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Scriptnotes, Episode 497: When You’re the Boss, Transcript

May 21, 2021 Scriptnotes Transcript

The original post for this episode can be found [here](https://johnaugust.com/2021/when-youre-the-boss).

**John August:** Hello and welcome. My name is John August.

**Craig Mazin:** Hello. And welcome. My name is Craig Mazin.

**John:** And this is Episode 497 of Scriptnotes, a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters. Today on the show we will discuss what writers need—

[Doorbell chimes]

Hold on, there’s somebody at the door.

**Craig:** There’s more at the door.

**John:** Oh my gosh! It’s Aline!

**Craig:** What the–?

**John:** Aline Brosh McKenna is here.

**Aline Brosh McKenna:** Woohoo! Anyone home?

**John:** I see she has a basket full of delicious things to talk about. So she’s setting them out on the table.

**Craig:** She brought a basket?

**John:** I see a covered dish labeled “notes.” Well, what’s in notes Aline?

**Aline:** In notes I want to talk about how writers prefer to get notes. How we prefer to get notes. And how when we have to give notes we prefer to give them.

**Craig:** Ooh.

**John:** That’s right, because Aline is a boss. And so she’s having to give writers lots of notes.

**Craig:** Like a boss.

**John:** Now, in that box, it looks like sprinkles/cupcakes, but the label says “hierarchy of genres.” What do you mean by hierarchy of genres?

**Aline:** I want to talk about how the business and the creative community has decided that certain genres are “better, fancier, more serious, more important” than others.

**Craig:** I have no thoughts on this at all.

**John:** Just a completely neutral discussion without any sort of–

**Aline:** I also have no agenda here.

**Craig:** Yes, exactly. [laughs]

**John:** Plus we have lots of follow up and we have questions to answer, so it’s so good that you’re here Aline. So pull up your chair and we’ll get into all of this. And I also heard that from the premium bonus subscribers you have some scientific discoveries you’ve made bout Craig Mazin. Is that correct?

**Aline:** I do. I have the lab results.

**Craig:** Oh.

**John:** All right. We will crack into those lab results, but only for our premium members. But let’s get into all these topics today. We’ll start with the sad news that ArcLight Cinemas and Pacific Theaters overall are not going to be reopening post-Covid.

**Craig:** Aw.

**John:** Aline, for folks who are not living in Los Angeles can you give us some sense of what the ArcLight means and why it is such a loss?

**Aline:** I mean, it’s the best place to see movies in LA. And you can get your ticket in advance. You can get an assigned seat. It’s got all the best movies when they come out. And it’s really a gathering place. For our family it’s a big deal because my older son, Charlie, is a big movie buff. In 2019 he saw over 100 movies. And most of them were at the ArcLight. Basically that’s his childhood was spent there. He went to the ArcLight instead of going to the prom.

**Craig:** Well, that’s sad?

**John:** No.

**Craig:** But happy. Did he go to see the movie Prom?

**Aline:** No. He went to see a double feature of Captain Underpants and he’s going to be mad because I can’t remember the other one. But, it’s not just a theater. It’s a gathering place. There’s a bar.

**Craig:** Yes.

**Aline:** And you’ll always run into people that you know. It’s a different experience and it’s very – it’s a movie theater that’s focused on giving you the best movie-going experience as opposed to a mall where it feels like the movie theater is an afterthought. So it had a feeling also of a temple to movie-going.

**John:** It was like church for movies. Absolutely.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** And so the Cinerama Dome which is the historically important part of that theater complex is that [unintelligible] Dome that you see and it’s great, and that already existed. But then they built the ArcLight cinema sort of around it. And they were just better. So, so many innovations that are common in theaters now like really great seating and being able to pick your assigned seat were there, but the thing I appreciated probably most is that there were no ads. There were no ads at all before you saw a movie. There were three trailers and only three trailers. And then you got to see your movie.

Every movie was introduced by a person in a blue shirt who told you about the movie and told you where to find them if there were any problems with projection. You applauded for that person afterwards. It was great.

We did a couple live Scriptnotes shows there. I saw my last movie before the pandemic. I saw The Invisible Man there. I saw Crazy Rich Asians twice at the Cinerama Dome, and one time John Chu was there and I got to congratulate him on his movie. It was just a great place, so I’m hopeful that someone with a lot of money will come in and save ArcLight cinemas. But, wow, it’s really sad that as things are opening up that’s not one of the things that’s going to be opening up right away.

**Craig:** I suspect that you’re going to see Warner Bros’ Cinerama Dome or something like that. I feel like one of those places is going to buy it because they can now. And the thing that I also loved about the ArcLight was that they had an actual concern for cinematic integrity. Like you knew going there the projection bulb would be the exact proper amount of lumens or however they measure it, because most people don’t know when they go to a regular theater somewhere random in the US that bulb in the projector is probably half as bright as it should be. So you’re not seeing the movie the way you’re supposed to see it.

Everybody got real smart with sound, but then the projection itself, they really took care of it there. It was a great place. It’s a bummer. But I refuse to believe that it’s just going to be shuttered and empty. Somebody else will pick this up and roll with it.

