Thursday picketing

I’ll be back at my usual gate and time (5:45 a.m. at Paramount’s Van Ness gate) on Thursday, but writers interested in multi-camera comedies might want to check out Warners Gate 2, for the next Teaching Thursday.

From the organizers:

Writers of various genres join us each Thursday, making themselves available to discuss story, structure and everything in between to aspirings. All you have to do is come out and pick up a sign.

For our second Teaching Thursday hilarity will ensue! It’s MULTI-CAMERA COMEDY DAY! Not sure how to write for geeks when you’re tragically hip? The cool kids from “The Big Bang Theory” have answers! Want to know how to get your own personal studio audience? Writers from “The War At Home” know! And remember: If it rains on our heads, it’s tragic. If it rains on yours, it’s comedy gold!

Thursday, January 31st
9 AM to Noon
Warner Bros Gate 2.

  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • SphereIt
  • StumbleUpon
January 30, 2008 @ 5:38 pm |
Filed under: Strike

2 Responses to “Thursday picketing”

  1. LHOOQtius ov Borg says:

    I already wish I were living somewhere where I could go physically walk the picket lines, but the Teaching Thursdays doubly make me wish I were down in LA to participate. If people who do participate in the teaching sessions could post links to Teaching Thursdays “class notes” for us out of town folks, that would be grand.

  2. Seth says:

    Is there any way you could point me in the right direction of finding more of the easter eggs? I found the “voices” feature, but I get the feeling there are more…

 

About

This site is run by screenwriter John August. Mostly, he answers reader-submitted questions about the craft, but occasionally he goes on tangents that run far afield of writing and filmmaking. You'll also find info on past, present and future projects.


For photos, blurbs and uncomfortable self-promotion, you can check out his Facebook fan page.

Ask a Question

If you have a question about screenwriting or my movies that hasn't been answered, by all means ask. There are a few guidelines to follow.

Featured Articles

101: Some screenwriting basics


There are more than 900 articles on the site. You can find category archives at the bottom of every page.

Watch Me

Now available on Amazon, iTunes, Netflix, and in stores.

More movies in the Store.

Feeds