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  • Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    I’ll do my best. Thanks for the help though. I really appreciate it.

    Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    I am not using a plugin for this effect, but I am using a theme. I certainly hope it’s not the theme that’s causing this restrictions… I will try a default theme though.

    Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    My goal is to have two elements on the page. An image, and text. I would further like all the text formatted to the right of the image. Here’s an example of how I want it to look.

    The problem is that I can only get the first bit of my text to be to the side of the image. after that, the rest of the text jumps to the below the image, which is how my page looks now. Link to my page.

    So all that text below my picture, I want to the side of the picture just like the first line of text is.

    Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    Also, for what it’s worth, if I delete the space between the lines, so one sits right under the other, the formatting is fine. Example:

    “blah blah blah
    blah blah blah”
    ^^works fine

    “blah blah blah

    blah blah blah”
    ^^doesn’t work, but it how I want it to look.

    Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    I had originally typed the text in the wordpress “new page” editor, so there was no copy and paste involved.

    I just did the test post though, with the “save drafts” where you suggested, but alas it’s the same result. Could the issue have anything to do with using a jpeg? I can convert to png…

    Thread Starter UnapologeticEntertainment

    (@unapologeticentertainment)

    I didn’t want it to come to this, but I have to play the “newb” card. When I click the text view, I get this:

    <img class="alignright  wp-image-355" alt="0053_5x7 (1)" src="http://unapologeticentertainment.com/wp-content/uploads/0053_5x7-1.jpg" width="364" height="546" />We’ve become too sensitive. The other day I overheard some people discussing  poverty. Simple enough, right? The conversation went like this:
    
    Person #1 – “…and that’s why people of a ‘lower socio-economic status’ need to-”
    
    Person #2 – “Um, I actually find the term ‘lower socio-economic status’ to be offensive, because it implies that those people are of a <em>lower</em> quality than others. I would prefer if we referred to them as ‘working class.’”
    
    Person #3 – “Actually, I find the term ‘working class’ to be offensive as well, because it implies that anybody that doesn’t fall into that category isn’t working.”
    
    And that was it. The conversation had shifted from one filled with good intentions, trying to identify the causing factors that hinder those financially less fortunate than others, to a “who can be more politically correct” competition. Those people each had something to say, and they each sacrificed saying it for the sake of coming off as socially-sensitive.
    
    Unapologetic Entertainment promises — no, vows (because Game of Thrones is so popular right now) — to never sacrifice your story for the sake of semantics. We all have a message that we deem worthy for the public, and it is our job to make sure that they hear it the way you meant it to be heard.
    
    Be it narrative film, corporate solutions, still photography, or anything in-between, Unapologetic Entertainment has not only the resources, but the mindset as well, to successfully spread your message.
    
    We’ve become too sensitive, and if that offends you then you’ve already missed the message.

    You’re saying to insert “<” right at the start, and a “>” right at the end?

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