**Aline:** Same.

**John:** Yeah. Something is going to happen. My understanding is that Pacific Theaters actually does own that property, because they owned not just ArcLight Cinemas and Cinerama Dome, but also all of those shops in there. So that is a source of assets and money that can hopefully be helping it through this period and they can find some way to reopen. But we’ll keep hoping.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** Now it was not all bad news this week because this week Final Draft announced that Final Draft 12 is now available for download.

**Craig:** Oh great! [laughs]

**John:** And Final Draft 12, Craig, it adds the ability to import PDFs.

**Craig:** Oh my god. They’ve somehow managed to leap frog ahead to 2006.

**John:** Yeah. So Highland 1.0, which was released eight years ago, that was its big marquee feature. It could do that. So now you can do that in the new Final Draft.

**Aline:** Did you read this tweet under your tweet, John? Somebody wrote, this Nick Rheinwald-Jones wrote, “Nice to literally every person, place, or thing except Final Draft is the personal brand I aspire to but will never reach.”

**John:** Yeah, I’m a pretty nice person but I did feel some shade when it came to Final Draft. And there was some snark as well. I’m sorry. But you cannot announce a big brand new bold feature when it has been eight years and–

**Craig:** No, it’s been done.

**Aline:** August Shade and Snark, by the way, is a podcast I would completely listen to.

**John:** 100%. Where it’s nasty.

**Aline:** Just shade and snark.

**Craig:** Sounds great. I would listen to that even.

**John:** So people can go back and listen to in the archives the Final Draft episode where the guy who owns Final Draft came in and talked with me and Craig. But he doesn’t own Final Draft anymore.

**Craig:** No.

**John:** It’s this company that just keeps going, but it’s not the same people.

**Craig:** In fact, Final Draft is owned by an entertainment business payroll company.

**John:** It feels like it, too.

**Craig:** What else do you need to know? It is literally run by bean counters. There was an update to Fade In which is the program I use. A free update. Sweet. Lovely. Some more options for PDFs and watermarking and some additional scene numbering and revision functionality, which is very nice. And Highland 2.0, so you’re at Highland 2.0 or Highland 3.0 now?

**John:** We’re in Highland 2.0

**Craig:** You’re at 2.0.

**John:** But we’ve done, like all of our little .1 releases are more than sort of every annual Final Draft release.

**Craig:** If Final Draft works the way Fade In or Highland did Final Draft would be on Final Draft 3 right now. Because, I mean, what was it, it’s a brand new release – we support the retina screen. Oh, for the love of god.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** Yeah, Final Draft. Dumb.

**Aline:** Well, because so many people use it and because a lot of production companies have it people are worried about the melting of the PDFs.

**John:** Let’s talk about that.

**Aline:** It is something you can do in Highland. And I think there are other programs you can do that in, no?

**Craig:** You can do it in Fade In.

**Aline:** So, it’s just that Final Draft is the one that the executives are most familiar with, so it’s probably the one they could figure out how to melt your PDF. But, you know, there’s a certain level of just, you know, trust you have to give. You know, since the days when we started when it was on a physical piece of paper and that’s the only place it was, the minute it became digital it became meltable.

**John:** Yeah, so the concern is – I saw people tweet about this – like, oh no, this is going to ruin everything because in theory I could turn in a PDF and then the executive could open it in Final Draft and make a change in it because they want to make a change in it. It’s like, yeah, that could already happen.

**Craig:** Right.

**John:** Like, you know, a file format is not going to protect you from malfeasance.

**Craig:** No. Like the guy who works at Universal Studios can certainly pay someone $100 to just type that PDF in Final Draft. This is not a bar to entry. So, no, any – look, if they really want to screw with your stuff they’re going to screw with it. They own it. It’s theirs.

**John:** Yeah. All right. Let’s get into some follow up. We’ve been talking about female characters who have ethical dilemmas and sort of why we don’t see enough of those on screen. Margaret wrote in to say, “Yes, we’re not seeing them on the big screen, but we do see a lot on television,” which I think is a good point. So the Ted Lasso example is a great one. But she also brings up The Honorable Woman, which I’ve not seem. Le Bureau, the French series. Did you watch that Aline?

**Aline:** That’s one of my favorites. And I just have to say Marie-Jeanne forever.

**Craig:** Toujours.

**Aline:** She was incredible. Marie-Jeanne Toujours. Exactly. This is a great – yeah, you mentioned some others here. Killing Eve. Homeland. The Crown.

**John:** The Crown, of course. There’s always choices about what she’s going to do which is mostly to do nothing. But, yeah, I would say that on the small screen we’re seeing more of these.

**Aline:** I have a question for you guys. Because I’ve never written a script where I didn’t have a woman with a moral dilemma. I mean, I feel like that’s what storytelling is in a way is at some point your character gets to a point where they have to choose their moral path. Like in Devil Wears Prada the person with the moral dilemma is not Miranda, because she sort of just is who she is. It’s Andy’s choice, moral choice, not whether she wants to work in fashion or not but whether she wants to be a person who is OK with screwing her friends over and putting career above all. That is her moral dilemma.

But even in 27 Dresses Katherine’s character at the end is deciding whether or not to out her sister as a hypocrite. I think all characters have moral dilemmas. Are you talking about like–?

**Craig:** Bigger kind of life and death sort of villainy ones. Like should I pursue this path of killing people to save people? We tend to assign these larger planet-changing or population-changing dilemmas to men in these movies, but women face them as well.

