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The 101 Habits of Highly Successful Screenwriters

July 26, 2011 Books, Stuart

by_stuartAt some screenwriting panels, there’s a palpable novice vibe in the room.

The moderator asks basic questions. The panelists have a look that combines boredom and ego: “This is what they’re asking us? And people actually care about our responses?” The audience applauds after every answer, noteworthy or not. The microphone is passed, and it repeats.

Karl Iglesias’s *The 101 Habits of Highly Successful Screenwriters* feels like the transcript of one of these panels. It’s not a list of 101 habits as much as a collection of broad but basic interviews, edited and assembled under 101 different headings.

An example:

>Ron Bass: There’s only one reason to become a screenwriter, or a writer of anything, and that is you can’t avoid it. It’s what you love to do. It’s who you are. I write because there’s no way I couldn’t write.

If you’ve been to film school, read a lot of screenwriting literature, or attended Academy or WGA events, the advice in this book will feel old hat. On the other hand, if you don’t have access to screenwriters, or your screenwriting obsession is new, you may find a lot of value here.

The clichés are familiar, but useful; there’s a reason they’re clichés.

Still, 101 is a very appropriate number for this book to have in its title.

Writing Movies for Fun and Profit

July 13, 2011 Books, Stuart

I don’t read many screenwriting books, but Stuart does. So I’ve asked him to start reviewing some.

——

by_stuartAs you would expect from two members of The State, Thomas Lennon & Robert Ben Garant’s *Writing Movies for Fun and Profit* is very entertaining.

It is also full of good information for aspiring screenwriters hoping to write studio movies.

The book is significantly less blithe than its [Funny or Die promo video](http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/5f1df15cc3/writing-movies-for-fun-and-profit), but it is still light in tone. Topics run the gamut, from basic 101s, like story structure (“If Your Screenplay Doesn’t Have This Structure, It Won’t Sell, Or Robert McKee Can Suck It.”), to a step-by-step explanation of how an unpaid intern can make or break your script’s shot with a major.

Some of the seemingly less serious chapters in that same vein are some of the book’s most useful. Lennon & Garant provide a fun and surprisingly helpful studio-by-studio breakdown of how to tell what your employer thinks of you based on your assigned parking spot:

> PARAMOUNT
>
>Important = Melrose gate, VALET. […] Ask the guy in the car next to you if he happens to have some Grey Poupon. He won’t laugh, because almost nobody remembers those commercials anymore.
>
>Not Important = The open parking lot that’s JUST TO THE LEFT of the Valet. You’ll find a spot, sure. And it’s out in the open, under the big fake panorama of sky, no real shame in that … BUT YOU’RE ALSO CLOSE ENOUGH TO THE VALET TO KNOW THAT YOU WEREN’T ALLOWED TO PARK THERE. Yep. And there’re so many open spots in the Valet area? Well, you fell just short of making that list. Chew on that as you walk the extra 300 feet to your car.

In a later chapter, they dispense advice on what to say if a star giving you notes brings up or compares your script to one of her previous flops:

>It’s best not to discuss flops at all. BUT, if they come up, YOU SHOULD HAVE ONE POSITIVE DETAIL ABOUT THEM TO DISCUSS.
>
>For example: you’ve just sat down in the trailer of, say, JENNIFER LOPEZ […]

JENNIFER LOPEZ

Wow. I can’t believe how crappy Gigli turned out.

YOU

I dunno, I thought you looked great in those fight scenes.

JENNIFER LOPEZ

Ha, thanks. I worked really hard on those. Now here’s my notes ...

>Whew! Nice save.

Another particularly useful section breaks down WGA credits and what each means in terms of dollars, with a detailed explanation of the arbitration process and strategies for winning.

The appendix provides three sample outlines, one of which is the treatment/script/plan for the unproduced Reno 911!: Miami sequel. For any Reno fan jonesing for new content, this alone makes the purchase worthwhile.

Bossypants

April 20, 2011 Books, Rave

If you like 30 Rock and books, you’ll enjoy Tina Fey’s Bossypants.

The first few chapters are very funny in a self-deprecating David Sedaris anecdotal-memoir way. My theory: the key to becoming a comedy writer isn’t having a miserable childhood (she didn’t), but a good memory for specific shames.

Any aspiring TV writer should check out the later chapters, in which Fey makes clear her ambition and ambivalence about her career. The way we make television isn’t healthy. ((Granted, you could say the same for how we make food, energy or automobiles.)) Yet the success of one’s career tracks closely to the sacrifices one makes.

And there are great lessons to learn: Watch as Amy Poehler alpha-rolls Jimmy Fallon. Listen as Lorne Michaels defuses and disarms. Explore the right mix of Harvard and Chicago talent in the writers’ room.

Very much worth the read.

The Variant and Snake People

December 26, 2010 Books, Snake People, The Variant

If you got a Kindle or iPad for Christmas, I have two short stories you may want to check out. Each works as a nice palate-cleanser from too much holiday cheer.

snake people coverbook cover

The Variant
is a spy thriller with a strong dose of science fiction, in the vein of The Prisoner and The Man from U.N.C.L.E., or the short stories of Jorge Luis Borges.

Snake People
is a tale of underage drinking and reptilian fertility set in the armpit of Florida.

Each is available for 99 cents on Amazon.

For the iPad, you have several choices of readers. The Kindle app for iPad is terrific. I prefer its font to any of the choices in iBooks.

But iBooks can handle ePub files without DRM, which is why I can simply invite you to [download Snake People](http://ja-vincent.s3.amazonaws.com/SnakePeople-JohnAugust.epub) through a link. (This is link-handling feature is new for iOS 4.2, and extremely useful.)

If you got a Nook, they can handle ePub files as well. I had a chance to use my first Nook Color yesterday, and for its price, it seems really solid.

The Variant is also available as an ePub and pdf. Check out the details in the [Variant page](http://johnaugust.com/variant).

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