Larry Brody: Make Your Scenes Flow

Larry Brody’s TV Writing Tips & Tricks #2
by Larry Brody

Over my years running various TV series I’ve been amazed at how many professional writers don’t understand the basics of good storytelling. In a nutshell, the trick to working out your plot is to always remember that the scenes must flow from and to each other in a progression that takes into account three different elements. That is, it must be logical, surprising, and climactic.

What this means is that everything that happens must grow out of what happened before. On one level, given the personalities of the characters and the situation they are in, each plot point must be inevitable. And on another level, these inevitable twists and turns must be such that the reader or viewer could never have predicted them. read article

Last Week’s Most Important Cord Cutting Developments

Cord Cutters News gives us the latest on the cord cutting front. Black Friday news w/Deals on Roku Gear, Fire TV Devices, and More!

Cord Cutters Video Channel: https://twitter.com/CordCuttersNews
Cord Cutters Web Site: http://cordcuttersnews.com read article

Happy Thanksgiving 2020 from TVWriter™

Inasmuch as we’re all stuck at home, and many of us may be there alone, we thought we would pass on this most excellent and historical Thanksgiving message.

That’s right, kids. It’s the legendary “Turkeys Away” episode of WKRP in Cincinnati, brought to us by Tony Figueroa and his “This Week in Television History YouTube Channel.

Thanks and Happy Thanksgiving from us to Tony and everybody who’ve visited TVWriter™ this year!

YABBA DABBA DOO!: REMEMBERING “THE FLINTSTONES”

There’s a reason we call “Classic TV” by that very term, and Michael Coate’s remembrance of one of the most successful innovations in TV history (so successful that now, 60 years later, very few viewers understand how innovative it really was) is every bit as classic as its subject matter.

by Michael Coates

(LB’s NOTE: Our thanks to pal Herbie J Pilato for calling our attention to this “classic article.”) read article

Larry Brody’s TV Writing Tips & Tricks #1

Outlining & Writer’s Block
by Larry Brody

One of the big differences between beginning writers and “old pros” is that beginning writers are always telling me how much they love sitting down at the keyboard and “winging” their scripts, while the pros invariably stress the importance of having a good outline before they start writing.

As an “elder statesman” myself, I’ve tried both methods, and outlining your story is the way to go. In television we spend as much time on the outline as we do on all drafts of the script combined. read article