Posts Tagged ‘soaps’

If you can’t join them, beat them.

Friday, December 18th, 2009

The Writers’ Guild blog has an interesting and important debate over the assertion that the BBC Writers’ Academy favours its trainees so that other writers get less of a chance. This blog is partly my response to the debate in the WGGB blog.

http://writersguild.blogspot.com/2009/12/bbc-writersroom-update.html

A couple of years ago I interviewed John Yorke, BBC TV series supremo:

http://www.twelvepoint.com/files/Interview%20John%20Yorke_Julian%20Friedmann.pdf

john-york1

It was clear then that the Academy made sense from the BBC’s point of view: they would get a better-trained cadre of writers, who would deliver more usable scripts in less time, thus saving time and money.

Other writers (such as my own clients) would probably get less access to slots even though some of them have had many years of diligent service in writing dozens and dozens of soap and series scripts.

There cannot be enough to go round for everyone. As a result of the increase in degree courses for scriptwriters over the last 5 years there are also now many more writers with some experience (even if it is spec academic scripts) trying for the decreasing number of slots. Inevitably there will be fewer writers getting a piece of the pie.

On top of that the BBC like the other broadcasters are having to cut the budgets of their shows. This is a reality they would be negligent not to deal with. Using equally talented writers who have been trained in the in-house hothouse of the Academy is pragmatic and sensible even though the Beeb admits a kind of sadness that they can’t please all the people all the time. But I don’t see anyone protesting at the ever-increasing new degree courses in scriptwriting that will turn out hungry and ambitious writers also after those slots.

The key – which I have encouraged through the pages of TwelvePoint.com and as an agent is to be flexible and adapt. There have been several long-running series and soaps cancelled in the last 4 or 5 years: between 500 and 600 episodes have disappeared; add that to the Academy writers and the new graduates and any scriptwriter who assumes that they can behave as they have in the past will end up probably out in the cold for a lot of the time.

Writers have to be more proactive; they have to start partially being like producers; they have to write saleable and commercial spec scripts; they have to consider other formats like novels – I had amazing feedback in Cheltenham on a session about novel writing for scriptwriters.

They way we were has gone. Like the ice shelf at the North Pole. As an agent I have had to make changes to the way I work to deal with the changing business in which we all work: so writers need to make changes. If you are a storyteller and want to earn a living by telling stories then tell stories for people who want to buy them in the format that they want to buy them. Don’t worry so much about the format. I would not recommend novelists start writing scripts (without training and experience); but most scriptwriters I talk to have read more novels than they have read scripts. You see where I am going with this. Watch out for my Cheltenham talk as a forthcoming article in TwelvePoint.

Being a little bit pregnant might be better then not being pregnant at all.

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Do other bloggers blog on holiday? I guess that gives the game away – I don’t read any one of them regularly enough to know. People tweet when they go to the loo but it seems to me that blogs should be more serious (or they become like long tweets and the saving grace for someone my age is that tweets are mercifully short since so many of them are, well…at the risk of offending many, vacuous).

A week in Berlin in the summer, when the throngs are tourists not film festival people, is a delight. I am sorry to be home, which is as holidays should be. From the opera to museums and galleries and parks, it is a transformed city.

I did have a few meetings, including with two agents: Uschi Keil of Above the Line and Steffen Weihe of Pegasus. It seems that the recession is taking its toll there – both agents are pleased to be repping directors who find work more easily than writers away from film and TV on commercials, corporate videos and ads (read the article Tom Williams wrote for us a while ago (http://www.twelvepoint.com/?q=articles/corporate-writing ) to see how one writer established himself outside the usual film and TV arenas.

Germany did in fact suffer a unique recession some years ago when the Neue Markt crashed and production companies went from supplying broadcasters with only 120 TV movies a year, down from a massive total or nearly 350. It hurt Blake Friedmann too because we supplied many of the scripts. This was even more dramatic than the UK losing Brookside, Crossroads and Family Affairs.

In some ways the current recession is not as significant as the loss of those TV movies or soap episodes. But it has allowed buyers of writers to scale down what they are paying, to prioritise the really well-established writers (hence the headlong rush to employ anyone who is considered a show-runner) and to take fewer chances than before.

It has not stopped buyers from embarking on bad ideas for shows, but playing it safe is the name of the game. For writers this means being flexible: ‘If you don’t like my principles…I’ll change them!’ is the form of flexible integrity that leads to being a little bit pregnant and being economical with the truth. Turn your hands to formats you have not tried (but which you have studied). Or take time out to write a completely new stand-alone low-budget piece of work, aimed at the 15 to 25 year olds (if not the four quadrant audience).

Whatever you do, in a recession do not stand still.

Why writers write

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

This endlessly fascinating subject came up today while talking on the phone to a student doing a degree in scriptwriting from a well-established university. The (banal) dialogue went: What do you want to do when you qualify? Write scripts. What kind of scripts? I enjoy drama, family drama? What are your strengths as a writer? Dialogue. What genres are you good at? Drama, dark comedy. How many drafts have your calling cards been through? One or maybe two. Have you targeted the easier-access shows like Doctors? No I haven’t really watched it.

What is the problem with this? Apart from the fact that a degree course in scriptwriting should prepare students better for the vocational world of freelance scriptwriting, just because you enjoy certain genres doesn’t mean you are any good at writing them.

It is cut-throat out there with experienced writers not getting enough work (so many of them teach), which is why we need a revolution in the teaching of scriptwriting, something that the Cheltenham Screenwriters’ Festival is trying to do in it’s four-day intensive programme (if you have not booked you should – it can change your life).

Scriptwriting is a profession like plumbing or medicine; it is not a self-indulgent wish-fulfilling way of spending time. As Orwell said in his book Why I Write, egotism is usually a major factor, but top of the list for scriptwriters (book writers too) should be How will I earn money?

The early stages of a career earning money as a writer are usually not done writing what you want to write, but writing what people who pay need to have written.

The calling card script is the key to getting this work, as are credits of almost any sort. This is not the time to be precious or proud or arrogant or self-indulgent.

Most of the leading TV showrunners started on the soaps, a difficult medium demanding discipline and talent in equal proportions. But so few writers are genuinely interested in soaps, usually regarding them as a lower form of writing. Pity, as they get the biggest audiences and probably have more to say about the world than any other form of writing.

The best answer in the industry to the question ‘Why do you want to be a writer?’ is probably a combination of having something you passionately want to say about the world, and because you believe it is the way you personally can make money. Showing that you understand how money is made by writers in the industry is some demonstration that you might be someone worth working with, as long as you also have some talent.

Writing as a career is far more difficult than many who teach want their students to believe. It also involves much more than just writing: apart from reading widely (scripts, books, TwelvePoint.com) it involves networking so that people get to know you. Check Janice Day’s networking workshop (http://janiceday.wordpress.com) – she is the most assiduous networking client I have known.

But don’t focus only on what you enjoy or like watching (reading scripts will teach you far more than going to the movies). That is unlikely to get you far in the real world outside higher education.

Julian