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...By Ken Levine
The world as seen by a TV comedy writer |
Brian A. Klems' Questions & Quandaries
Let this WD columnist answer your most pressing grammatical, ethical, business and writing-related questions. |
| Children's Writer's & Illustrator's Market blog |
| Chuck Sambuchino's Agents Blog |
Complications Ensue: The Crafty TV and Screenwriting Blog
The craft of screenwriting for tv and movies by a working screenwriter... with forays into life and political theater. |
Daily Script
A huge online of screenplays and TV scripts... often including different drafts of the scripts! |
Deadline Hollywood Daily
News for, and from, industry insiders... by L.A. Weekly columnist/blogger Nikki Finke |
Drew's Script-O-Rama
Hundreds of downloadable TV scripts and movie screenplays |
FishbowlLA
A blog about the Hollywood creative community and L.A. media |
Internet Movie Script Database
Produced movie scripts to read online |
Jane Espenson.com
A terrific blog from "Buffy" and "Battlestar Galactica" writer Jane Espenson, who offers everything from practical advice to writing tips to Hollywood commentary. |
John August.com
A ton of useful information about screenwriting... from the writer of "Corpse Bride," "Charlie & the Chocolate Factory," and "Charlie's Angels" |
Kung Fu Monkey
Hollywood commentary from screenwriter/producer John Rogers (Catwoman, Cosby, Transformers) |
| Maria Schneider's The Writer's Perspective |
Morning Call Time
The only daily podcast designed specifically for the entertainment industry! We not only give you today's industry headlines... we tell you how the trades are reporting them. |
News From Me
Mark Evanier's blog about TV, movies, comics, theater, news, politics, and other forms of fantasy |
| Novel & Short Story Writer's Market blog |
Past Deadline
Hollywood commentary from columnist/reviewer Ray Richmond (The Hollywood Reporter, The Pulse) |
| Poetic Asides |
Script City
A great site where you can buy produced scripts for hundreds of produced movies and TV episodes (they also have various drafts of different scripts) |
Simply Scripts
Tons of free downloadable screenplays and TV scripts |
The Artful Writer
Information, theory, and debate for the professional television and film writer |
The Thinking Writer
"A conversation about screenwriting" with a bonafide ntertainment lawyer and screenwriter |
The Unknown Screenwriter
A wonderful (and bit mysterious) meeting place for screenwriters looking for writing tips, Hollywood business advice, or fun commentary on the art and craft of screenwriting. |
| This Writer's Life by Kevin Alexander |
TV by the Numbers
Daily TV ratings, analysis, and commentary |
Without A Box
Streamlines the distribution process both for filmmakers seeking contests, festivals, & distribution and for distributors searching for content |
Wordplay
Screenwriters Ted Elliott & Terry Rosso (Aladdin, Shrek, Pirates of the Caribbean) offer advice on everything from the art of screenwriting to the science of pitching. They also have guest writers like Walter Parkes and Nina Jacobson. |
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 Monday, September 01, 2008
A Message from the Writers Guild
Posted by Chad
Hey, everyone-- Just wanted to post this email sent this evening from Writers Guild presidents Patric Verrone and Michael Winship. They say some interesting things about the post-strike world of new media and online entertainment, as well as their stance on the current standoff between studios and the Screen Actors Guild... Dear Fellow Members, It's Labor Day and, in a year during which we have created a stronger working relationship between the Guilds and reestablished our place in the American labor movement, we'd like to update you on some of the achievements of the past few months and the challenges of the months to come. Following the strike, most of us expected that the gains we made in new media coverage would take time to justify the sacrifices, but they already are bearing fruit. Webisodes based on such existing TV series as The Office, Heroes, and Californication are now being written under the new MBA contract and writers working under the PBS contract now are receiving payment for Internet reuse. Original content being created under Guild contracts includes some of the most successful projects, like Joss Whedon's Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog, and the most anticipated, including Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy. As business models quickly evolve, it's imperative that writers, who are fast becoming important entrepreneurs in new media, involve the Writers Guilds in making their deals. We can guide and work with you to negotiate appropriate compensation, separated rights, credits, reuse, and other provisions in addition to the benefits already guaranteed by the MBA. While devoting time and energy to organizing new media, we have focused as well on traditional media as well, especially genres over which our coverage is incomplete. New signatories include Chocolate News, Lewis Black's The Root of All Evil, and The Bob Saget Roast at Comedy Central, as well as the first broadcast game show contract with Mark Burnett for Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader? We also have a game show deal with FremantleMedia for Match Game, but that company remains an organizing target following our much-publicized American Idol Truth Tour. The Tour, in alliance with the Teamsters, has brought to light the unacceptable working conditions suffered by writers and other workers in reality TV. Contract enforcement remains a top priority and writers, working with the staffs of the Guilds, must be the main force in instigating (Instigating violations sounds funny), investigating, and pursuing violations. Although the new MBA increases access to information, difficulties already are appearing. Blaming "technology problems," the conglomerates are failing to make the correct payments due on streaming and downloads. Even more appalling, AMPTP reps now claim that our agreement doubling the DVD formula on EST downloads only applies to movies and TV shows released after the end of the strike. Needless to say, we are challenging the companies aggressively and will take all actions necessary to protect and collect what we won as a result of the strike. This Labor Day we also recognize the alliances we have built with other unions that supported us during our strike and with which we continue to work to achieve our mutual goals. Mention was made of our alliance with the Teamsters, especially Hollywood Local 399, during the recent American Idol Truth Tour; we look forward to further developing and improving relations with the rest of the labor movement, including the IATSE, to whose new international president Matt Loeb we extend our congratulations and best wishes. The union that deserves our profound gratitude and attention right now is the one that supported us so strongly during our struggle, the Screen Actors Guild. During its ongoing negotiations, SAG regularly has been criticized for trying to improve on the deal that we made in February. Such criticism is unfounded. We didn't win everything in new media that we eventually will. SAG is well within its rights to improve on our gains. For example, we grudgingly agreed to certain budget levels for original new media productions, but SAG is right to demand coverage for all new media projects, regardless of budget, and we very much hope they achieve it. The suggestion that companies need budget breaks in order to experiment in a new medium rings false. Experimentation is too often a euphemism for "nonunion." We agreed in our deal to make initial compensation completely negotiable precisely to give producers all the flexibility they need in these new markets. They don't need to develop another non-union business model. Naturally, we hope the SAG negotiations successfully end soon. But we reject the notion that SAG must follow any predetermined bargaining pattern. We worked hard to inform our members about the benefits and limits of pattern bargaining. Unions need to support each other when pattern bargaining is used as an excuse not to address a union's legitimate concerns. We stand behind SAG and its efforts to represent its members' interests, and we urge the AMPTP to return to the bargaining table. Thanks for your attention. We will continue to keep you apprised of developments, challenges, and opportunities. We encourage you to do the same. Best, Patric M. Verrone President, WGAW Michael Winship President, WGAE Industry Updates | The Writers Strike 2007
9/1/2008 10:16:51 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Sunday, August 31, 2008
READER QUESTION: TV Spec-Writing Advice?
