@blackjack2145309It's that "unique" part that's always the problem. Prison stories are a dime a dozen and the only really interesting part that I see is that we're talking about a real Hollywood star who happens to be quite the hottie.
Some say that it'd be wrong to write a non-con scene because it is a real person. But others say that it would be okay since non-con is actually quite a real thing in prisons around the world. I can see it being rather squick for some, and admit it is a touchy subject.
Half the fun, imo, would be the wake-up call it'd certainly give her. She has to survive amidst the peons, women who would love nothing more than to own her in a dozen ways. Maybe the guards are complicit since they're pissed about her elitist/entitled ways.
Maybe the key to it would be relay everything through her private memoirs or diary as she's trying to talk with her therapist, working out all the things that happened to her.
One of the ideas I had was to focus on the way the court of public opinion swayed what happened in the legal court. She could have gotten off with a fine and public service, but the media was in full swing. Even when she was accidentally shipped to the wrong prison, it was the media that made it impossible for her to be transferred because they were running constant hit pieces on her, the judge, the prosecutor and everyone else. Imagine headlines like "Oooh, little Miss Hollywood gets special treatment!" or, "The Rich get Club Fed, You get Club Dread."
Even in the age of the 24hr news cycle, the stories just don't seem to stop as everyone's fixated on her for some reason. With all the pressure from the media and protesters on the street, there's no way the judge can be seen playing favorites, so she decides to leave the mistake as is. Lori stays in the "standard" prison with all the low-lifes and learns some hard lessons.