
IM YourOnlyOne:
The moral lesson of this story, which for some reason many missed, is:
If you think you can do better with the story and ending, write and produce it yourself.
Who knows? You might get your own isekai experience and do end up writing and producing a better version. 😉
Remember, the entire premise of the story is the FL attacked the writer and said nasty and rude words, so the author challenged her to do it herself.
Unfortunately for her, she did not learn her lesson and ended up in a situation where she would have died.
The author, pitying his nasty and rude audience, gave her one last challenge: change the last few chapters by only writing three sentences.
She wasted an entire day thinking of what to write. And the only thing she can come up with to save herself was introduce a ridiculous bee out-of-nowhere.
Yeah, the FL had her first and last taste of writing her own story and trying to salvage it because she assumed she can do better than the author. The very thing she was complaining about saved her: ridiculous plot twist, a bee. 🤣🤣
The authors played it well. They sent a strong message to readers and audiences who has the guts to say nasty and rude words, but when they're told to do it themselves, they hide under "we're entitled to leave a feedback" and attack the writers further just because they defended themselves.
Quite frankly, this is true. Authors and writers from all over the world and throughout history have enough of readers and audiences who think they can do better. Some of them made a stand, some kept quiet, some simply quit because of supposedly "fans" and disguised "constructive" criticisms. This story is them subtly telling audiences and reader, "if you think you can do better, go write and produce your own story".
Real constructive criticism are welcome. But fake "constructive" feedback are not. And obviously, simply saying "worse writing in history" or "stupid ending" without any resolution or suggestion are not criticism, they're destructive attacks that can demoralize authors and writers, and potentially lose their jobs too. It's not easy to get published, it's much harder in TV and film productions.