Posted by Chad
Today’s question comes from Peggy, an aspiring TV writer who lives in Florida. Peggy writes… “I love Law & Order: SVU, and I am working on a script. Any suggestions for me?” Well, first of all, Peggy—congratulations on starting your spec! I’m not sure exactly what stage you’re at, but I think simply starting a new script is farther than most aspiring writers ever get; the world is full of “writers” who never actually write… they simply talk about ideas and hang out in Starbucks. So kudos on putting pen to paper and actually starting a project! You’re also taking the exact right first step in launching a TV career. One of the essential elements of any aspirant’s portfolio is at least a couple “spec scripts,” or sample episodes of shows already on the air. Spec scripts can’t be sold or produced; they’re simply written as samples of your work, calling cards to show off your talent. So when TV shows like “Law & Order: SVU” or “ Pushing Daisies” hire their staffs of writers, their showrunners and executive producers vet potential writers by reading their sample specs. It’s also important to understand that producers rarely read specs of their own shows; most, in fact, NEVER read specs of their own show. This is for a couple reasons: 1) Legal reasons. Showrunners never want to find themselves in a position where they could be accused of stealing a writer’s script or story idea, so they try not to expose themselves to spec scripts of their own series. This may seem over-protective, but the truth is: writers throw about hundreds, maybe thousands, or story areas each year… so it’s quite probable that many of the specs out there are treading on story territories that the writers have actually explored or talked about. 2) Writers on staff live and breathe their shows’ characters and stories, so they know the worlds of their series better than anyone… making it nearly impossible for them to be impressed with an outside writer’s take. This isn’t to say they’re arrogant or close-minded; it just means they’ve played with a gazillion story and character possibilities over the course of writing the series… so not only is it rare for an outside writer to come up with something original (and tonally accurate), but when an outside spec-writer does write something the staff has already discussed, it makes it easy for a showrunner to dismiss the spec (even if it’s fairly well-written). In other words, the bar is set so incredibly high when a showrunner reads a spec of his/her own show, it’s not fair to the showrunner OR the writer. So rather than putting themselves… or you… in that position, most showrunners just don’t read specs of their own series. Thus, your “Law & Order: SVU” script probably won’t help get you a job at “Law & Order: SVU;” but it could certainly land you a job at “ CSI” or “ Numb3rs.” So, moving forward, here are my top three suggestions for writing your spec: • OUTLINE EPISODES. Watch as many episodes of “Law & Order: SVU” as you possibly can. Or, better yet, read the scripts. (Words often read a bit differently than the play on-screen.) Write down what happens in every scene, and note when it takes place in the story (the time-code or page number). This will give you the beginnings of a reverse-engineered outline. Keep it short and sweet, like this… 2:42 – Detectives discover murdered body. 3:36 – Learn victim is bowling champion. 4:12 – Victim’s diary says he was having an affair with his wife’s sister. 6:00 – Interview wife’s sister; she denies affair. Then go back through each “beat,” or piece of story information, and identify how it functions, or helps push the story forward. For instance (this time, I’ll do it with page numbers, as if we’re following the actual script, rather than a produced episode from TV)… Page 2 – Detectives discover murdered body – DISCOVER MYSTERY Page 3 – Learn victim is bowling champion – IDENTIFY VICTIM Page 5 – Victim’s diary says he was having an affair with his wife’s sister – IDENTIFY SUSPICIOUS RELATIONSHIP AND SUSPECT #1 Page 7 – Interview wife’s sister; she denies affair – SUSPECT #1 DENIES RELATIONSHIP, COMPLICATES INVESTIGATION Do this for the entire script, then go back through and remove the details associated with the particular episode you’re using as a model. I.e., using the info above… Page 2 – Discover mystery Page 3 – Identify victim Page 5 – Identify suspicious relationship and suspect #1 Page 7 – Suspect #1 denies relationship with victim, complicates investigation As you can see, you slowly develop a “reverse outline,” or an exact structural breakdown of a produced episode of “Law & Order!” You can then follow this beat-for-beat, simply laying your own story over the skeleton of the old. You may need to tweak and fudge some beats here and there, but because you’re “borrowing” from a working episode, you should have a solid outline with which to structure your spec! • SLASH ANY LINE THAT’S NOT ABSOLUTELY 100% NECESSARY. This is one of my favorite rewriting techniques. After writing your first draft, read through your script with a red pen. Slash ANY LINE OR WORD that is not COMPLETELY NECESSARY TO PUSHING THE STORY FORWARD. I don’t care if it’s beautiful description; if it doesn’t propel the story, cut it. I don’t care if it’s hilarious repartee; axe it. I don’t care if it’s a brilliant character moment; trash it. Deep-six anything—and I mean literally ANYTHING—that is not pure story. And expect to lose at least a third of what you’ve written. (First drafts are almost always too long.) You’ll be left with a pared-down script that is nothing but bare-bones narrative. Which means your script will not only