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In case you’ve missed what’s happening at TVWriter™, the most popular blog posts during the week ending yesterday were:
Peggy Bechko’s World: So Finish It Already! 4 Tips for Finishing Your Story
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In case you’ve missed what’s happening at TVWriter™, the most popular blog posts during the week ending yesterday were:
Peggy Bechko’s World: So Finish It Already! 4 Tips for Finishing Your Story

Survival isn’t something I’ve addressed often in this blog before, but with many of reality television’s best (in my opinion, anyway) behind-the-scenes players going through slumps more often than usual these days, I think it’s a good time to bring it up.
In 2010, there were just over 760 reality shows in production, according to the results of a Kansas City Star study on the industry. Anecdotally, different sources claim that that number’s dropped slightly, but is still well above 700 shows. Tastes change, and the amount of available work in dramas, sitcoms and reality shows naturally ebbs and flows based on what viewers are in the mood for.
I find myself working less often than maybe five or ten years ago when I’d wrap a project on Friday and start a new one Monday. I’d been able to work as much as I wanted to whenever I wanted to, and with a decade or so of credits on a string of well-received shows, there was no reason for me to think there’d be an end to that kind of possibility.
I’m a huge fan of the X-Men film series. I was so excited that another one was coming out. X-Men Apocalypse introduces the audience to the first ever mutant, coincidentally enough named, Apocalypse. In this film the X-Men must reunite to defeat his plan to extinct human kind. What do we think, everybody? Will the X’s succeed?
THE GOOD:
THE BAD;

Speaking of crowdfunding (as we were earlier in the week) this adaptation of the award-winning novel Lullaby, written by the author of a certain cult favorite novel called Fight Club, looks like a really good thing to this fussy (I am, honest…just ask my mother about my eating habits) TVWriter™ minion.
Here’s the skinny from Kickstarter:
More CARGO 3120, by popular request. (For reals!)
If you’re not up to speed, please start from the beginning HERE
by Aaron Walker Sr.In an underground bunker, several hundred meters outside the Ore Storage area, an eight man ISG Special Forces Unit known as Saber Team stood huddled around a small sensor station. The team leader: Lieutenant Donald Shepard, a stocky ebony skinned mountain of muscle, stared intently at the screen, when his second in command: First Sargent Alex Chavez, reported in.