I think that Margaret is right that television does a better job of it, probably because television – most of these shows that she’s listed here are elevated soap operas. And in soap operas there must be escalating moral dilemmas all the time. So it’s natural that I think this would come up and touch on the female characters as well.

In movies when you’re dealing with these kind of big moral dilemmas as opposed to personal ones. I always talk about Nemo and I think Marlin has a moral dilemma of a sort of how to deal with this son and raise his son, but I don’t think that’s what we were talking about. We were talking more about those people—

**Aline:** I think of this as I’m a good person. I’m doing this. So sometimes you write stuff that is not necessarily hinging on right or wrong. Sometimes, you know, the climax of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, sorry, spoiler alert, is about not who she’s going to be with but what she’s going to do with her life. And that’s not a moral choice. What’s my path in life?

But a lot of the things I’ve written have to do with a woman deciding who she wants to be in the world morally. Sort of what the choices that she’s going to make to be useful in the world and to be a good person. So, it might be a genre, just the genres that are more populated by male lead characters the stakes are more like planets and death.

**Craig:** Yeah. It’s like Lindsay Doran always says that women have figured out that what matters is the relationship. So they just get to the relationship. And men need planets exploding and then the relationship. [laughs] You can actually skip past the planets.

**Aline:** You definitely have less of women deciding whether or not they need to exterminate. I mean, I’m always – I have trouble with superhero movies with calibrating – so when they wipe out a whole planet, or a whole people in sci-fi, too, I’m so distracted by that that it’s really hard for me to move on to, you know, but they still have to smuggle the backpack out to this tiny planet. I’m like but they just killed a billion people on the purple planet?

**Craig:** Right.

**Aline:** How are you guys not standing around being bummed about that? I actually think there is a certain blitheness about killing that we’ve gotten to in these stories where there’s sort of mass killing and we just kind of walk past it.

**Craig:** Yeah. I mean, the see Alderaan, they’ve figured out that Alderaan has been exploded in Star Wars and they’re like wow, oh man, that’s terrible. And then about 20 minutes later they’re joking around. Like nobody towards the end of the movie is like, “Can we just have a moment of silence for the entire planet of people that got blown up?” No, no, it’s medal time. Everybody gets medals.

**John:** It’s like the say a million 9/11s happen all at once and they’re like, “All right, let’s trade some jokes.”

**Craig:** You know the Holocaust? A lot of us.

**Aline:** Spy stuff. Le Bureau, Americans, Homeland, those are all spy pieces where all of those female characters are really, really grappling with…

**Craig:** Definitely.

**John:** 100 percent.

**Aline:** Especially in Homeland where she’s dealing with kind of the morality of American foreign policy. And it’s sort of writ large in her own person stories.

**Craig:** Yup. And I would say the same thing for Zero Dark Thirty as well.

**John:** Agreed. All right. Last episode we talked about the burden of specificity. Rachel wrote in with a question about that. Lydia from London, England writes in, “I totally agree with Craig that BIPOC writers should not have to write more about race, but isn’t it preferable and better representation to give characters some cultural specificity, even if the story they’re in is not about race at all? I think To All the Boys I Loved Before does a great job of this. Lara Jean is a middleclass character whose story is not about race, but the small cultural touch tones of her home life make her home feel specific. And her identity as a Korean-American was thoughtfully baked in from the start by creators who understood it, and not as an afterthought by a majority white team suddenly realizing their movie isn’t diverse enough.

“For me this feels like a more trustworthy and satisfying representation.”

So, yes, and I’m also wondering though about the distinction between what you ought to do and what opportunities there are to do things. Because in answering the question last week, Craig, you were defending Rachel saying, no, you shouldn’t feel like you have to have representation – as a Black writer you shouldn’t have to be the person who is creating Black representation. But also there’s an opportunity, right?

**Craig:** Well, yeah. It comes down to the character, because I agree with Lydia that there is great value to be mined in characters with cultural specificity. However, there are certain types of shows and movies where that isn’t necessarily going to add what you want, or it may disrupt the tone of what you want. In fact, there was a bit of a kerfuffle this past week over the show Luther. It’s the English show from the BBC. Luther is sort of a cop show and Luther is played by Iris Elba.

And this week the BBC diversity chief named Miranda Wayland, who is a Black Britain, came under fire after she claimed the beloved detective chief inspector “doesn’t feel authentic because of his lack of Black culture.” She said “when it first came out everybody loved the fact that Idris Elba was in there, a really strong Black character lead. We all fell in love with him? Who didn’t, right? But after you got into about the second series,” meaning the second season for them, “you got kind of like, OK, he doesn’t have any Black friends. He doesn’t eat any Caribbean food. This doesn’t feel authentic.”

This did not go over well.

**John:** I can imagine.

**Craig:** Yeah. It did not go over well because, again, it’s putting a calculation on a creative thing. So I suppose the best advice I could give in general is to put your heart in a good place. Always consider how you can work cultural specificity in in a way that makes sense and serves the story and the tone, but don’t feel that as a writer of color that you have an additional burden that other writers don’t.

And similarly as a white writer don’t feel that you have less of a burden that other writers do. That’s the best I think I could do.

**John:** Now, Aline, you’re writing and you’re also developing TV shows. So, at what stage in the conversation do these questions come up?