read “leaner,” but it’ll also show you where you have holes that need to be fixed. Some places, you’ll realize, need more dialogue to illustrate what’s happening between two characters. Others need whole new scenes. This can be a painful process; after pouring your heart and soul into a script, it’s tough to go through and rip it to shreds. But often when we DON’T shave stories down to bare essentials, it’s difficult to tell whether or not they’re working because they’re cluttered with fun dialogue, description, and character moments. And while these can be emotionally moving, they cloud the story itself. So it’s important, after your first draft, to reduce your script to nothing but plot. • SORT DIALOGUE BY CHARACTER. As you’re watching or reading your “Law & Order: SVU” episodes, write down each character’s EVERY LINE OF DIALOGUE. Yes, that’s right… EVERY ONE. Then sort them according to character: Stabler’s lines, Benson’s lines, Munch’s lines, etc. Once you’re able to isolate and focus on each character’s lines, you’ll notice quirks and consistencies. Does one character always talk in sassy retorts? Does another communicate only in monosyllabic grunts? Is another always being overly negative or positive? Do the same with your script as you finish each draft; separate your own dialogue by character. Does each person speak in a consistent voice that’s appropriate to his/her character? Do certain lines need to be punched up? Do some characters sound too similar to one another? Well, Peggy—there ya go… my top three spec-writing suggestions. I’d also recommend picking up Pamela Douglas’s excellent book, Writing the TV Drama Series. This book deals a bit more with creating your own series, but it’s still got some outstanding writing advice, especially for drama writers like yourself. Also, if you spend just a couple moments on Amazon, or at your local bookstore or library, you can certainly find countless other great books on writing TV specs and dramas. I hope all this is helpful, Peggy. Please lemme know how it goes… and I hope to see you on a staff out here soon! For the rest of you who may have questions about writing for TV, film, or the Internet… or questions about the business, how to break in, etc… please don’t hesitate to post a comment below or shoot me an email at WDScriptNotes@FWPubs.com. Have a great Labor Day, everyone! Chad Writing Advice | Writing TV
8/31/2008 12:13:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, August 29, 2008
TheWB.com Launches!
Posted by Chad
This may not mean much to some of you, but to those of you who were fans of Buffy, Roswell, Veronica Mars, and Angel (I'm not mentioning Gilmore Girls... sorry), this is freakin' awesome news!... As announced this spring, TheWB.com has finally launched! Basically, it's a resurrection of the original WB network, but entirely online. They're streaming full episodes of classic WB series, as well as Warner Bros. shows like Friends (and some random FOX shows like Firefly)... as well as original web series, like the reality show A Boy Wearing Makeup, and scripted shows like Sorority Forever. Even if you're not a WB fan, this is interesting news. As TV evolves and migrates to the Internet, this is the biggest yet attempt to create a legitimate TV network online. Sure, NBC, ABC, and most other networks have websites streaming shows (and sometimes original content). But most of those sites are designed to drive viewers back to the original TV distributor. (In fact, this spring, in a move of sheer stupidity, the CW tried removing streams of its hit show Gossip Girl in hopes of forcing viewers back to the network. It failed.) But theWB.com is not only well-funded with a certain degree of built-in audience, it's branding and positioning itself as a destination for well-produced young adult programming. Now, to be fair-- it's still in beta stage, and the interface still feels a little clunky. The streaming isn't great... it's slow and herky-jerky. Having said that... I still just sat here and watched "Witch" from Buffy season one. Damn, I miss that show. (Side note: all you TV-writers... wanna learn how to write great TV? Study the shit out of Joss Whedon.) Anyway, it'll be interesting to see how-- or if-- thewb.com helps advance TV-web convergence. But in the mean time, at least we can we visit Sunnydale again. Industry Updates | Digital Media and Web Series
8/29/2008 1:48:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Writing the Reality TV Show - Next Thursday!
Posted by Chad
Hey, TV writers and producers-- If you have any idea for the next America's Got Talent, Good Eats, The Amazing Race or Criss Angel: Mindfreak... or if you're just trying to get your foot in the reality TV door... or even if you're just a big reality fan... check out the mediabistro seminar I'm teaching next Thursday night, September 4! Writing the Reality TV ShowWipeout. Big Brother. Sunset Tan. Making the Band. From the
multi-million-dollar series of broadcast television to the low-budget
niche shows of cable, reality programming dominates television. But are
reality shows really "reality?" How much planning and production goes
into unscripted storytelling? And, most importantly, how can you get in
on the action?
This seminar lays the groundwork for anyone wanting to break into
the lucrative world of reality TV. We'll look at various types of
reality shows and what makes them tick, from docu-dramas and docu-soaps
(Dog the Bounty Hunter, The Hills) to game shows and elimination-style competitions (The Biggest Loser, Survivor) to personality-driven and "aspirational" series (Tasty Travels, Extreme Makeover: Home Edition).
