Larry Brody: Live! From Paradise! #143 “The Sweat Lodge”

THE USUAL NOTE FROM LB: From the summer of 2002 to  the spring of 2010, Gwen the Beautiful and I were the proud and often exhausted owners of a beautiful Ozarks property we called Cloud Creek Ranch.

In many ways, the ranch was paradise. But it was a paradise with a price that started going up before we even knew it existed. Here’s another Monday musing about our adventure and the lessons we learned. read article

Top Views & Trending Posts on TVWriter™ in the Week Ending 4/4/21

Thumbs Up Y’all

Good morning! Welcome to another new week at TVWriter™.  Today we begin with a look at our most popular blog posts and resource pages during the last 7 days.

They are, in order:

40 TV SHOW BIBLE EXAMPLES TO DOWNLOAD AND STUDY. read article

Stephanie Bourbon on the 2 Things All Writers Need to do on Social Media

LB’S NOTE: One of our fave TV writers-illustrators-screenwriters-vloggers, Stephanie Bourbon, has something important to say about – gasp! – social media. Don’t panic and run away. Keep reading!

by Stephanie Bourbon

This week I’m talking about what social media you MUST have if you are a writer. Okay, maybe not a must have, or a should have but both of these could really help you grow your business as a writer. read article

“I’ve written less in the last year than I have my entire career.”

Time now for a few words about our ongoing lockdown. Some people were sure it would be a  major benefit to TV and screenwriters. How’s that working for us so far?

Despite Solitude, Lockdown Wasn’t A Creative Boon for Screenwriters
by Bryn Sandberg

Writing was the rare Hollywood vocation that never had to shut down, but A-list scribes including Damon Lindelof and Courtney Kemp describe a different reality: “I’ve written less in the last year than I have my entire career.” read article

Cartoon: ‘Multitudes’

TVWriter™’s all-time favorite artist/philosopher, Grant Snider reminds us of what life can really become if we let it.

See more of Grant Snider’s extraordinary perceptions of human creativity at Incidental Comics, HERE read article