Herbie J Pilato’s New Book Will Be In The Stores TOMORROW

13716055_1040046389406384_6051592490385733318_nThat’s right, gang. TVWriter™’s own hunk of a Contributing Editor, Herbie J Pilato, Golden Age TV Expert Extraordinaire, has a new book for us to glom onto.

It’s called Dashing, Daring, and Debonair: TV’s Top Male Icons from the 50s, 60s, and 70s, but between us you can call it DD&D, and it’s chock full of all that full-bodied, full-blooded, full steam ahead Herbie flavor. 

The book drops tomorrow, but you can, of course, get a headstart on learning all about your favorite TV doods and order it from Amazon today! read article

Peggy Bechko’s World: Creating Comics – an abbreviated how-to

Planet of the Eggs co-creators Peggy Bechko and Charlene Brash-Sorenson
Planet of the Eggs co-creators Peggy Bechko and Charlene Brash-Sorenson

by Peggy Bechko

Since our newest in the Planet of The Eggs series, Eruption, has now been released in paperback, I decided this week to talk a bit about the creation of the comics. It takes a whole lot of work, but the creation process is such great fun I thought I’d share a bit of it with our readers.

I really can’t tell folks how to find a story idea other than to be open, to research and to be aware of the weird world around you. I can, however give some practical tips.

There’s a lot to it, but basically my writing and creative partner Charlene Brash-Sorensen and I use Comic Life software (you can try it free, but there is a low cost to buy – no, I’m not an affiliate so I won’t make any money if you buy a copy) to create the actual comic, but prior to that there’s a lot of prep work. read article

How to Succeed as a Female Writer in TV & Film

Whoa, talk about the time a’changin’. Looks like being a female writer in Hollywood is now in, hip, and trendy. Or at least ultra PC. Even the staid old media darling, Writer’s Digest, is getting into the act. Better late than never, we suppose:

Jessica Fletcher writing Murder She Wrote

by Dr. Rosanne Welch

You have to “Alertly Seize Your Opportunities”, learn the “Company Way”, insist to any still-cave-dwelling males who may come your way that a writer’s assistant “is not a toy” (nor is she – or he – meant to fetch your dry cleaning or work overtime for no pay while the producer reaps all the benefits of sending a well-formatted script to the network executives for approval). You should adjust to workdays being “Long Days” and learn “How to Handle a Disaster” (like actors throwing scripts in the trash or writers throwing things across the room). You should be comfortable with the idea that there still is a bit of a “Brotherhood of Man” atmosphere in writers rooms which are still 80/20 male/female. (Having grown up with brothers or a good set of guy friends – or having played high school sports helps.) But most of all you have to remember to “Believe in You” because no one else – not your agent, not your manager, not your producer, and sometimes not your family – will always be in your corner.

If you survived that paragraph and still want to be in the business, good. Such a reality check is necessary because dreams don’t come cheap – but they do come if you keep at your writing and keep making connections along the way. That said, writers take many paths to their careers. I’ve known ski instructors who passed spec scripts off to the wives of producers who eventually hired them. I’ve known limo drivers to producers who gained their trust traveling the 405 for a year and I’ve known writers who passed spec movie scripts to the boyfriends of former college roommates who happened to be directors. (I’m still waiting for the story of the female writer who gets to pass her script off to the former female college roommate who happens to be a director so we can skip this middle-girlfriend step.) read article

You’ll Never Believe How Important High Stakes are to your Story!

raisingstakes

by Diana Black

CHUCK
Bowling Saturday?

DAVID
No.

CHUCK
But if we don’t lead with you, we’re history, man. read article

Conversation with Novelist & 2009 People’s Pilot Winner John Adcox

Back in 2007, TVWriter™’s People’s Pilot Competition declared John Adcox’s spec pilot script, CHALLENGERS OF MYSTERY the overall contest winner. Since then, John’s veered off the TV writing path and become a highly regarded writer of books and short stories.  Recently, John gave the following highly informative interview about writing, marketing, and everything in between:

5 Questions with Fantasy Author John Adcox
by Will Bly

I interview John Adcox and receive some of the most-detailed answers to date. We explore John’s varied background, relate his marketing background to john adcoxwriting, and ask him to predict the future.

he first impression I have of you is that you are a man who wears many hats – publisher, author, and screenwriter for starters. You also boast a solid background in marketing and communications, and have helped some notable companies develop their brand. As a writerly person how important is it to be flexible in the age of the internet? read article