We'll then discuss how to conceive, develop, and sell your idea.
What are the critical elements of a pitch? Should you attach talent?
Does your series work as a strip? We'll explore how to structure your
reality pitch and get it to the right people. Who are the major
players? When should you attach a senior producer? What networks are
best for your concept? Whether you're a writer, producer, or host,
reality television's waiting for you.
In this seminar, you will learn:
- The difference between reality shows, and how to pitch them accordingly
- The critical elements every reality show and pitch must have
- How to structure a pitch both verbally and as a written document
- How to pitch to networks, studios, and production companies
- When to attach hosts or producers to your idea, and when not to
- What to expect when you're making your pitch, and what happens when you leave
Click here for more information...
WHEN: Thursday, August 4, 7-10 pm WHERE: Beverly Hills Bar Assoc., 300 S. Beverly Dr., 2nd Fl., Beverly Hills, CA 90212 COST: $65 ($50 for avantguild members) TO SIGN UP: Call 212-547-7890 or click HERE
Career Advice | Classes Seminars Workshops | Events Activities and Things To Do | Reality TV | Writing TV
8/27/2008 3:46:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Speaking of the Writers Strike...
Posted by Chad
Industry Updates | The Writers Strike 2007
8/27/2008 12:36:09 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Action, Thriller, or Crime Scripts Wanted
Posted by Chad
FROM JEFF GUND'S INFO LIST...Hi everyone, INFOLIST.com has forged an alliance with InkTip.com to bring you some great opportunities! Here's some info on a script wanted that is high concept action/drama story with comedic elements, ala The Rundown - be sure to read the specific details below! Feel free to forward if you know anyone who would be interested, and please submit only if your script meets ALL the requirements!! You should always be sure to register your material with the Writer's Guild and the US Copyright Office before submitting to any leads. Good luck, and have a great day! -Jeff Jeffrey R. Gund INFOLIST.comJeffrey R. Gund Music & Sound DesignJeffrey R. Gund on IMDbwww.myspace.com/JeffGundIf you like the InfoList - Add a Comment on my Myspace page and let me know what you like about it! ______________________________ ACTION, THRILLER, OR CRIME SCRIPTS WANTED--------------- TriCoast International - Action or Thriller --------------- We are looking for completed feature-length action/adventure, thriller or crime scripts with name actors attached (meaning actors with feature credits whom we can look up on IMDb) and/or directors attached who have theatrically released credits (also verifiable on IMDb). We are also open to submissions from writers with theatrically released feature credits. When submitting, please include a list of attachments and/or list your produced feature credits in the personal message space. Budget will be between $5 and $15 million. WGA and non-WGA writers may submit as long as the above criteria are met. For further reference, feel free to look us up on IMDb under TriCoast Studios. TO SUBMIT: 1. Please go to www.InkTippro.com/leads2. Enter your email address (you will be signing up for InkTip's newsletter - FREE!) 3. Copy/Paste this code: fnu25n34hq4. You will be submitting a logline and synopsis only, and you will be contacted to submit the full script only if there is interest from the production company. IMPORTANT: Please ONLY submit your work if it fits what the lead is looking for EXACTLY. If you aren't sure if your submission fits, please ask InkTip first. Please mention you heard about this from Jeff Gund at INFOLIST.com and please email any questions to: jerrol@inktip.com Jobs Contests Opportunities
8/26/2008 4:38:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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The Writers Strike: 6 Months Later...
Posted by Chad
Hey, everyone-- it's been six months since the end of the 100-day writers strike that shut down Hollywood for almost four months in 2007 and 2008... and we're still feeling the effects. Pilot and development season has been revamped (at least for now), networks and studios have fewer projects in development, and the Screen Actors Guild is now waging its own (losing) battle for rights and compensation in digital media. Yesteday, Variety ran this interesting article looking back at the strike and the months since it ended. Pretty interesting... take a look... http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117991065.html?categoryid=1066&cs=1 Industry Updates | The Writers Strike 2007
8/26/2008 1:47:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 25, 2008
Two Cool Web Series!
Posted by Chad
Hey, everyone-- Not sure if you've seen these, but wanted to turn you on to two interesting web series... 1) Stephen King's N. This is an adaptation of a short story coming out in Just After Sunset, a collection of Stephen King stories coming out this November. The web series, written by Marc Guggenheim (creator of Eli Stone on ABC), is basically a "filmed" graphic novel... it's illustrated with actors doing voice-over. N. tells the story of Charlie, a psychiatrist who receives a bizarre box from an old school friend. In that box are notes from the friend's brother Johnny, also a psychiatrist, who recently committed suicide after treating a mysterious patient known only as "N." The story follows Charlie as he explores the contents of the box... and learns the secret that drove Johnny to his death. Each episode is around a minute and a half... and they are addictive. Watch one, you'll definitely watch another. This is a great example of how even with the simplest production values, well-crafted storytelling is utterly riveting. Also-- the series premiered July 28 and has been posting a new episode every day until today... which is the finale. All the episodes are now available HERE or you can check out the widget I put below... 2) Gemini Division. Produced by and starring the super-cute Rosario Dawson (who is also a self-professed comic book geek), Gemini Division follows an NYPD cop, Anna, as she tries to avenge the death of her fiance... and finds herself pulled into a sci-fi world of cyborgs and conspiracies. There's been a ton of buzz around this series because it's got a ton of heavy-hitters involved, including Sony and NBC. I'll be honest... I don't think it's the best thing ever done on the Internet (I wish each episode was a bit shorter, and I wish the story integrated the "webbiness" of the web a bit more... interactivity, etc.), but it deserves kudos for being more ambitious and sophisticated than most web offerings out... and it's a great example of how much you can do if you use your green screen creatively. Anyway, check 'em out and lemme know what you think... Stephen King's N.
