6 Unusual Habits of Exceptionally Creative People

Sorry, but we can’t help ourselves. Lurve, lurve, lurve learning how to be better than we are. It’s the American Way, yeah?

horray-for-the-artsby Travis Bradberry

I expend a huge amount of my time and energy writing books and articles and working to keep my company innovative. I’ve developed an obsession with some of history’s most creative minds in the hope that I might learn some tricks to expand my own creative productivity.

Some of the things I’ve learned are more useful than others, and some are simply too weird to try. read article

Writing About Writing About TV

Gather ’round, aspiring writers about TV writing, we at TVWriter™ are proud to bring you this truly intellectual discussion about the kind of thing we do right here every day (till we get a gig writing actual TV, in which case, “Whoa, Nellie!”)

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by Linda Holmes

It was years ago that TV critic Alan Sepinwall said something to me that I’ve remembered ever since and that he doesn’t remember saying: that writing about television was shifting its focus from what is said before shows are on to what is said after shows are on. It made sense to me, since my career writing about TV started with writing recaps of shows I used an actual VCR to record. With tapes. I didn’t get screeners, I didn’t get advances — I just taped things, and then I wrote about them. I think now, that shift is so obvious that it’s taken for granted.

This came up again recently when Quentin Tarantino sat down for a long and searching interview with New York Magazine. After he expressed, among many other things, his affection for the departed HBO drama The Newsroom, interviewer Lane Brown mentioned the show’s mixed reviews. Tarantino’s response, in addition to wondering whether anyone reads TV criticism, included: “TV critics review the pilot. Pilots of shows suck.” read article

13 Tips for Actually Getting Some Writing Accomplished

At last! Just what we’ve been waiting for. A guide to getting our writing, erm, written. And being finished is just as good as being brilliant, year?

Maybe better cuz for some of us it’s even harder.

dreamstime_xs_16028339by Gretchen Rubin

One of the challenges of writing is…writing. Here are some tips that I’ve found most useful for myself, for actually getting words onto the page: read article

Follow Your Opportunity, Not Your Passion

Say what? Doesn’t advice like “follow your opportunity” directly oppose following your passion? But we all know that life’s all about going where your enthusiasm leads you, don’t we? Hmm?

Well….

followyourheartornot read article

Like Athletes, Writers Need to Warm Up

Know all those jocks who mocked you way back when cuz you were busy writing instead of playing sports?

Well, guess what, fellow scribes? We’re much more like our braggadocio-filled brethren than they – and we – ever thought:

pilates-how-to-warm-up-and-cool-down.WidePlayer read article