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In this episode, Jenny Han, creator and showrunner of 'The Summer I Turned Pretty,' pulls back the curtain on how the series was built with patience, emotional confidence, and a deep trust in the audience. She talks about writing “lean,” letting quiet moments breathe, and resisting the urge to chase shock in favor of something more lasting. The result is a show that unfolds gently, rewarding viewers who linger, notice, and return—one that believes the emotional payoff is worth the wait.Han also reflects on memory as the heartbeat of the series: how nostalgia, warmth, and realism shape the tone, making the show feel less like a story being told and more like one being remembered. She explains how seemingly small conversations and fleeting moments were planted early, designed to echo years later, and why those delayed resonances often hit the hardest. It’s a thoughtful, whimsical look at storytelling that values feeling over flash—and why *The Summer I Turned Pretty* stays with people long after the episode ends.Listen to the podcast: https://anchor.fm/screenplayedFollow the Kinnane Brothers:www.instagram.com/kinnanebrothers/www.twitter.com/kinnanebrothers/Follow Screenplayed:Instagram: http://bit.ly/34oQKLGTwitter: https://bit.ly/3p5qnEyFacebook: https://bit.ly/2KhPbKTWebsite: www.screenplayed.com
By Screenplayed5
2727 ratings
In this episode, Jenny Han, creator and showrunner of 'The Summer I Turned Pretty,' pulls back the curtain on how the series was built with patience, emotional confidence, and a deep trust in the audience. She talks about writing “lean,” letting quiet moments breathe, and resisting the urge to chase shock in favor of something more lasting. The result is a show that unfolds gently, rewarding viewers who linger, notice, and return—one that believes the emotional payoff is worth the wait.Han also reflects on memory as the heartbeat of the series: how nostalgia, warmth, and realism shape the tone, making the show feel less like a story being told and more like one being remembered. She explains how seemingly small conversations and fleeting moments were planted early, designed to echo years later, and why those delayed resonances often hit the hardest. It’s a thoughtful, whimsical look at storytelling that values feeling over flash—and why *The Summer I Turned Pretty* stays with people long after the episode ends.Listen to the podcast: https://anchor.fm/screenplayedFollow the Kinnane Brothers:www.instagram.com/kinnanebrothers/www.twitter.com/kinnanebrothers/Follow Screenplayed:Instagram: http://bit.ly/34oQKLGTwitter: https://bit.ly/3p5qnEyFacebook: https://bit.ly/2KhPbKTWebsite: www.screenplayed.com