Part 2/6:
The speaker highlights a common, yet critical, issue: reliance on internal monologues or voice-overs can serve as an easy way out for writers who haven't fully developed their characters or plots. When viewers are told explicitly what a character is thinking, it often indicates that the scene isn't communicating visually or through action effectively. Rather than showing us, the audience is simply told—we're given exposition in an oversimplified manner, which can feel amateurish or lazy.