**Aline:** It’s definitely something that comes up. One of the writers that I’ve worked with who I really admire, the way he thinks about these things, who is a writer of color and he once said to me, “It matters when I say it matters.”

**Craig:** Mm-hmm.

**Aline:** And I think that’s an excellent guide. I think that sometimes it’s very important in the details, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, a good example of like makes people feel seen as texture to the story but it’s not primarily an identity piece.

I think that if you’re a writer of color you probably have some sense of how you would like things to be represented in the world. And I would seize that. And I encourage writers that I work with to seize the opportunity to depict their community in the way tht they would like for it to be depicted. And it’s often not for me to say.

So, I think it matters when you say it matters. And if you feel like it really matters in the story specify it definitely. And if you feel like you want to leave it open to, you know, open up things that may look like the default, right, and the default as we’ve discussed is often white and male. If you can open up those people’s thinking by naming a character something, you know, opening it up in places where you see an opportunity to make the world look like the world. Because that’s what we’re trying to do.

**John:** Great.

**Craig:** Do your homework. Do your homework.

**John:** Last week on the episode we also talked about Scott Rudin. And this last week there was a Twitter thread by David Graham-Caso who was writing about his brother, Kevin, who died by suicide.

**Craig:** Oh yeah. I saw this.

**John:** And Kevin had worked for Scott Rudin as an executive assistant back in 2008 and 2009. Kevin actually had a Three Page Challenge on Scriptnotes in Episode 85.

**Craig:** Oh wow.

**John:** So we’re sorry for David’s loss. I would just point everybody to this Twitter thread where the brother talks through what Kevin experienced working for Scott Rudin and sort of the affect it had on his mental health overall. And how just that year or so working for him really did hurt him a lot. And sort of the ongoing effects of this. So, you know, as we talked about last week there was physical abuse that could actually be a crime and could be prosecuted, but I think this behavior that we saw from Rudin and from people in that kind of position really does have an impact that we need to be talking about.

**Craig:** This was just tragic to read. And it reminded me that sometimes we ask the wrong question. Did someone like Kevin end his life because of what Scott Rudin did? That’s not the question. The question is was someone like Kevin experiencing mental health problems or trauma that put him in a place where he was particularly vulnerable to people like Scott Rudin? Because I can certainly say that about myself and why I ended up working for the Weinsteins for so long. Because when you have a certain pattern in your head that’s been put there you oftentimes seek repetition of it.

And the great hope is that instead of finding the repetition of abusive behavior you meet people who treat you well and you learn that there is this other way. There are too many people out here who are the perfect negative fit for folks who are coming to Hollywood. Then it is even worse to contemplate that someone is arriving here has this little lock in their brain and someone like Scott Rudin is walking around with this very bad key. And he finds him and then that key goes into the lock and it starts turning it. That’s what upsets me so much.

People who come to this business are oftentimes very vulnerable. As our great Dennis Palumbo said in Episode 99 when people come to Hollywood they are often looking for the approval that they did not receive as children. This makes them very vulnerable. And it is our responsibility as adults and people in power and people of authority in this business to be aware of that and treat people kindly. Even if they seem willing to accept abuse.

**Aline:** Man, I just, threw him from a moving car, you know, sent people to the hospital. You know, I’m kind of surprised that there isn’t more blowback on this and I keep thinking about the fact that when Harvey was taken down his career was in a massive decline. And it felt like as he became less relevant to the business people felt more comfortable speaking out, which I suppose makes sense. Scott is still very powerful to a lot of different companies. He’s a huge Broadway producer in particular. And I think this is criminal behavior.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**Aline:** And if this happened to my child I would, you know, pursue this. I would – I don’t know if people are suing him. I don’t know if the statute of limitations has run out on some of this. But this is absolutely appalling and unacceptable and people are going to still work with this guy.

**Craig:** I don’t know about that, Aline.

**John:** I don’t know that they will.

**Craig:** I think he’s done. I got to be honest, I think he’s done.

**Aline:** All right. Let’s see. Let’s do a check-in. Because, I don’t know that we can take people speaking out on Twitter as the marker. I think we have to see. I’m just very interested in the power and the employment and the money. I mean, I don’t think Scott has an overall deal with a studio right now, which means he’s drawing income from multiple companies, so that’s why there isn’t like a big firing as a friend of mine pointed out. There’s not a big where he’s deposed from a big company.

But–

**Craig:** There will be distancing I think.

**Aline:** There will be distancing. But this is not just “get me a new potato.” This is physical violence. Violence at a workplace. And you don’t have to be in any way vulnerable to be traumatized by physical violence in a place where there should be none.

**Craig:** Yeah. He sent a guy to the hospital. Broke a laptop over his hand. And I just think that the one thing Scott Rudin has done that is correct in the aftermath of this story coming out is he’s said nothing. That is indeed the best possible thing to do if you have that light on you, because everything you say just becomes more rope.

But I just don’t think people are going to want to have their selves blown up. The next person who announces that they are starting a new venture with Scott Rudin is going to hear about it from everyone.

