Peggy Bechko: Six Don’ts When Ending Your Story

by Peggy Bechko

You’ve written a great story and now you’re coming to the end; time to wrap it up, keep it tight and really give it some punch. Ending the story can be harder than many other aspects of writing it because there are traps we writers tend to fall into. So here are a few to keep your sharp writer’s eye out for.

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  1. Now is not the time to introduce new characters or heaven’s forbid a new subplot. Anything new cropping up at this point should have been foreshadowed long before, even if it was a subtle and mysterious reference.
  2. Don’t think your ending should be some grand philosophizing on your part, that now is the time to muse about the universe or give some lengthy explanation of what has gone before. Boring. Now is the time to keep description tight and maximize the conflict of your story and the action surrounding it. If you’ve written well you’ve planted all the little bombs along the way. Now’s the time to let ‘er rip.
  3. Avoid gimmicks. Now is not the time to do a quick twist and a trick ending that’s quirky. Unless you’re desperate for that final twist and have laid the ground work for it don’t just toss it into the writing mix like a wrench in a clothes dryer.  It’ll sound just as ‘clunky’. Your reader, whether editor, producer agent or book reader has stuck with you because you’ve engaged him or her. Don’t throw in something so out of context that he or she resolves never to read your work again.
  4. Don’t pass up the opportunity to tie up loose ends you know every reader is going to want to have resolved. Consider every question you so carefully planted along the way and address them in some fashion; even if just to let them know it is something that will be left hanging.
  5. The end of the story is not the time to suddenly change your voice or your attitude or have a character suddenly do something totally in opposition to everything else that character has done previously. Unless you foreshadowed it all that will do is make the ending sound contrived and slapped on – like you couldn’t figure out how to end your story.
  6. Don’t think you can slip past resolving the central conflict of your tale. Happily ever after isn’t necessary, but do try to have the conclusion be somehow a positive. And if your hero has been doing a balancing act between good guy and bad guy give him a way to redeem himself. Readers mostly want to feel uplifted at the end of a book or a movie. Rarely does a totally dark ending work out well.

That’s it. My suggestions for the day. Hopefully it’s some food for thought when you’re working on that spectacular ending and you’ll bring home a really strong closer.

Herbie J Pilato: Classic TV & Self-Esteem

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by Herbie J Pilato

“We celebrate the integrity of classic television.”

That’s the motto of The Classic TV Preservation Society (CTVPS), a nonprofit organization that offers TV & Self-Esteem Seminars to schools, colleges, community, senior and business centers or organizations.

The mission? read article

5 Things to Keep in Mind When Making an Independent TV Pilot

This year’s New York Television Festival has come and gone, but it’s given us – as in we TV series creator/showrunner wannabes – much to think about. Here’s what we think is some of the best advice to come out of it:

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by Alison Willmore

New York Television Festival founder Terence Gray notes that the fest has been seeing many filmmakers with TV projects… “I think if you look at the networks and premium cable, you see that a lot of very well-respected filmmakers and directors have entered the television marketplace and they’re doing great series,” Gray observed. “Here’s a great opportunity to use the skills that they’ve honed in storytelling and independent film and migrate to television — we’re happy to showcase their incredible talent.”

The growing demand from cable channels for original series and the rise of online platforms has also made for more outlets for new projects, and Gray adds that “my hope is with places like Amazon and Microsoft specifically, that there really are opportunities for emerging artists to come in and create great series for them.” That said, an indie pilot requires a somewhat different approach from that of a film — Gray offered us five tips to keep in mind. read article

Leesa Dean: Adventures of a Web Series Newbie

wranglingcomplexityChapter 35 – Wrangling Celebs
by Leesa Dean

I’ve mentioned it in passing a few times here, but since April I’ve been working on a TOP SECRET project. It’s brand new, I have a producing partner (a first!) and we’re still a ways off from figuring out when we’re gonna release it, etc. And while, as the world’s most superstitious atheist, I don’t normally like to talk about projects til I’m ready to release them, I will talk about this.

We’ve been having a tough time wrangling celebs.

When you’re a relative nobody like me, let’s just say it doesn’t hurt to have a celeb attached to your project. It’s definitely a way to get views and, if said celeb has a big following and tweets about it, well you just might have a hit on your hands. read article

Protecting Your Creative Rights

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Well, first of all, you have to know what they are…

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Hardly a day goes by that TVWriter™ and, mostly, LB, don’t get an inquiry or three from new writers wanting to know how to protect their work from being stolen or how to protect themselves from being taken advantage of, or even scammed, in a deal. read article