Digital Media and Web Series | Fun Stuff
8/25/2008 6:33:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Saturday, August 23, 2008
GUEST PERSPECTIVE: How NOT to Write a Screenplay
Posted by Chad
Hey, screenwriters-- I'm excited to present a special guest today... William M. Akers, author of the new screenwriting book, Your Screenplay Sucks! 100 Ways To Make It Great, from Michael Wiese Productions, and... my former screenwriting teacher at Vanderbilt University! Will was not only a great teacher (and my first screenwriting professor ever), but he's written movies and television for virtually every major network and studio from MGM and Disney to FOX, NBC, and ABC. He's currently writing a movie for Overture Films which is being directed by Jon Amiel. This is his first book... and he's done an incredible job. Your Screenplay Sucks! is a terrific first outing, not only because it's packed with great info, tips, and insight, but because it has a wonderfully unique approach to working on your script. First of all, it's a great book to read if you've never written a screenplay and want some terrific first-time-out pointers and help. But more importantly and uniquely... this is a great book to read if you've already learned-- or are in the process of learning-- how to do it, and want to make sure your script is as good as it can possibly be. Basically, Your Screenplay Sucks! is a comprehensive checklist of the 100 things screenwriters almost NEVER do... but should. It pinpoints specific mistakes writers make-- such as "you don't have a killer first page" or "you haven't buried exposition like Jimmy Hoffa" or "you call shots"-- which makes it easy to focus in on specific aspects of your script and punch them up. And because it's in checklist form, you can just go down the list, looking at and improving each aspect until you've whipped your screenplay into shape. Also, this book doesn't use kid gloves. It doesn't coddle you and give you warm-your-heart artistic advice like "listen to your heart" or "find the hidden writer within." This book is designed to pummel mistakes out of your script until it's better. It has sections like "you didn't run your spellcheck, you moron!" and
"you blew your first ten pages! Arggggghhhhh!" and "you think your
script is special and rules don't apply." Many of the mistakes are mistakes screenwriters at all levels continue to make. As such, it doesn't pull punches... it ribs you, goads you, and takes your script to task until its better (which, even in and of itself, is a great lesson in writing with "voice"). So do yourself a favor... head to your nearest bookstore, or click HERE to go to Amazon, and grab yourself a copy of Your Screenplay Sucks! But first... check out the interview I did this week with Will... you'll learn a bit more about him, the book, and writing in general... Will... you have a unique career, because you write and teach… and you do both far from the madding crowds of Hollywood. So let’s begin by learning your path. Tell me how you started writing professionally… and how you got to where you are today.When I was in the third grade, my teacher would read to us after lunch. My favorite book was The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, an English adventure with wolves, sleighs in the snow, and little girls and a wicked governess who kills their parents for their money. After I got out of USC grad school, I knew I wanted to write, so I looked at things that had been eating at me for a long time, (which make the best subjects for screenplays, btw) and I had never forgotten the book that had been read to me as a child. I ended up optioning it. Nine months later, I had a screenplay. It was produced by Zenith Productions in London. It found a home on the Disney Channel and I was nominated for a CableAce. Actually, that wasn’t my first professional gig. Haven’t thought of this in a while. When I was still at USC, I was sitting outside the chairman’s office telling stories to his assistant and he came out of his office, pointed at me and said, “Are you a writer?” I said, “Sure.” He said, “Come in my office.” He didn’t know my name. Someone had called, a manager for child actors, and wanted USC’s best writing student to write a screenplay for one of his clients. The chairman told him he had just the writer in mind, opened his door, and saw me. I got paid $1,500 dollars. Needless to say, the movie never got made. I love the idea that this manager thought the chairman went through some involved search to get to me, their “best writing student” and he didn’t even know my name. Easiest way I ever got a job. After the first job, I had to get the next one. I’ve always had an agent in Los Angeles, and if you live out of town, it helps. But, you can’t sit around waiting for your agent to land you a job. You have to go out and beat the bushes. I’ve sold pitches, sold spec scripts, and been hired on assignment. Every year is different. Some years, I haven’t worked at all. It helps to have no credit card debt and as small a house note as possible! Even when I’m not getting paid to write, I’m still writing spec material. I tend to write every day, so after a while, that’s a lot of pages. It’s been a hodgepodge of trying to get work, and failing, and wasting time, and being lucky, and writing and writing and writing. Sometimes it works and most times it doesn’t. The key is that you have to enjoy it even when it’s not working. Right now, I’m rewriting a spec I sold. Done eleven drafts for the producers in nearly two years. The script is about the fall of Saigon. Jon Amiel is directing it, and, under his aegis, the script has only gotten better. “Development paradise” is not a phrase you often hear, but it applies to this one. I just sold a pitch about a cop in London, based on a true story, and am waiting for the contracts to be negotiated before I start work. So there is a bit of activity here and there... You’ve written and sold numerous screenplays, and now you’ve published a book about screenwriting. One of the things that makes this book unique is its approach and tone. It’s not a how-to book for beginners trying their first screenplay; it’s an in-your-face pummeling for people who have written a few scripts and want to whip them into shape. It doesn’t pull punches or wear kiddie gloves; it’s a brutally honest assessment of the 100 biggest mistakes you see in beginners’ screenplays. So what compelled you, when you already have a successful screenwriting career, to write this book? And how did you decide on its unique voice and checklist format?First of all, Your Screenplay Sucks! is aimed at both beginning and more experienced writers. There’s a lot in there about generating an idea and how to develop characters and especially what I call “physical writing” -- how to write a clean sentence that actually tells the reader what you think it means... That’s useful to a writer just starting her first script, and you don’t often see it covered in books. As for experienced writers, I’ve heard from people who’ve been selling material for twenty years who said the book reminded them of stuff they had forgotten they were supposed to be doing. Anybody who is contemplating starting a script, or rewriting one, can benefit. So much for the commercial plug. As to where it came from, I wrote it in self defense. I’ve been critiquing screenplays for a long time, and I found