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True, but totally irrelevant to your behavior, right? And, no, I don't mind Laurel continuing to be reminded of her behavior here, either. Ownership doesn't require maturity.
But youre the official troll.

A question about radio plays: Were listeners reacting more to the characters as they were written, or to the performances as voiced? Would the characters have been as memorable and involving if performed differently?
Does a great story with unconvincing characters win? Or can convincing, engaging characters carry the day?
You can craft a story almost totally out of character, just by letting their needs and drives cause them to bounce off each other.
lol Bramble, if you don't write it, I may steal it,ObNeilGaiman: "He talks about stories. My brother. Let me tell you the plot of every one of his damned stories. Somebody wanted something. That’s the story. Mostly they get it, too."
It's how most of human history gets made. That's a pretty interesting plot, albeit not a tidy one.
One device that can be interesting is to write about two characters who are driven by the same need but handle it in different ways. The gay kid who satisfies their need for acceptance by running away to SF to find a community that welcomes them, vs the one who goes deep into the closet for mainstream acceptance. (And then they meet at the high-school reunion ten years later, and... hmm, maybe I should write that one.)
Golden, you are wasting your time arguing with jbj, he loves to get people rolling, but actually cares about nothing but his own feeble ramblings.
I Besides, there's no such thing as a plot twist anymore; there's a widely-repeated theory that every original story has already been told.
One device that can be interesting is to write about two characters who are driven by the same need but handle it in different ways. The gay kid who satisfies their need for acceptance by running away to SF to find a community that welcomes them, vs the one who goes deep into the closet for mainstream acceptance. (And then they meet at the high-school reunion ten years later, and... hmm, maybe I should write that one.)

^^^^^^A fag who cant have me or stay on task in a thread.
You always go to name calling because you have nothing else. Par for the course.
Please don't feed the troll guys. Ignore is your best friend.
lol Bramble, if you don't write it, I may steal it,
I think I have already--which adds fuel to the "nothing new under the sun" argument.
Not a reason not to write it again, though. Inevitably another writer would give it a different spin or two.
Let the characters do their own plotting. I (as author) have better things to work on.
The other way to go is to take an archetype that has been used so much that it's become completely flat and worn out and breathe life and personality back into it. Not quiet a reconstruction trope, as it doesn't need to be deconstructed first.I enjoy characters who are not archetypes, but those are incredibly hard to find/write. How do you make a character behave in an unpredictable manner in an unusual set of circumstances and still be sympathetic? I struggle with that currently.
The other way to go is to take an archetype that has been used so much that it's become completely flat and worn out and breathe life and personality back into it. Not quiet a reconstruction trope, as it doesn't need to be deconstructed first.
If you have problems avoiding archetypes, use them; revive, deconstruct, reconstruct, or subvert them. Sometimes it takes a little psychology to put together a good character that still fits neatly within the archetype, but it can be worth it. I sometimes like taking often cliché character types that are used so much, that people have stopped thinking about why they act the way they do and focus on that 'why' until it goes from trampled 2d to vivid 3d.
Taking an overly perfect type, and turning it into someone struggling with their own self image is often an easy way to do that. You have a lot of room to build a full personality with flaws, desires, quirks, and self-contradictions because what you're starting with is their self-image, who they're trying to be, and/or who they want others to see them as.
Almost any character archetype can become a non-static, 3-d character if you ask, "Why?" enough times. Taking a couple archetypes, usually very different ones, and trying to mix them into one character can give really interesting results too!