Most Popular TVWriter™ Posts of the Week Ending August 28, 2015

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Hmm, kinda like this image we used last week for our weekly “Most Popular” feature. Maybe we should keep it?

The most clicked-on posts by TVWriter™ visitors during the past week were:

How Does an Aspiring TV Writer Get Discovered by an Agent?

Looking for TV Pilot Scripts? read article

Project Greenlight is Back

The Usual Suspects
The Usual Suspects

Oh no! We mean, yay! We mean…well, we’ll have to see the new version of PROJECT GREENLIGHT when it returns to HBO after a hiatus of a decades. Will it really discover new filmmakers? Talented ones? Considering what came out of the original series, we’re doubtful.

But hope. We got miles and miles of hope.

Anyway, here’s the teaser: read article

Most Popular TVWriter™ Posts of the Week Ending August 21, 2015

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The most clicked-on posts by TVWriter™ visitors during the past week were:

Peggy Bechko’s Tips for Writing a First Draft read article

Our August Advanced Online Workshop has 2 Openings

by Larry Brody

lbwriterbiggerTook a longer than usual break after the most recent Advanced Online TV & Film Writing Workshop to recharge my batteries and get a haircut, but now the next, 152nd edition, is coming upon us next week. (That’s more workshops than Kentucky Derbies! Yikes!)

And…and…we’ve still got two spaces  – oh boy, wait – one space left.

Unbelievable! I hate when there’s a hole. I get mopey and sad and impossible to be around. Now just for a minute, imagine what that kind of behavior does to my family. Fortunately, you out there can help. All it takes is one of you to step forward, plunk down a hundred and forty smackers, and seize your writing destiny by making your way HERE, learning more about all the good stuff you’ll learn and the opportunities your knowledge and talent and craft will provide you, and, you know, signing up. read article

Writing for Humans – An Epiphany

by Hank Isaac

My daughter just had me listen to a portion of Oryx and Crake by Margaret Attwood on audio books.  While I liked the part she wanted me to hear, I suddenly realized why I can’t listen to webinars, why I always had problems in school lectures, and why audio books are hard for me to listen to.

When the reader (Campbell Scott) read dialogue, everything was cool.  But when he read descriptions, exposition, and thoughts, everything ground to a halt with me.

Why?

The reading of dialogue generally takes place more or less in real time.  But everything else – by necessity – takes far longer.  If something we’re supposed to see is described, the description of it takes far longer than it would actually take for us to see it. read article