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Podcaster as cult leader

April 21, 2015 Hive Mind, Psych 101

In a post that [has since been taken down](http://www.nobullscript.net/screenwritingtips/how-to-know-if-you-are-leading-a-cult/?utm_source=Supersized%20April%20Newsletter&utm_campaign=April%20Newsletter&utm_medium=email), Danny Manus [warned](http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://www.nobullscript.net/screenwritingtips/how-to-know-if-you-are-leading-a-cult/) that screenwriters are unwittingly being drawn into cults:

> To be honest, I’m not even sure the professionals themselves are aware of their Jim Jonesy behavior and what type of insulated, self-aggrandizing, arrogant dome of cynicism and power they are creating. So, in hopes that there is still time to save others from drinking the Kool-Aid, and as a public service to inform those unknowingly responsible, here are some ways to know if you’re leading a cult.

> …

> – You cast aspersions on outside computer programs or software your followers may use (…and then launch your own and charge for it).

> – You advise your followers that they need to move closer to you, and can only truly be part of your world if they are living nearby in the same town.

> – You create your own terminology for words and concepts that don’t require new terminology (or perhaps your own FONT because the font others use aren’t good enough for you?).

While the first bullet point could apply to [Marco Arment](http://marco.org), I have a strong hunch that Manus is mostly referring to me and Craig Mazin, and our [Scriptnotes](https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/scriptnotes-podcast/id462495496?mt=2) podcast.

If he’s calling me a cult leader, he’s not altogether wrong.

By these standards, most popular podcasters are cult leaders.

## Sound of My Voice

Here’s the thing: I’m fascinated by cults. I read books about Jonestown. I watch movies like Martha Marcy May Marlene. I wrote a pilot for Fox about an apocalyptic cult in the Santa Ynez Valley.

I know cults, and podcasts are inherently kind of culty.

Week after week, you’re hearing the same voices talking in your head about the same topics. You begin to learn the hosts’ quirks, opinions and predilections. They feel like friends even though they’re strangers. ((Meeting people in person, I’ve experienced both sides of this asymmetric familiarity. It’s weird both ways.))

Podcasts never abandon you. They are with you when you’re alone in the car, or riding the train, or washing dishes. They take you out of the tedium of the moment and engage you in something more interesting.

Podcasts offer secret knowledge. Anyone can watch The Daily Show, but to listen to a podcast you have to know it exists. You have to seek it out. You have a source of information almost no one else in the world does.

Some podcasts even provide a special wardrobe, say, a [t-shirt](http://atp.fm/shirt).

Yet there are some significant barriers to podcasts becoming full-on cults.

For starters, listening to a podcast is a solo experience, while cults are inherently group activities. Social media can get you part of the way — but you’d want to do some [live shows](http://www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/culturegabfest/2014/10/slate_s_culture_gabfest_is_live_from_l_a_the_critics_talk_to_jenny_slate.html) so your fans can interact with each other.

Second, the opt-out is way too easy. True cults have ways to punish apostasy. With podcasts, you can simply stop listening, or delete the show from your podcasting app. No one is going to know that you bailed. ((I’ve stopped listening to several of my friends’ podcasts. No, not yours. Another friend’s.))

## Cult-like isn’t the same as cult

I don’t believe podcasters are cult leaders in the sense of Jim Jones. Manus is comparing the murder of 913 men, women and children to a few mean Facebook comments.

A podcast like Scriptnotes — or The Talk Show, or Serial, or the Slate Political Gabfest — does share some characteristics with a cult. It has charismatic leaders voicing an opinion. It singles out heroes and villains. Just like Apple and Android, a podcast can attract fans and fanatics.

Should podcasters be aware of the dangers of cult-like behavior? Absolutely. So should bloggers, tweeters, Viners and YouTubers. Any time you have a crowd, you have to consider responsible crowd management.

Manus writes:

> Those who spout off about how THERE ARE NO RULES – but then continue to tell you exactly what to believe and think and how to act and who to do business with – are either wildly hypocritical, or completely oblivious.

I don’t think Craig and I are hypocritical or oblivious. We’re mindful of our responsibility to both our audience and the industry, and always aim to be inclusive rather than isolationist. If we’re cult leaders, we suck at it.

But I guess that’s what a modern cult leader would say.

