why a story didn't perform well

I've written over 300 stories here.

Truth is, every story is a roll of the dice. Some are just riskier than others.

You've got the think like a buisness-person. What does the audience want?
And this is advice I cheerfully ignore, because I'm not really in the business of finding out what an audience wants. I don't care what it wants. I only care about what I want to write, and want to tell. Sure, I like it if other people like it, too. But as for ways of keeping score, like author ratings or monetary gain, they don't interest me. If I were writing this shit for a living, I would be intensely interested in trying to figure out what readers want, and pandering to them in hopes that they would give me money. But this is a free site, and I like it that way.
 
The stunt people on that film look like they earned every nickel.
Movies about moviemaking are kind of "meta," if that is the right word to use. Here is a movie called Waterloo inside another one called The Day of the Locust (it's supposed to be the late 1930's). The novel by Nathanael West has the set-collapse scene. However, West could create it without using stunt people or anything else beyond his typewriter.
 
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