How To Edit Comedy Scenes for Max Laughs

Editing for comedy is a very specialized skill. One wrong shot – too wide, too close, whatever – can ruin the laugh. Here’s an excellent primer for new comedy writers, directors, producers, and editors. Read on and avoid all-too-easy to make beginner mistakes:

seinfeld-curbby Noam Kroll

No matter what genre they’re working in, an editor’s job is undoubtably a difficult one. That said, editing comedycomes with its own set of principles and challenges that can often make it that much harder to tackle. Unlike many other genres that have a lot of leeway in terms of pacing and timing, comedic edits need to be extremely tight and specific in order to land well with an audience.

For those of you out there cutting comedy, whether it’s in a commercial or feature-film format — these tips on how to edit comedy scenes are for you! read article

As the Old TV Paradigm Dies, Shows w/Strong Brands & Social Appeal will Knock ‘Em Dead

It’s always fun to watch mainstream or Old Media thinkers catch up on things the interwebs already have known. Case in point:

TVApp_economy_embedby Joel Espelien

As novelist William Gibson once said, the future is already here; it’s just not evenly distributed. Consider that in the U.S., revenue from the top 10 video streaming apps more than tripled during the year ending in July, driven by HBO Now, Netflix and Hulu. And in early September, Apple CEOTim Cook made it official, proclaiming in support of the new (more app-friendly) Apple TV device that, “The future of TV is apps.”

If the future of TV is indeed an app, who wins and who loses? read article

Cartoon: THE FIRST MOVIE CRITIC

Inasmuch as this movie is appearing on the wall of somebody’s home, we’re going to call it TV.

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From “Non Sequitur”

Indie Film & VIdeo: IDLE

Jonah PrimianoCapture

Being indie means creating freely.

At least, it should. read article

The Lesson of Amazon Studios’ New Pilots: “Forget Newbies. We want the old pros.”

Back when Amazon first started producing its own “TV” shows, it was all about recruiting interweb newbs. Giving ’em a chance to get into the biz and learn the ropes. Then came TRANSPARENT and its Emmy and now, well, looks like the welcome mat’s been yanked:

Amazon Confirms 6 Pilots From
Shane Black, Sacha Baron Cohen, Tig Notaro & Louis CK, Others
by Nellie Andreeva

iStock_000014869787XSmallAmazon Studios, coming off its first Emmy wins for Transparent, once again waited for its pilots to be fully cast and in various stages of production to announce them. Last week, the streaming service officially unveiled its lineup of 6 fall 2015 pilots: WesternEdge, from Shane Black and Fred Dekker, starring Max Martini, Ryan Kwanten and Yvonne Strahovski; the 1969 newsroom-set Good Girls Revolt, starring Genevieve Angelson, Chris Diamantopoulos and Jim Belushi; Highston, a comedy about a 19-year old (Lewis Pullman) produced by Sacha Baron Cohen and co-starring Mary Lynn Rajskub and Chris Parnell, with Shaq and Flea playing themselves; Tig Notaro/Diablo Cody/Louis CK’s dark comedy One Mississippi; political thriller Patriot, written and directed by Steven Conrad and co-starring Terry O’Quinn; and Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald bio-series Z starring Christina Ricci, directed by Tim Blake Nelson. Not included is David E. Kelley’s legal drama Trial starring Billy Bob Thornton, which is expected to go straight to series. Here are detailed descriptions of Amazon’s six newly announced pilots with full casting information:

Edge read article