**Aline:** I’d like to follow the money. I think we should follow the money.

**Craig:** Let’s follow the money.

**Aline:** I mean, sure, there are going to be actors who – if Scott is making movies and they’re good parts. But those are not the economically most powerful folks. I’m curious about who is investing in these shows and these movies. And they are ultimately responsible. And someone was saying to me today, “Aren’t you liable now if you know that this is how this person behaves and you go into business with them?”

**Craig:** Yes.

**Aline:** Is there a liability there?

**Craig:** Yes. Yes. That’s why I think they’re not going to do it.

**John:** These are all possible problems. So, we will flag this for follow up. And so a year from now let’s take a look and see where we’re at. My hunch is that the stuff that is in production or is sitting in the can will come out and there will be talk about it but it won’t kill those things. But I think the next author is not going to sell his book to Scott Rudin. I think the next thing he’s shopping around people will just step back away from it and won’t want to touch it. And I think that is what’s going to happen. Because as you said he’s no one’s employee, so you can’t just fire him. But you can simply not take his projects.

**Craig:** Yeah. I think he’s radioactive.

**John:** All right. One of my favorite things we’ve discussed on this show has been the crush from last episode.

**Craig:** The best.

**John:** And so Megana read the original crush letter, so I want to make sure that she comes back for this follow up that we have, because I also want to hear Aline’s take on this. So, Megana, can you come on and give us a follow up from Oops who has a crush on her producer?

**Megana Rao:** Hello. OK. So I cut this first part down for time to protect Oops’s identity. But to get you guys up to speed her production is currently in quarantine and the producer has gone ahead and asked her to get a drink after the quarantine ends, which should be this weekend.

**Craig:** OK.

**John:** Wow.

**Megana:** And so Oops wrote in and she said, “As it stands we have eight weeks of prep and a ten-week shoot. As much as I love it I don’t think I can sit in this giddy Victorian fan-waving space for that long without being sick on myself. I’m just going to go have a couple of drinks, be chill, see what the vibe is, and maybe pull the Mazin rip cord a la what are we doing, there’s something here right, and just see how it goes.

“If I fall flat on my face that’s fine. At least I got it out there and can just get up and move forward. I’ll take a little minor embarrassment over another four months of will they/won’t they. Because as much as I love a good rom-com I don’t want it to be my life. I promise to come through with any further updates. You guys are amazing. Thank you so much for the sagest of advice. And for what it’s worth, we always need more Sexy Craig.”

**Craig:** You will always have more Sexy Craig. Sexy Craig doesn’t run out. You know what I’m saying? He doesn’t get tired. Ever.

**Aline:** So, you know what?

**Craig:** No one pays attention to Sexy Craig. [laughs]

**John:** That’s how we get rid of him.

**Aline:** I listened to this question. This landed so completely differently on me. As I was listening to the podcast with my headphones on under my weighted blanket I really wanted to like sit up and call you guys. And I ran this by a couple female executives and another female writer. This is really tricky.

Now, I’m not going to – I think Oops, the specific of Oops’s situation are hard to tell without knowing the specifics. But I will say that this is something that I specifically did not do when I was a young writer. I specifically did not date anyone in the business. That may have been a more extreme stance than I needed to take, but the reason I did that was because especially executives and agents I was very aware of how they spoke about the women they had dated.

And to this day there are female writers who will come up and men will say some version of “she slept to the top.” And, again, I’m not saying that’s what Oops is doing. And I’m not saying this is right. I’m not saying this is the way things should be. But when you’re dealing with a patriarchy there’s a way things should be and the way things are.

And so even though this gentleman is not the person she reports to directly, he is part of the other company, right? And she doesn’t work for them. So Hollywood is one big workplace. Because we’re freelance and they’re not, but we are one big workplace where people talk. If it goes south and I hope it doesn’t, but if it goes south you have no recourse and now you’re inside your project with what might be attention. You break up with them, that’s going to be awkward. They break up with you, there’s an awkwardness there.

You got to be so, so, so careful. I wish there wasn’t a double standard, but in a business which is so male-dominated. When men flirted with me at work, especially when they did it in front of other people, I never took it as sincere interest. I always took it as an assertion of power. Like the director who looked at my ring and said, “Oh, you’re engaged. What a bummer.” Never thought he was interested in me. Only thought he was trying to diminish me frankly.

So, listen, I haven’t been on a date since 1996. So, I’m not as current. But I will say be super, super careful, especially about – I mean, the thing that Craig said which is like if you say I know we’re feeling this way and somebody says, “I’m sorry, we feel what way,” that’s not at a bar. That’s in your workplace. That is very hard to walk away from.

And so I thought that John said, you know, at first your instinct was to say wait and then to say no to your feelings, and I thought no to your feelings was a really good thought, not just as a writer, but also just note it. I feel like I have some chemistry with this person. And if it’s real chemistry that is going to be a real relationship it will wait.

If it’s hop into bed chemistry I think you should be really careful about introducing that into your workplace. Because Oops may have found her happy ever after, and I understand the temptation there, but I would just be very careful. I mean, I think whatever the streak is in my personality, I was always vaguely offended when that came up. Because I felt like well now you’re looking at me not as a peer. You’re looking at me as a girl to date. And I suppose that’s an antiquated way of looking at things. But I would just say be careful.

And I think John and Craig you have probably been in fewer rooms where sex has been introduced.

