{"type":"video","version":"1.0","html":"<iframe src=\"https://www.loom.com/embed/84f30ee29fab4fbd846d2718bde340a9\" frameborder=\"0\" width=\"1920\" height=\"1440\" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>","height":1440,"width":1920,"provider_name":"Loom","provider_url":"https://www.loom.com","thumbnail_height":1440,"thumbnail_width":1920,"thumbnail_url":"https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/84f30ee29fab4fbd846d2718bde340a9-7adf9c2f839b8196.gif","duration":491.76,"title":"Scene Purpose Beats Cinematic Looks","description":"This Loom explains the key difference between visually impressive video scenes and stories people actually remember: scene purpose. It argues that scenes must earn their place by driving purpose, goal, conflict, and emotional change rather than relying on cool visuals, especially in AI filmmaking where random moments can be tempting. The presenter emphasizes asking why the scene exists and notes a scene is weak if nothing becomes harder, the character mainly waits, or removing the scene changes nothing. It then demonstrates how to transform a weak gardener hedge maze idea into an emotional journey through escalating pressure and an eventual symbol shift from failure to possibility."}