John Ostrander: Through the Years

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by John Ostrander

I recently was talking to my friend and frequent (and upcoming) collaborator, Jan Duursema, about just the technological changes I’ve seen in comics over the course of my career. It must be getting close to thirty years since I began all this.

When I first started, I wrote my plots and scripts on a manual typewriter with a carbon copy for me. For you boys and girls who don’t know what a carbon was, it was a black inked piece of paper that you placed between the first and second pieces of paper. As the typewriter key struck the first page, the force of it would penetrate the carbon and leave an identical letter on the second page. If you hit it hard enough. In theory.

When I began, I wrote out my plots and scripts in longhand on yellow legal sized pads of paper from which I would then transcribe to the typewriter. It was easier to make corrections on the yellow pad than on the typed page. There, if you even made a spelling mistake, you had to haul out the Wite-Out (sic) or Liquid Paper. These were small round bottles of white paint with a cap with a small brush in it and it was a pain to use. If you didn’t seal it up properly, the liquid would dry out and become unusable. Some inkers who use it to this day either for corrections or to create effects. read article

The Cult of Jason Katims

Attention FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS and PARENTHOOD fans – this one’s for you. (The rest of you Philistines are welcome to read it too. Never say TVWriter™ isn’t big-hearted, y’hear?)

jason-katimsby Mike Sager

Jason Katims is best known for making grown men cry.

Lunching at a trendy spot in Brentwood, California, Katims laughs at this. “It’s not like I’m sitting up in bed in the morning thinking, I’m gonna make somebody cry,” he says, his longish graying hair grazing the top of his collar, his accent still carrying a trace of his lefty Jewish Brooklyn roots. Despite his two decades as a successful writer and executive producer of a string of emotionally fraught and critically acclaimed TV series—including My So-Called Life, Friday Night Lights, Parenthood,and Roswell—the fifty-five-year-old Katims has the unassuming air of a guy who survived many lean years of workshops and showcases, as well as a day job slinging copy for a graphic designer. read article

A TV Writer Teaches Us About “NOOOO!!!”

And believe us when we say that understanding the No word and all its ramifications – and dealing with it appropriately – can make all the difference in anybody’s TV (or film) writing career:

n0by David S. Simon

I am in a war of words and I’m fighting it all by myself, day by day, battle by battle, against an insidious enemy that isn’t anywhere but is everywhere I look.

Judging by that opening paragraph it looks like I’m also in the riddle business and in some ways I am.
In this case the riddle is my life that seems to be born out of an incredibly evasive, complex code that requires an Alan Turing to break. read article

Peggy Bechko’s World: Writing the First Draft

prachettby Peggy Bechko

Writers are always digging for tips on how to do it quicker, better, more detailed, less so, whatever!

But I note the dreaded first draft is frequently skipped or maybe sort of glossed over. So, let’s take a look.

You’re a writer, you have a great idea, but all sorts of ‘tips’ are hanging you up. You don’t want to be too wordy, you worry about what your ‘first’ reader might think, you want to get everything just right – right from the beginning.
Not going to happen. Really. read article

“Am I really a Writer?”

Mindy Newell isn’t just a writer, she’s an all-round writing pro extraordinaire, with a resume to die for. And here she is asking herself the Writer’s Eternal Question, just like all the rest of us. What a world, what a world….

FreelanceWritersTips
by Mindy Newell

One of the doctors I’ve worked with once asked me “What’s it like to be a writer?”

I guarantee that every single one of the columnists here at ComicMix has been asked that question, or a form of it, quadrillions of times. read article