**Craig:** Every room I’m in, Aline. Every room I’m in.

**Aline:** Well, it feels pretty bad. And I will tell you just a funny – I mean, I guess this is funny – it’s a little dark P.S. to this. So I never went out with any executives or agents. I think writer to writer is a different story, because you’re not – there’s a different power imbalance. But one of the gentleman who was an agent-executive back in the day, so I had lunch with him not long ago, maybe a year and a half ago. And he’s my age. And he said, and again, as I made clear this was never on the table. This was never on the table. And he very magnanimously said to me, and it was clear that he thought he was saying something really flattering and he said it in front of his female executive. He said, “You know Aline back in the day when we were in our 20s I totally would have slept with you, which is like a weird thing for me because I usually don’t want to have sex with the smart girls.”

That’s a thing that was said to me recently as if I was supposed to be like super flattered. And what I said was, “It was never on the table.” And everybody laughs. But like what?

**John:** So, Aline, here’s where I want to find the balance here, because I think so much of how you framed that is important to understand. And the recognition that in a patriarchy and in a double standard that she is risking more by going out on a date with this guy than he is risking. And that’s not right, but that is a reality.

And at the same time be open to the reality that people fall in love and meet their spouses at work situations.

**Aline:** 100 percent.

**John:** And you and I were both sort of starting in the business at the same time and I did date in the industry a lot. And slept with people I was working with. And that’s also OK. I guess there’s a double standard there as well, sort of women versus men there. But I want Oops to have a great personal life and a great work life. And for her to understand that she’s going to make some choices that are going to tip the balance there a little bit in these next couple weeks. So, that’s why I want to know what happens this weekend.

**Craig:** Yeah. I think that’s good. I mean, everything that Aline said is mission critical for Oops to have in her head. And the good thing is I do recall that when she was describing the situation she did say that this guy has been an absolute gentleman. And I think that there’s value to that, because there are guys out there – there’s a spectrum of piggish behavior. No one is perfect, of course, but there are certain guys that it’s very red-flaggy. Some guys are sort of like in between. And then some guys, OK, gentlemen. So I want to give her the credit of her own ability to evaluate. But I think trust but verify is a really great way of moving forward.

You are allowed to go into something in good faith. You just have to keep your eyes open and watch it carefully. When she says she doesn’t think she can sit in this giddy Victorian fan-waving space for that long, I get it. And there is—

**Aline:** Well, OK, I’m going to say two more things. Sets, they’re the most gossipy places. And if that becomes, and she mentioned in her last letter that people were aware that there was some chemistry. So if they start having a sexual relationship everyone will know about it in pretty short order.

**John:** Yup.

**Aline:** And, again, if that is enough of a priority for her to – I was going to use the word “risk.” Maybe it’s a risk. Then to have a strategy for what happens when for example his boss finds out about it, or other people on set find out about it. Everything she said last week led me to believe that this is a nice guy, where they’re having a real connection, in which case, man, movies you’re working so hard. You know, four months – again, this is an older lady talking. But in four months it feels like if you guys have had some nice dinners and hangs while you’re working and then when you’re done if it’s something that is a real thing – I have no problem with people meeting the person that they are romantically interested in at work. But this is a specific circumstance where her fate is tied to his fate and she does not have the same access to the levers of power that he does.

And the thing I just want people to remember is there is no one to go to. He has an HR department. You do not have an HR department.

**Craig:** Oops, she’s got us. She’s got a whole podcast.

**Aline:** [laughs] But, I mean, as a woman. So, when this has happened to me, when someone says – I’m nine months pregnant and I walk into a meeting and the executive says, “I guess this would be a bad day to punch you in the stomach,” I don’t have anyone to tell. I can either just laugh and move on, as I sort of did, and then cry in my car, as I did. And then go and hang out with Craig and John and my buddies and tell the story. But it sucks. And you have no one to tell. And I think, you know, relationships can go south in a billion different ways and can only go right in one way.

So, I don’t want to be the prim old lady, but I want her to be careful. And I’m sorry that there’s a double standard, but this is still an extremely male system.

**Craig:** I think we’ve given Oops a lot of really good boundaries, right? So, you can look around all of our various advices and see where kind of, you know, the optimism and the pessimism and the wariness and the trust are. And then I think move through it as the smart person that you are and remind yourself that you are an adult.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** And you can do this.

**John:** You’re also the writer who got this movie into production.

**Craig:** Correct.

**John:** So congratulations on that. Celebrate that, also.

**Craig:** Exactly. This is one of the things about being human that we cannot avoid. We cannot avoid the infatuations. We cannot avoid love. We cannot avoid relationships with the people we’re attracted to. We can temper them. We can delay them. We can moderate them. How you approach this ultimately of course, Oops, you have all the agency here. It is up to you.

I think you’ve gotten the broadest possible spectrum of maybes, red flags, encouragement. What else can we give you?

**Aline:** I mean, she’s certainly gotten a lot of advice.

**Craig:** Yes. You’re drowning in advice now.

**Aline:** And I’m curious if this has ever happened to you guys, but it’s pretty incredible the amount of times, especially because I started working when I was 23. And I got married when I was 30. And in those years it was kind of incredible how much – and by the way, still after that. I mean, just telling you other stories where people feel like they need to call attention to your boobs or your butt or your marital status. It’s pretty shocking.

