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Showing posts with the label movie pitch guide

India Upcoming Cricket Matches 2025 | Test Series, Asia Cup, and More

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India’s Upcoming Cricket Matches: How I Plan My Life Around the Men in Blue If I miss anything, it is an Indian cricket match. My calendar is not booked with meetings and birthdays—it's booked with fixtures, toss times, and start times. Whether it's a nail-biting Test or a heart-stopping T20, I've been guilty of missing weddings (yes, even family weddings) just to catch up on the Men in Blue from my drawing room. It may appear fanatical to others. But to me, the existence of cricket in India is more than entertainment; it is rhythm and tradition, and frankly, one of the few things that maintain my mental well-being in times of crisis. So when the new schedule comes out, I am hooked immediately. So if you are where I am standing—or at least a die-hard fan wanting to be in the know—here is the lowdown on India's future games, the future test series, and 2025. The Significance of the Schedule to Me The 2003 World Cup is etched in my memory. I was ten years old when India l...

"Mastering the Art of Pitching a Screenplay You Haven’t Written Yet"

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  H ow I Learned the Hard Way: The Best Way to Pitch a Movie Idea (Even If You Haven’t Written It Yet) The Panic of Pitching Something That Barely Exists Let me start by telling you something real: the first time I tried to pitch a movie idea I hadn’t written yet, I felt like a complete fraud. I mean, who was I kidding? I had no polished script, no fancy logline, just a messy notebook full of half-formed thoughts and dreams that only made sense to me. Still, I showed up, sweaty palms and all, to pitch an unwritten idea because I truly believed in it. Guess what? I crashed and burned. But looking back, I see now—it wasn’t because my idea was bad. It was because I didn’t know how to pitch something that wasn't fully born yet. If you’re here wondering "How the heck do I pitch a movie idea that only exists in my brain?" — trust me, I’ve been there. And I’m about to tell you everything I learned the painful (and eventually successful) way. Step One: Believe in Your Idea Like ...