Highland and Weekend Read get updates

April 21, 2015 Apps, Highland, Weekend Read

Our two major screenwriting apps have updates out this week, fixing minor bugs and annoyances.

[Highland 1.8.6](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/highland/id499329572?mt=12) fixes an issue where scene headers could get stuck on bold for some users. Highland offers application-wide preferences for whether scene headers should be double-spaced and/or bolded. Most screenwriters set it once and forget it.

[Weekend Read 1.5.1](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/weekend-read/id502725173?mt=8) fixes a range of minor formating bugs reported by our users.

Both are available in their respective App Stores.

We already have a new build of Weekend Read in review with Apple to address a vulnerablity in the open-source AFNetworking code library. Despite the alarmist headlines (“1,500 iPhone apps have a serious flaw that hackers can easily exploit”), it’s highly unlikely users would ever encounter an issue within Weekend Read.

From [Ars Technica](http://arstechnica.com/security/2015/04/1500-ios-apps-have-https-crippling-bug-is-one-of-them-on-your-device/):

> To exploit the bug, attackers on a coffee shop Wi-Fi network or in another position to monitor the connection of a vulnerable device need only present it with a fraudulent secure sockets layer certificate.

The hypothetical coffee shop attacker could get access to network activity to and from Weekend Read — and only Weekend Read. What good would that be, exactly?

NIMA

Theoretically, they could see that you are downloading the script for Looper from the For Your Consideration list.

ME

That’ll make Rian Johnson happy. And I guess if you were sitting at Peets and you were downloading the top-secret screenplay for the next Avengers, someone could see that too. But I can guarantee you those scripts aren’t being emailed anywhere. And you probably shouldn’t be doing that on coffee-shop WiFi anyway.

NIMA

True.

ME

Could you push a script into someone’s library? Like, fake an iCloud sync event so that a new script shows up?

NIMA

That would be so hard but so cool.

ME

It’s the new breaking-in strategy. Hacker wanna-be screenwriters hang around coffee shops and wait for movie execs to come in and then they secretly load their scripts into Weekend Read. It’s like the Blackhat List.

NIMA

We should call Franklin Leonard. I think that’s a feature, not a bug.

Whichever it is, the AFNetwork issue will be closed in the next build.

You can find more information about [Highland](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland-2/) and [Weekend Read](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/weekendread/) on their sites.

Writer Emergency Pack, now in stores

April 1, 2015 Writer Emergency Pack

WEP-1-PackWriter Emergency Pack, the deck of writer tools we Kickstarted late last year, is now available for sale in the Store and on Amazon. It’s $19, and makes a perfect gift for writers. (Or for yourself.)

The logistics behind getting Writer Emergency Pack available online were trickier than I had anticipated. I wrote an update to Kickstarter backers explaining what’s happening behind the scenes when you click the buy button.

Here it is in flowchart form:

3da59278b4950a5b80fca5a4a5cac984_original

Sales have been solid, bordering on brisk. My phone buzzes every time we sell a deck, which is of course the worst kind of Pavlovian conditioning.

I’ll switch the notifications off soon, but for now it’s useful to see the immediate impact of Amazon reviews and user tweets. And it’s oddly gratifying to see something we made out there in the world being purchased by strangers.

K.C. Scott’s “This Is Working”

March 26, 2015 Follow Up, Story and Plot, Words on the page

On Tuesday’s episode of Scriptnotes, we’ll be looking at K.C. Scott’s original screenplay This Is Working, a former Three Page Challenge entry.

We just recorded the episode, and it’s already in my top ten.

Joined by special guest Franklin Leonard, Craig and I talk about character, story and thematic issues in ways we never could when only looking at just three pages. We get very specific about what’s working in the script now — but also what the movie may want to become. Plus we talk about the road ahead for this writer, and the choices he’s going to be facing.

I think listeners are going to get a lot out of this episode — and even moreso if they read the script beforehand. So [download the script](http://johnaugust.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/THIS-IS-WORKING_screenplay_2015.pdf) and give it a read this weekend if you have a chance.

We’ve also just added it to [Weekend Read](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/weekend-read/id502725173?mt=8), at the top of the For Your Consideration list.

Take a look and see if you agree with our assessment on Tuesday’s show.

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