that beginning writers all make the same mistakes. Over and over and over and over. So, I thought to create a checklist so the writer could do all this boilerplate stuff I had to tell every client about, and then send me their script so I could hammer them on structure and character instead of “don’t have character names that rhyme,” “take out thes and thats,” “make your prose crystal clear,” and “beware of research...” The book’s voice is my voice. I dictated the first draft of the book, so it’s a breezy read and, for a screenwriting book, pretty funny. How did the process of writing a book differ from the process of writing a screenplay? What surprised you about the differences in writing a book?I wrote a table of contents and a few chapters, sent it to the publisher, and they said “Go for it.” Once I knew it was going to be published, it was a complete blast to write. Like writing a movie, I suppose, where you know the producer has a put deal. Not that that’s ever happened to me... I basically wrote it for myself and had fun. I put in there whatever the hell I thought would be helpful, and that’s what came out the other end. No development hell. I rewrote it a lot, but what’s there is what I wanted. A lot easier than writing a screenplay, that’s for sure. What surprised me is how much fun I had writing it. Now that you’ve finished the book and returned to screenwriting, how has going through the book-writing process helped your screenwriting chops and process? Or has it?Interesting question. Act III of the book is about selling your screenplay and dealing with producers and Hollywood, and I have found myself trying to take my own advice. Weird, huh? All the painstaking work I did on the rewriting section of the book has helped my first drafts. There is so much in the book about being clear and concise, that writing it rubbed off on my own work. You’ve done what few people are able to do… maintain a successful screenwriting career while living far from the heart of Los Angeles. How do you do this? What advice do you have for screenwriters and aspirants who don’t live—or can’t get to—Los Angeles?Horrible question. Do you actually want the truth? It’s a bitch-willy to write and not live in L.A.. I lived there three years as a grad student in film school. Then three more years getting my career going. I’m still dining off those six years of living in Los Angeles full time. For six more years after that, I kept an apartment in West Hollywood and commuted regularly until my sharp-fanged, drooling landlord figured out a way to throw me out. So, I did put in my time in L.A. Living someplace else, lobbing scripts at Los Angeles, hoping someone will notice is, if you want my opinion, a fool’s paradise. You don’t want to confuse hope with denial. You can win a contest and get discovered, but that’s not easy. Every agent I’ve ever had came because a friend held a gun to their head, handed them a script and said, “Read this. This guy walks on water.” I never had a single query letter answered. Not one. Okay, so much for the depressing part... Now for the advice. Figure out a way to get to Los Angeles, regularly. Find people who live there who you can meet. Facebook. Network. Lie. Use the internet. Use the Creative Directory. Talk to 18 year old kids about how to do it. Take a marketing person to lunch and squeeze them dry for free. Get out there somehow. Or, get your material out there. Of course, the single best (and essential) thing you can do is to write a great screenplay. Not a good one, either, mind you. There’re lots of them all over. In gutters. Being used to clean windshields at gas stations. L.A. is lousy with good scripts. Any jackass can write a good screenplay. But, keep in mind, they’re not interested in good scripts, only great ones. So write a great one. If it takes you three years, so be it. If your script is great, people will pass your material on to someone they know because it makes them look good. Great material will open doors. Remember, that if you ever do meet someone “real” who is in a position to pass your script on to someone else, your script has to be bulletproof. You will only get one read. If it’s not fantastic, they will never read anything from you again. You have to make it perfect. Hence the crying need for writers to buy my book or hire me to crit their script before it’s too late! You teach college students, so you’re often working with young writers just starting to experiment with screenwriting and storytelling. What are the top three mistakes you see beginning writers make?They don’t have a breathtakingly original, wildly creative, non-derivative idea. They put the backstory in the first act. They don’t take the time to pare down the scene description and dialogue to the bare stark-white bones. They have character names that rhyme or start with the same letter. Their bad guy is poorly constructed. They don’t separate out the characters’s voices. They didn’t throw out the first twenty pages. They don’t have a clue how the motion picture or television business operates. They are arrogant and think the rules don’t apply. They argue when you give them notes. They don’t keep the reader in mind when they are writing. Those’re probably the top three mistakes. Your Screenplay Sucks! details 100 mistakes you see aspiring screenwriters make in their projects. But what are the biggest mistakes you’ve made… both in your actual writing and your career… and what have you learned from them?Biggest mistake I ever made was when a producer wanted to make a script of mine and I told him... “No.” The script was autobiographical and I wanted to direct it myself. Idiot. The instant I said I was attached to direct, the script died and that was that. The producer had the financing and everything in place to make the movie and I, moron that I was, didn’t let him make my movie. I still own the script. It sits on a shelf, sneering at me. In my writing, there is not a writing mistake I have not made. Repeatedly. I’ve done everything wrong there is to do, but not in the draft I handed in. I tried to correct the mistakes before I showed the material to anybody in the business. Another gigantic mistake I’ve made is to allow my heart to rule my head when it comes to choosing material. The longer I take to decide what to write, the better off I am. Just because I think it’s a great idea and is something that will easily sell, doesn’t mean it will sell. I have an eclectic personality, and that is doom when it comes to choosing material. No one is a master of all genres, and you need to pick the one or two you’re good at and stick with them. I’ve never written the same thing twice, and that’s a hindrance. Better to find a groove and stay in it. Screenwriting is a collaborative art form; screenwriters must know how to work and get along with directors, producers, designers, actors, etc. Having given screenwriters the 100 mistakes made when writing a script… what are the top three mistakes screenwriters often make during the rest of the production process, when dealing with all the other people and parts of making a movie?It’s tricky to deal with a producer and their notes. You want to do the notes that will help the script while tactfully forgetting the ones that are destructive. Bear in mind that no one, at least I tell myself this, no one is trying to destroy your screenplay, but sometimes people who don’t