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Adam Davis, year five

June 19, 2012 First Person, Follow Up, Los Angeles

Adam Davis wrote one of the original First Person posts for the site back in 2007, when he [first moved to Los Angeles](http://johnaugust.com/2007/starting-out-in-hollywood) from Des Moines. In 2009, we checked in with him again, and found him [working as PA](http://johnaugust.com/2009/adam-davis-year-two).

At a reader’s request, I asked Adam to tell us what he’s up to now.

—

first personWhen I first moved out here to pursue the writing/directing dream, I was driving on the 10, a mile from my exit in Culver City and I kept looking for the Hollywood sign in the hills. I wanted to see that piece of iconography so badly, I risked taking my eyes off the road.

That’s when I rear-ended the car in front of me.

adam davisSix years later, I see the sign every day when I drive home taking Gower. I’ve learned not to stare. Since I last checked in with you good folks, I’ve seen some great gains in my day job and my writing. The day job is a bit more tangible to brag about to my parents because it’s tough to explain that holy crap my dialogue finally doesn’t suck!

So my days have been filled with working on promotions and licensing for the newly-minted [third-top-grossing film](http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/world/) of all time. My set PA experience has paid off handsomely as I’ve helped produce two great partner spots, one featuring the littlest Earth’s Mightiest Heroes for Target, and the other featuring a massive film set rebuild for Red Baron. I’ve been creatively working on all the toys (Hulk Hands make their triumphant return!) and am most proud of the Hot Toys line that’s coming out.

I also worked on the line of kids and young adult books that came out with the movie, using my writing skills to great effect.

But enough of that detour. Highland gets backed up around Sunset anyway.

It was after a few failed short film and music video projects that I decided to focus entirely on writing and let the directing wait. It’s much cheaper and I felt I needed to get great at one thing before moving on to another trade. I subsequently entered my “content production” phase (still ongoing). I’ve banged out four features, three original TV pilots and one children’s book — some with my writing partner, others by myself — that are ready to hit the marketplace. We’ve also outlined a few features of various budgetary levels and are planning to pen a second episode of one of our series to hopefully make it easier to sell.

It’s been a consistent workflow: finish a draft, work on a new property’s outline, go back and do a second draft…some of these things happening simultaneously. That’s one of the benefits of a writing partner. For example, I’m doing the first draft of a new feature as my writing partner fixes and polishes the last draft of our other feature’s outline. When I’m done, he’ll take the second draft and I may start work on the first draft off the outline. Or he’ll take the first stab as I cook up a new idea. This is what we’ve been doing for the past three years.

And during all this writing, I’ve been hustling as much as I can. Talking to people about the projects, getting some reads, getting great notes, revising drafts as necessary.

I’ve had some “meetings,” but not like the “Come on into Screen Gems, here’s a parking validation” type — the more casual lunch or drinks ones. The ones where I don’t have to slightly-dress-up, but I still do. What’s important is whom these meetings are with: Not the people *of* power, but the people who *will have* power.

I remember John saying something along the lines of “the group of people who are your age will rise up together, and they’ll be the ones to help you.” His version of, “Be nice to the assistant, because they’ll be running the studio one day.” Completely true. I’ve seen many of my interns go on to production companies or lit agencies, and now I’m asking them to read my stuff in the hopes they can help me. Don’t be a dick, don’t burn bridges, and be grateful for people even reading your stuff.

But the one thing I’ve learned above all is to be patient. People can take a very long time to read. We all have lives, and they’re doing a favor. I’m not owed anything, and it’s been a hard climb back up the hill after deluding myself into believing I’d be directing a feature at 23.

I sometimes curse Robert Rodriguez’s [Rebel Without a Crew](http://www.amazon.com/dp/0452271878/?tag=johnaugustcom-20) for cooking up wild dreams that I thought would be a reality. But the book did me more good than bad: It showed me a work ethic that I still strive to reach and maintain.

I’ve learned that I’ll be just like all those other hard working people that struggled for 10 years to reach their dreams, or at least the beginnings of them. But those are now the stories I’m interested in. Not about the hotshot kid who really hasn’t had enough life experience, but the Eastwoods, the Scotts, the Abrams.

And in dark moments I do occasionally entertain the doubts that I’ll never sell a script or direct. But it doesn’t stop me from trying.

Because I need the writing. Three years of consistent content production has left me unable to go without it. I get cranky when I haven’t had my fix. Me typing this is a nice bump that will get me to that next scene tomorrow after work. I’ll keep writing what I want as more genre-mashing Pirate Gladiators vs. Sunkist Sodas are bought.

