre fond of and wouldnt ever actually hurt now