Let’s be honest: many of us had a "secret folder." In the age of FLV, sharing your indexed playlist was an intimate act. You weren’t just sending links; you were exposing your emotional architecture.
Index relationships here refer to how one link leads to another, forming a narrative pathway. The romantic storyline is the user’s own relationship, mapped onto the files they collect.
Let’s say you’re tracking “Dancing in the Dark,” a 10-part FLV series between Characters C & D. index of flv sex link
| Part | Link to Next | Romance Beat | Notes | |------|------------------------|----------------------------------|-------------------------------------------| | 1 | Part 2 (description) | Strangers, accidental meeting | No romance yet, but mutual glance at 2:13 | | 2 | Part 3 (end card) | Denial of feelings | “I don’t even like them” – blatant lie | | 3 | Part 4 (pinned comment)| First indirect confession (song) | Lyrics say “I need you” – C looks away | | 4 | Deleted scene “Rain” | Almost-kiss, interrupted | Deleted scene is CANON per creator tweet | | 5 | Part 6 + “Alternate 5” | Fight and breakup (temporary) | Alternate 5 is a dream sequence |
Now you never have to re-watch all 10 parts to remember where the first almost-kiss lives. Let’s be honest: many of us had a "secret folder
FLV creators often build cinematic universes across multiple videos using three main link types:
Your index needs to capture all three.
Quick Tip: Start a simple document with three columns: Video Title | Links To | Romantic Arc Type.