I know it seems stupid in this climate, but I still believe in good, original ideas. I need to hold onto some of that naïveté I had when I was staring off into the hills, looking for that beacon of hope that fuels all out-of-town newbies. But the plastic bumper of reality that is years spent working and learning is so much more rewarding, even if it’s painful.

I’ll let you know when the next collision happens.

Less IMDb: Faster and cleaner than ever

June 5, 2012 Apps, Less IMDb

Ryan spent much of this last week updating [Less IMDb](http://quoteunquoteapps.com/less-imdb), our browser plug-in that makes IMDb approximately one billion times better.

Version 1.2 sniffs out some of the new cruft that IMDb has packed into its title and people pages, hiding it away so you can see the credits. Ryan has also streamlined how it works, so you’ll find pages loading faster than ever.

Here’s a [little screencast](http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nv0A5XUOpBg) I did that shows what it does and how to install it:

For Chrome, you can install it from [our site](http://quoteunquoteapps.com/less-imdb), or with one click from the [Chrome Web Store](https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/necddehinbndjblnhmgcodpobjfpblle?hl=en-US). Well done, Google!

For Safari, it’s three clicks from [our site](http://quoteunquoteapps.com/less-imdb). It’s also available on Apple’s [Safari extensions gallery](https://extensions.apple.com/), but without an easy link. Bad Apple.

If you have an earlier version of Less IMDb for Safari, it’s a good idea to uninstall it first to prevent possible wonkiness. Instructions are in the video.

Less IMDb was the first thing we made as a company, and it still gets the most traffic to the site. We don’t make any money off of it, but goodwill is its [own currency](http://myothercareer.wordpress.com/2010/11/16/less-imdb-safari-extension/):

> Their Less IMDB Safari extension is a godsend. It gets rid of nearly all of the garbage and delivers the streamlined UI that’s as close to how it used to be as possible.

And that’s why we made it.

Highland update fixes .fdx, adds Snow Leopard support

June 4, 2012 Apps, Highland, News

highland logoThe new beta of [Highland](http://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland/) — released last night — tackles three major issues.

The first fix is exporting to Final Draft (.fdx). If you encountered a file that opened as bunch of (cont’d)’s, give it another try.

The second major addition: legacy support for Snow Leopard (OS 10.6). In order to make it work, we had to temporarily disable two features: printing and the quick-reference sheet. They’ll be back. We just wanted to get the beta into testers’ hands ASAP.

The third issue is extended Unicode support for larger character sets, including accents and diacritical marks. We want Highland to work on screenplays written in a range of languages, but our sample size is small. So as with any issue, if you find Highland is struggling with a given script, please send a report card.

If you already have the Highland beta installed, it will auto-update. If not, you can [download it from the site](http://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland/).

House-sitting for ghosts

June 1, 2012 Los Angeles, Random Advice

House-sitting is an ideal job for the underemployed writer. But Megan L. Wood recounts how [one assignment went wrong](http://thehairpin.com/2012/05/the-best-time-i-house-sat-for-a-ghost):

> The owner of the house, let’s call her Emily, was flying with her husband via private jet to their other castle in Colorado. All I had to do was feed the cats, soak in the tub, and not steal anything. Emily showed me around her “house” taking the time to explain how her espresso machine worked and insisting I look through her box of clothes headed to Goodwill. I saw a Diane Von Furstenberg label and almost passed out. ‘Leave!’ I kept thinking, anxious to turn on the flatscreen and drink cappuccino while trying on my new designer clothes. I planned on sitting on the magnificent wraparound front porch so passerby’s could admire what a baller I’d become.

> As Emily turned to go she nonchalantly mentioned one final thing. “We have a ghost. She’s a little girl. I call her Rachel.” Then the bitch left me all alone in a three story Victorian mansion for two nights with a child ghost.

Reading Megan’s account, I found myself nodding along.

My last house-sitting gig was in 1995, taking care of Vincent Price’s old house in the hills. I lasted one sleepless night. Despite the promise of easy escape — the master bedroom had sliding glass doors to the patio — the accumulated creaks and bumps and footsteps in the dark were too much for my fertile imagination.

Here’s the thing: I don’t believe in ghosts. At all. But I’m not so adamant in my convictions that I’m willing to be the cocky skeptic who gets dragged across the ceiling by a vengeful spirit.

And let’s not forget — those noises could just be an ordinary psycho with a knife who has been hiding in the house since sunset. Because that happens in the Hollywood Hills all the time.

Or, at least once. So that’s reason enough to get out of that house.

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