Here’s a Fun Way to Contribute to Our Favorite #PAC

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Not only will this event make giving painless, it might even make it fun!

Writers Guild of America West Board of Directors Election News

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TVWriter™ Don’t-Miss Posts of the Week – July 25th

In case you’ve missed what’s happening at TVWriter™, the most popular blog posts during the week ending yesterday were:

Diana Vacc sees OUTLANDER Ep. 13 “Dragonfly in Amber” read article

Writers! It ain’t what your characters want. It’s what they NEED!

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by Diana Black

In compelling narratives, there’s always the ‘good guy’ (protagonist) – usually a person, versus the ‘bad guy’ (antagonist) – person, corporation, object or whatever, sometimes even themselves, and it’s a given that a battle of wills is raging with ‘guns’ real or metaphorical, accompanied by a roller-coaster ride of triumph and tragedy. Don’t we just love putting our character/s through hell?

We do put them through hell, don’t we? In every scene the ongoing battle shows up blatantly in the scene or more subtly, informing the scene and driving the narrative forward. Let’s take a moment to think this through, wtf are they fighting over?

Wanting and needing are rarely if ever, the same thing… read article

POWER Creator-Writer-Producer Tells How It Came to Be

Courtney Kemp has caught the brass ring with her Starz series, and here’s her insightful take on her carousel ride:

Sensational pic by Meron Menghistab
Sensational pic by Meron Menghistab

by Rawiya Kameir

When the second season of Power aired last August, more than 4.4 million people tuned in to find out what twisted direction the crime drama would take. That number — double the viewership recorded for its debut the previous year — was a record for Starz, a cable network whose flagship original series is a historical time travel show set in the Scottish Highlands. Power, by impressive contrast, is a glamorous guns-and-gangs procedural set across New York City clubs, penthouses, and outer boroughs, played out through the web of its characters’ messy relationships and ambitions.

It was created by first-time showrunner Courtney Kemp, a former GQ writer who left journalism and transitioned into TV, eventually spending several years writing for the beloved CBS drama The Good Wife. Notably, the show is co-executive produced by 50 Cent, who stars across Omari Hardwick as a grimy antagonist. Season three of Power returns to Starz on July 17; ahead of its premiere, we talked to Kemp about empathy, race, and the American dream.
This is your third year with the characters of Power. How do you continue to treat them with empathy? How do you bring that consideration into the writers’ room? read article