Peggy Bechko’s World: Your Inner Critic and You

Quiet_Your_Thoughts_BSP

by Peggy Bechko

Everybody and his or her brother can be a critic; is willing to criticize the writing of others…especially if they don’t write themselves, right?

And over time all that criticism from editors, producers, well-meaning friends, critical relatives who just know you’re wasting your time, a reader’s group who though well-meaning, don’t know what they’re talking about, whoever, builds up until it all super-charges the self-critic already camped in your brain. In fact, by now as a writer of scripts and/or books, you might not even be able to tell exactly who or what makes up that tyrant of a self-critic sitting in the bleachers in your brain.

It might do you some good to figure out what the composite actually is, but the main lesson to take away from this is, your writing absolutely must make your audience come back again and again. The audience must look for your name in the credits of a movie. The novel must hook the reader to return to continue reading that book and to look for more with your name on the cover of the next. read article

Career Advice Dept: Why We Make Irrational Decisions

Logic? Who needs logic when it comes to decision-making? We’ve all got our guts, right? Infallible instincts for where to go and how to get there?

Oh, wait:

read article

Idris Elba has his own TV Writing Contest in the UK

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Buckner/Variety/REX/Shutterstock (5577734ai) Idris Elba The 22nd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, Press Room, Los Angeles, America - 30 Jan 2016
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Buckner/Variety/REX/Shutterstock (5577734ai)
Idris Elba
The 22nd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, Press Room, Los Angeles, America – 30 Jan 2016

by TVWriter™ Press Service

Yep, the big guy is moving into a whole new racket. Which we think is weird because everybody knows he makes up all his own dialog on Luther.

What? He doesn’t? Whoa, that’s good writing. Clearly, he’s gonna be a terrific contest judge.

Here’s the deal, direct from the P.R. team for the parties involved: read article

Why Do We Keep Rebooting and Remaking and Rewinding and…?

Turns out it’s because…humans. It’s how we’re wired. Day-am, kids. Day-am it to hell!

“Self Portrait 1889? remake by Seth Johnson
“Self Portrait 1889? remake by Seth Johnson

by Annalee Newitz

It’s the question that every movie [and TV] fan asks in summer: why are there so many remakes and sequels and reboots? It turns out that science may have an answer. Unfortunately, if you’re hoping for more original stories, the prognosis is not good.

Two network theorists in the Netherlands, Folgert Karsdorp and Antal van den Bosch, just published a study on story networks in Royal Society Open Science. Story networks, they write, are “streams of retellings in which retellers modify and adapt retellings in a gradual and accumulative way.” There is also a basic structure that seems to underly how these networks function. To explore retellings, the researchers looked at more than 200 versions of the Little Red Riding Hood story, which had been retold over the past two centuries. They measured the stories’ similarity to one another with the amusingly named “bag-of-words” technique, which reveals how many words two texts have in common. Then they created a network diagram showing relatedness between stories over time. Earlier stories became what the researchers called “pre-texts” that inspired later retellings. read article

Writers Guild of America West July, 2016 Calendar

WGAw July 2016 CalThe Clickable Version is HERE