How Much Should Spec Writers Worry About the Budget In Their Scripts?

The Bitter Script Reader has one of the most informative sites on the web for new writers. Here’s proof from a recent post there:

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by the Bitter Script Reader

Kris writes —

As I’m currently trying to grind out my first feature-length spec, a bit of a harrowing thought crossed my mind; something that often is discussed in various podcasts and blogs of this nature — keeping budget in mind when writing.

I’m confidently certain that it can happen to any screenwriter might get swept by the imagination he/she puts unto paper, but also understand that studios ultimately answer to what can be afforded, with X amount of blockbusters eating up studio funding.

Anyways, this concern of mine came into fruition amid writing my script; where a teenaged protagonist undergoes a transformation early on and remains in her changed form (a centaur) for the rest of the story. Given that the story is geared more as a drama with supernatural elements — the focus more on the protagonist’s decision to act on her sudden change, and how her family is affected by it — I don’t know of too many films that would have the level of practical-SFX integration I assume would be needed to budget (of course, if on fate’s good luck it ever gets picked up); especially for the centaur FX.

I feel the transformation is key in the story to help conceptualize the forced change the character faces to keep it in the story, but also understand how a studio may not pick it up if they deemed it too expensive for a smaller tier film that would likely not be blockbuster material. And I must admit if a potential producer would ask me how much budget I thought the film, my vague understanding of SFX budgeting, being a screenwriter, would cripple my ability to answer effectively.

Given the aforementioned scenario, and writing skill aside, would it better to tailor down the SFX featured in the script to make it appealing to potential producers? Or can I try my best to make the premise and script solid enough that if the script was green-lit, that the SFX projections could be adjusted during pre-production? Also, in your experience, what is often the biggest reasons for a otherwise solid spec reliant on SFX to be rejected due to budget concerns? read article

Our Friends at Comedy High are Back with a New Web Series

comedy highby Team TVWriter™ Press Service

Shlongologues: The Web Series is an exciting, forward-thinking 10 part web series! Think The Vagina Monologues, with less vagina and more SHLONGS!

Comedy High Productions, creators of TVWriter™ web series fave BECOMING RICARDO, brings you a series of stories, poems and songs, featuring a wildly talented and diverse group of actors, writers and comedians in an intimate setting talking about how the SHLONG affects their lives. There is nothing else like this on the web! With each episode under 2 minutes, you’re not going to want to miss this!

With the success of previous web series, Becoming Ricardo, (named one of the 5 webseries to watch by Fusion & ABC networks) and viral success of sketch, “Latino Stereotypes for Dummies”, we know our upcoming web series will be just as successful breaking barriers for women, sex, and comedy. read article

It’s Free Comic Book time!

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Speaking of Peggy Bechko, as we often do:

This just in from the Pegster: read article

Peggy Bechko Discusses How Writers – and Readers – Regard Characters

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by Peggy Becko

Today I’m addressing writers and readers. It’s interesting how writers get lost in their own stories at times, even to the point of forgetting it’s their readers they want to engage and draw into the story and the lives of the character.

So I’ll focus, for the moment on characters and more specifically, the hero or heroine of the story. Characters are integral to the story. They aren’t just stick figures to be moved about, populating the world the writer has created in order to move those exciting and cool twists and turns of plot forward.

Right readers? You’re in it for more than that. Rarely do you readers wish you could read more about the plot, but rather wish you could read more about the characters, spend more time with them, learn what makes them tick. I’ve heard that from so many readers. read article

Would You Invest in the TV Biz as it is Now?

Whoa! Television must be dead. Even the Wall Street Journal is starting to smell the corpse:

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Note to Media Investors: TV Isn’t Quite Dead Yet
by Paul Vigna

The media sector got walloped last week, hit hard by investors fleeing amid the panic of the “cord cutters,” people who are dropping their cable packages in favor of Internet-based platforms like Netflix , Hulu, YouTube, or Amazon. Far from a sudden crash, however, it seems that Wall Street is just starting to take seriously a phenomenon that’s been building for year. read article