have a great story sense will give you a note that sounds like a good idea to them, but, if executed, will eventually cause the entire house of cards that is the story, to collapse. You have to listen, to everybody, and figure out how to deal with what they say they want. Sometimes it’s not what they really mean, because they don’t know what they really mean. That makes it tougher. Being arrogant is death. You are not in charge and your goal is to get your story told... not rigorously protect the material from people you may see as Visigoths. Producers loathe writers who guard every word like it’s sacrosanct. Don’t fight for every phrase like it’s Omaha Beach. They’re just trying to help you make your movie. A movie in a theater that you wrote, that got changed some, is far more valuable and interesting to your career than a screenplay that is 100% unaltered... but that never got made...! They are paying you to execute the notes, so don’t be a brat. I just had dinner with a guy who had investors for a project and $20 million to fund it. They flew in a private jet to meet the writers and tell them the changes they wanted done so they could pull the trigger. The writers refused to change anything. The investors got on their plane and flew away. And the writers still... control... their material! Whaddya bet their wives aren’t too happy with them? A simple thing about notes is to write it all down, when you’re in the meeting. Don’t trust memory. Write it down, then decide later what you’re going to do and not do. If you take killer notes, at least you’ll come out of the meeting knowing precisely what was discussed. I take my laptop to every meeting, so I walk away knowing what was said. Then I have a checklist to go through. You have a unique career, because half your career is dedicated to teaching young writers to write. And as you say in the dedication of your book, you’ve learned a ton from your students. So… what have you learned from your students? What has teaching taught you that makes you a better writer?By correcting their mistakes, I am reminded not to make those mistakes in my writing. Their enthusiasm for what they are doing is always contagious, so their fire for the work constantly fuels my own. I’ve written screenplays with my students, too, and that’s a great way to learn. Plus, it’s fun to hang out with people younger than I am. They have different world views and opinions and listen to better music. Books Tools Resources | Career Advice | Guest Perspectives | Screenwriting (Film) | Writing Advice
8/23/2008 12:46:19 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, August 19, 2008
CONTEST: Worst Logline Ever!
Posted by Chad
Hey, everyone-- The Guide to Literary Agents and its editor, Chuck Sambuchino, are hosting a hilarious contest... the search for The Worst Storyline Ever! Basically, they're looking for loglines... and the lamer, stupider, and more ridiculous the better. The winner gets a query
letter critique from Chuck, a follow-up phone call to discuss the query
critique, a plan of action for seeing your work published, and copies of the 2009 Guide to Literary Agents and the 2009 Writer's Market. Runners up will receive a free copy of either the 2009 Guide to Literary Agents or the 2009 Writer's Market.
Either way, this contest sounds like a blast... click HERE to check it out!
(Oh-- and the deadline is the end of August...)
Events Activities and Things To Do | Fun Stuff | Jobs Contests Opportunities
8/19/2008 12:25:13 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 18, 2008
Cool Writing Opportunities
Posted by Chad
Hey, screenwriters-- Just learned about these interesting new writing opportunities from Jeff Gund's Infolist, a great source for Hollywood jobs and writing opportunities. Check it out... ______________________________
Hi everyone, Here's an opportunity for a writer for a half-hour animation project ala Family Guy - details are below. As always, feel free to forward if you know someone that would be interested, and be sure to mention I sent you. Good luck, and have a great day! -Jeff Jeffrey R. Gund INFOLIST.comJeffrey R. Gund Music & Sound DesignJeffrey R. Gund on IMDbwww.myspace.com/JeffGundIf you like the InfoList - Add a Comment on my Myspace page and let me know what you like about it! ______________________________ WRITERS WANTED HALF-HOUR ANIMATION PROJECT GEARED FOR ADULT AUDIENCES, ALA FAMILY GUYAward winning NY animation producer seeking writing talent to work with in Los Angeles. I am open to either new talent or experience writers, as long as you've got the talent. There will be pay, commensurate with experience. I am looking for someone to work with and develop a half hour format animated show geared for adult audiences, ala Family Guy. TO SUBMIT: Be sure to mention you heard about this from Jeff Gund at INFOLIST.com, and email your RESUME, and WRITING SAMPLE (if available), to: wise1too@aol.com. Hi everyone, This is an update to the previous posting - apparently the submission email address was not set up before and gave bounceback errors - but it's confirmed and ready to go now! So... Here's a great opportunity for playwrights to have their one-act or full-length plays produced by the Edgmar Center for the Arts (Board Members include Steven Spielberg, Jason Alexander, Neil Simon, Kate Capshaw, etc.) Details are below ˆ as always, feel free to forward if you know someone that would be interested, and be sure to mention I sent you for priority consideration! Good luck, and have a great day! -Jeff Jeffrey R. Gund
INFOLIST.com
Jeffrey R. Gund Music & Sound Design
Jeffrey R. Gund on IMDb
www.myspace.com/JeffGund
If you like the InfoList - Add a Comment on my Myspace page and let me know what you like about it! ______________________________ FULL-LENGTH AND ONE-ACT PLAYS WANTED FOR PRODUCTION The Edgemar Center for the Arts is a two-theater complex located in the Frank Gehry building in the heart of Santa Monica, with board members including Steven Spielberg, Jason Alexander, Neil Simon, Kate Capshaw, and others. The Edgemar Theater Group is our resident theatre company which is looking for NEW WORKS for the Lab Theatre Season. We are looking for full-length and one-act PLAYS to be included in our monthly reading of selected scripts, which may then be considered for production by the company. We are open to all genres, comedy and drama, including "cutting edge" works. Unpublished and unproduced plays are preferred, but we are open to plays which may have had a small run or "limited exposure." This is a wonderful opportunity for writers to hear their works read by a group of talented actors, with the possibility of having your work produced by an established and reputable company. TO SUBMIT: Be sure to mention you heard about this from Jeff Gund at INFOLIST.com for priority consideration, and email scripts and your contact information to Les Brandt at: literary@edgemarcenter.org. OR scripts can be mailed to: The Edgemar Center Literary Dept Attn: InfoList Priority Submission 2437 Main Street Santa Monica, CA 90405 For more information on the Edgemar Center, please visit: www.edgemarcenter.org. We look forward to receiving your submissions! Events Activities and Things To Do | Jobs Contests Opportunities
8/18/2008 2:19:46 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Sunday, August 17, 2008
READER QUESTION: Why shouldn't I write an "origin pilot?"
