TVWriter™ Top Posts for the Week Ending 12/12/14

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Here they are, the most viewed TVWriter™ posts during the past week:

Peggy Bechko: The Characters We Create – A Writer’s World read article

Love & Money Dept – TV Writing Deals for 12/12/14

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Latest News About Writers Who Are Doing Better Than We Are=&0=& (NECESSARY ROUGHNESS) is writing a pilot based on the comic book mini-series Boom! created by Gary Phillips & Marc Laming. It’s all about a professional money launderer so at least it’ll be clean. (Sorry about that, gang. Couldn’t resist) =&1=& (Yes, the Max Mutchnick) is developing the series QUICK SHOTS OF FALSE HOPE for HBO, about a ’70s era single mom looking for a husband. (Looks like somebody didn’t get the whole “It’s time to treat women like human beings and not slavish stereotypes” memo. Thumbs down, folks. Yeppers, I can’t resist that either.) Gil Ozeri (HAPPY ENDINGS) is writing the pilot for a Fox comedy about “a family of two-bit criminals who decide to pull off an elaborate Ponzi scheme.” (Sounds to yer friendly neighborhood munchman as tho this show’s gonna be the Ponzi scheme. Jeeze!) Andrew Hinderaker (a playwright, which makes him a TV newbie, hooray!) is writing a GLEE-type pilot for the CW that the network describes as “ENTOURAGE meets 30 FEET FROM STARDOM. (To which the muncher has to ask, “What the hell is 30 FEET FROM STARDOM?)

That’s it for now, munchachos. Don’t forget to write in and tell yers truly what you’ve sold when you sell it. Cuz TVWriter™ can’t wait to brag to all your friends. (And, more importantly, enemies. Hehehe….)

Love & Money Dept – TV Writing Deals for 12/11/14

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Latest News About Writers Who Are Doing Better Than We Are=&0=& (YOUNG BOND) is writing an ITV pilot for a 10 part drama series based on Robert Louis Stevenson‘s Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde. (To which I say, with absolutely no irony cuz you know I never do the irony thing, “Amen!” Looking forward to this one, brothers and sisters!) =&1=& (hot writers we never heard of cuz NEWBIES!) are writing the pilot for an NBC comedy series called #WINNING about…well, munchilito can’t really tell what it’s about from the description. (Which only goes to show you how desperate NBC must be. Talk about “blind pilot commitments!”) Catherine Tregenna has become only the fifth woman ever to get a writing assignment on DOCTOR WHO. (Loude sing “Halloo!”) Anna Fricke (BEING HUMAN) is writing a Fox pilot based on Deep State, a comic book created by Justin Jordan & Ariela Kristantina, about an FBI agent and her partner go after a mysterious group that covers up all the big – and real – conspiracies by promoting the idiotic fake ones we see in the news every day. (Sounds interesting, but I haven’t read the comic…yet.)

That’s it for now, munchachos. Don’t forget to write in and tell yers truly what you’ve sold when you sell it. Cuz TVWriter™ can’t wait to brag to all your friends. (And, more importantly, enemies. Hehehe….)

The Environment as a Character

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by Diana Black

Disney animated films such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarves and Bambi were among the breakthroughs in early animation – using a multi-plane camera that required several individual layers of hand-inked/painted backdrops to be moved past the camera at varying depths and speed to produce a three-dimensional effect. Thousands of hours requiring painstaking attention to detail went into producing the beautiful imagery that would later surround and interact with the characters. Maurice Day – one of Disney’s most celebrated animation artists, would spend weeks in the forest just to get the right ‘feel’ for the ‘on-screen’ environment he wanted to create. As children we recoiled in fear of the twisted, nightmarish trees tearing at Snow White or the fire consuming Bambi’s forest home. The notion of ‘environment as character’ will be revisited in another Disney film, Into the Woods but malevolent forests are not the only environments capable of threatening the protagonist. The vacuum called ‘space’, a mere 62 miles (100 km) above the Earth’s surface is terrifyingly lethal, as seen in awesome films like Gravity and Interstellar.

Are the environments created for TV land perceived just as viscerally? As emerging television writers creating the ‘Bible’ for our episodic masterpiece, it’s a given that our heroes and villains be immersed in a high-stakes situation but thinking back to that latest project, did the environment actively support or hinder the characters in their momentous struggle? Was [it] simply ‘there’ with the decision left up to the Director as to how much it informed the narrative and the impact it would have (or not) on the characters?

Perhaps clarification of what is meant by the term ‘environment’ is needed here. In addition to the aforementioned physical variety, there’s the gritty, urban jungles prominent within crime dramas – Sons of Anarchy and True Detective; the squalor of a post-apocalyptic world – The Walking Dead and then there’s the ‘environment of the mind’ – the psychological state of being; for example, when our protagonist ‘goes over to the dark side’ – Breaking Bad. What about a suppressive environment such as portrayed within Orange is the New Black? Here a further distinction is possible – the claustrophobic, brick-n-mortar jail cell working in collaboration with the penal system to grind the psyche of the inmates to pulp. read article

TVWriter™ Top Posts for the Week Ending 12/5/14

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Here they are, the most viewed TVWriter™ posts during the past week:

Peggy Bechko: Those Weird and Wacky Writers read article