And I actually think that because I am older I learned to walk past it. And I hope that younger women have an ability to say, “Hey, that’s not cool.” But the problem is you don’t have anyone to tell. And that’s the issue.

**Craig:** Yeah. I don’t know exactly – I mean, I think we’re all presuming that Oops is younger than we are. She might not be. But I know that what you’re saying is deeply, deeply true because even I have said some moments in my career, even I, where as a married guy and not exactly a Chippendales dancer, have had some moments where weird shit was said.

**Aline:** Yeah. Well, the funny thing is that I was always – because I was always aware not to bring that into the room it was always – it is always a shock to me. And the thing is one of the reasons it can get confusing is because we work on personal stuff. Right? These are personal stories. And you end up telling personal stories. And you have to. I don’t know what kind of movie this is, but generally we’re writing about human relationships. And so one of the things that distinguishes Hollywood from other workplaces is you’re going to tell a story about when you lost your virginity if that’s the show you’re working on. So by virtue of the kind of work we do you’re going to share more vulnerable, probably more vulnerable, parts of yourselves.

But that to me makes it even more important that we are careful and safe. And that as women in particular in a lot of ways you have to set up your own protective zone. And as you said that’s one of the things you learn to do not just as a writer, but as an adult.

**Craig:** Right. Because this is all messy everywhere. And, boy, if you were surprised when people said stuff to you, imagine how surprised I was when someone said something to me.

**Aline:** Yeah, but you know, Sexy Craig.

**John:** Sexy Craig.

**Craig:** Well, that’s the thing. Sometimes I forget how sexy Sexy Craig is.

**John:** Now, if a writer like Oops is very, very lucky she might have a boss like Aline or someone she’s working for like Aline. And so Aline—

**Aline:** Those segues.

**Craig:** Segue Man!

**Aline:** So good.

**John:** Aline, you are now a boss. And so you are working with writers who are working through pitches and you’re hopefully setting up shows at various places. Talk to us about your notes process with writers and sort of what you’ve learned now that you’ve been doing this for a while?

**Aline:** Yeah. And I wanted to ask you guys how you do this. So one of the things that I – we have a bunch of writers who are working for us. We have about six to eight writers who are working on various projects. And one of the things that I try to do as a producer is to approach things the way I would have enjoyed things being approached when I’m a writer, or when I was and am a writer.

What I found is that I don’t – and this was true in the writer’s room, too – I don’t have my system and everyone has to go with my system. I don’t say this is how we give notes, and you must get these notes in this format. When we start working with a writer I will ask them do you like spoken notes, do you like written notes, do you like written notes with suggestions or written notes with no suggestions? Because the thing you guys point out which is that you don’t want to activate the lizard brain. Right?

Once you’ve activated the fear-shame complex it’s very hard for writers to respond. So, for me I like spoken notes. I would rather get on the phone and have people walk me verbally through their notes, because I like to discuss, and because I like to hear the problem and respond to the problem in the moment. That’s probably when I’m going to have my best idea, because I’m a talker.

But some people when you try to do that they’re so activated by the thought that they have to be articulate that they would prefer to have written notes. And then among the people who like written notes some people really want to hear like hey this takes a little time getting started, why don’t you cut this scene, or move this. And some people just want to hear seems like we could get started a little more quickly.

So, I think one of the things I would love is for the business to be more flexible to the artist, because the artist is the one who has to write. And it always makes me laugh when you get notes which is like we should do blah-blah-blah, and I’m like we? Who is we? It’s me.

So, I think, you know, one of the things I try and do is I try and take all of the necessary kind of distancing that comes with a critique or comes with feedback and pose it more like is it possible, could we, could we think about, would this work, as opposed to dictates. Because you’re trying to keep people’s brains sort of limber.

Now, do you guys have a preference about whether you like spoken, written, what type of written?

**John:** I think like you I tend to prefer spoken, unless it’s just like down the page notes and then it’s fine for that. And Craig I remember you talking on our Notes on Notes episode about that lizard brain thing and keeping you from blocking up. What works for you?

**Craig:** I prefer to have a discussion about all of it. I don’t want to look at any notes on a page. I find that they are codified in a way that makes me feel vaguely nauseated. And the thing about a discussion is that you can go through methodically the way you write. Even if we’re going through, like, you know, I just went through an episode I just finished with Neil Druckmann. So I’m writing the episode. I send it to him. He reads it. And then we have a discussion. And at this point it was just some page notes. And what was nice is we get to a page. He can say, OK, here’s my question, or this line, and we have a discussion, and then I kind of like fix it. There. And then we move on.

And so now we’re not having this notes session which is like going to the dentist, lying back, and having them put needles in your mouth. Now you’re just working, which is what you want.

**Aline:** But, Craig, the three of us are talkers. And I, like you, I prefer that. But I always ask writers. And most of the ones that I’ve worked with like a document.

**Craig:** Great.

**Aline:** Because they like to tick it off. And, you know, there is a difference between the two-page document and the eight-page document. And trying to undo any kind of snarkiness in notes. When I get a set of notes, me personally that I like, I give them to Heather, our VP, Emily, our director of development, Jeff, our development coordinator. I will show them written notes that I like, that made me feel encouraged and happy.