Posted by Chad
Hey, guys— First off, I want to give a HUGE THANK YOU to E. Daniels and everyone else who submitted questions to Eric, our host at Reality Binge, for him to answer on his funny blog. You can submit whenever you want, so please… keep ‘em coming! Secondly, wanted to take a few moments to answer a great question I received the other day. This question comes from Susan, who took my pilot writing class last week. Susan writes... “You recommend not writing an ‘origin pilot’ (a la Lost), but writing a pilot that could be episode 100 or episode 1. But aren't pilots where the main character moves to Alaska (Northern Exposure) or gets hit on the head (Samantha Who?) origin pilots? Or do you mean a literal creation of a whole new world type of thing?”
Great question, Susan! To get to that answer, let’s take a quick step back to catch people up… As I said last week last week, many writers often make the mistake of thinking that a pilot is simply the first episode of a TV series, and your job in writing a pilot is to write the beginnings of a story and characters that make people want to keep watching. While this is PART of what a pilot is, it’s only partially/somewhat/occasionally accurate. In truth, a pilot is designed to be a prototype of a typical episode or your series. Yes, it’s introducing your audience to the world of your story (and before your show is on the air, your pilot’s “audience” consists mainly of network execs who decide whether to air your project at all), but it’s also meant to show networks how the show will work in series. Which means your job is not only to launch a story that can sustain itself for years to come, but to illustrate how that series will generate and tell stories whether it’s at episode 10 or episode 500. Thus, if every episode of your show is a close-ended story in which your main character, a detective, solves an art heist, your pilot needs to show that detective solving an art heist. If every episode of your series shows a group of friends helping each other through wacky dating situations, your pilot needs to show that same group of friends helping each other through funny dating situations. In other words, while your pilot is—in some way—unlike any other episode of your series (because it’s the beginning of your story), it must also work just like every other episode of your series. So, now that we understand this, there tend to be two types of TV pilots: origin pilots and "traditional pilots" (to be honest, I’m not sure if non-origin pilots have a special name, so I just call them “traditional” pilots). Traditional pilots work just like a regular episode of the series. In fact, some—like the Everybody Loves Raymond pilot—are nearly indistinguishable from regular episodes. They spend very little time introducing characters, setting up stories, etc. They just throw readers/audiences right into the world and start the show. Origin pilots begin at the VERY BEGINNING of the story. Jericho kicked off with a nuclear attack. Grey's Antaomy begins on the day Meredith meets the other interns and McDreamy. Different pilots work differently. The question is: WHICH IS MORE SELLABLE OR MORE ATTRACTIVE TO NETWORKS AND STUDIOS? The answer, almost unequivocally, is: “traditional” pilots. Remember, the true job of a pilot is to show audiences—including network buyers—how the episodes works on a regular basis, and traditional pilots do this MUCH BETTER than origin pilots, which have so much “pipe to lay,” or story to set up—that they frequently don’t work like subsequent episodes. (In fact, sometimes the series’ original pilot never airs… or airs out of order… because the network simply wants to jump right into the meat of the story. Firefly and Cavemen both aired their pilots later in the series. Ed shot a pilot, decided not to use it, then cut it into an quick montage that opened the first episode to set up the story.) Now, Susan, you ask about pilots like Northern Exposure and Samantha Who?, where Joel moves to Alaska or Sam gets hit on the head and goes into/awakes from her coma. Many pilots, obviously, are indeed telling the beginning of a story, so they can’t scrap ALL the elements of an origin pilot. After all, they still need to START THEIR STORY (by moving Joel to Alaska or putting Sam in the coma). But they also need to show how the episodes work. Thus, they usually set up their story as quickly as possible, but they also work hard at illustrating how future episodes will play out. The CSI pilot, for instance, began with a new detective (Holly) joining the CSI team. It was a new day for the CSI gang… they had a new member. (This also allowed the storytellers to introduce the other people, places, and situations organically, since Holly was just meeting them for the first time.) But the rest of the episode then followed the crew as they solved what would becom | |