But I have found like executives really want to give you written notes. And I will try and couple that for myself personally. I will try and couple that with a conversation because I so prefer it. But a lot of writers are really internal. And they don’t want to be – if you do it verbally they will feel called on the carpet, so they prefer–

**Craig:** That’s good to know. I think the point is you’re asking them what it is they’d like. You’re right, the executives literally have to write the notes down because that’s work product for them that they’re judged on. They have to be distributed internally and someone has to say, oh look, John did his job this week and wrote notes up. So whatever works for you as the writer I think it’s important. Even if there are written notes, write your written notes as an executive. And then if you know that that writer likes the conversation then call them with your written notes right there and walk through it.

I have no problem with that at all. I tend to like that. I also am particularly fond of questions. I think questions are inherently more respectful and therefore will be more productive than blanket statements.

**Aline:** Did you consider? Would it be possible?

**Craig:** I actually hate “did you consider.”

**Aline:** Oh, interesting.

**Craig:** Because did you consider is one of the more insulting ones. Like did you consider? Yeah, I considered that. Now let me tell why I didn’t do it. But what I do like is when I get to a place and it says something like “what were you going for here because what we got was this, but what were you intending?” Or, “is there a way that it could be more like this or this? If not, this is what we’re kind of missing from this. But how would you do it differently to get this or this? So that it is not just…”

Because my least favorite notes are the ones that are like “we feel that we’re missing an opportunity for more fun here.” Well, I feel that that doesn’t mean anything. Everything is an opportunity for everything. We could be missing an opportunity for a killing. Or a joke. Or something exploding. Or sex. Or anything. It’s all opportunities. Everything is building in choices. So why?

Everything is about why to me, and that’s why I kind of like the questioning aspect as opposed to the “this didn’t work, take out.” Oh, OK. No. Because I thought about it and you didn’t. I know why it’s there and you don’t. That kind of thing.

Although I have to say I always feel very self-conscious now. HBO gives excellent notes. I’ve got to tip my hat to those guys. They are really good at them. And I’m not kissing their asses. I was nervous like I’m doing this and then they’re like, “Oh, he’s talking about us.” I’m actually definitely not talking about HBO. But pick every other place I’ve worked at.

**John:** Yeah. I’m about to turn in something at a brand new place and I’m really curious what the notes are going to be like from that.

**Craig:** Brace yourself.

**John:** Yeah. I just don’t know.

**Aline:** Our company is a writer-driven company. Our sort of mission is to support writers. And I’ve just learned that part of that is being flexible to whatever – you know, some people want to come in and do cards with me and put them up. And some people want to do it on their own and come back with an outline. Some people don’t want an outline. I just try and let the writer enjoy their process. Because one of the problems with notes is that they can squeeze the joy.

So I’m trying to find notes that are – they’re never going to be fun, but that feel like a great conversation with someone who really respects you and the work. And is not clipping your wings, which they can often feel like.

**John:** All right, now I’m looking at the layout on the table here and so we have all these great dishes. And I need to break open this box that I thought was sprinkles cupcakes is actually about the hierarchy of genres. So, you and I have talked, I remember I think we talked about this on our walk a couple weeks ago. But talk me through what you perceive Hollywood tends to look at the hierarchy of genres. Which movies are important and meaningful versus which ones are trivial and not important? Is that the spectrum?

**Aline:** There’s just this dramas are better. You know, that’s how you’re made to feel. And the funny this is it’s not just awards or critics or whatever. And again so I work with a lot of female leads. My movies, even if We Bought a Zoo has a male lead, but that’s a female audience. I feel often still at the age of 53 head-padded by people. The most stunning example I think I told on this podcast was when somebody was talking about some really pretentious story thing and then turned to me and said, “Aline, do you have to worry about that in your movies?”

And I was like, no, no, I just write a makeover montage and then a meet-cute and then I call it a day. And what’s so interesting to me, I think we’ve got to all live in the moment of realizing that It Happened One Night won Best Picture, Best Screenplay, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress.

**John:** Yeah.

**Aline:** And that was a romantic comedy. And somehow this primacy on darkness, seriousness, violence, bleakness, I get it, and taste is taste, but why is that considered fancier or cooler? Anybody who has written funny stuff and serious stuff knows that funny stuff is way harder.

**John:** Well also we’ve talked about this before on the show that if a man makes a movie it’s a serious thing, but if a woman makes a movie it’s a rom-com. Even if they’re exactly the same movie. But I do want to talk about the hierarchy of genres here, because I would say that Hollywood values most, or at least when it especially comes to awards time, is the sort of historical courtroom drama is sort of like there up at the top, or some important moment in history as a drama is at the very top. And near the bottom would be, you know, the light, fluffy romantic comedy. The thing that looks like it’s effortless but it’s actually really difficult to do.

And somewhere stretched in the middle of those are like the Marvel movies.

**Craig:** Oh, I think the spoof movie is underneath that one. I would argue the spoof movie is in the basement.

**Aline:** Yeah, when you get into the super broad comedies. But it’s kind of the thing about how like people will review stuff and be like these people were lazy. They weren’t lazy. You work as hard on the crappy ones as the good ones. You probably work more on the ones that don’t work than the ones that do work. Because the ones that do work just kind of have a special “they’re working” thing to them. When something is not working it’s a lot of work. And I don’t know why people think it’s more or less work to write a dark historical piece where somebody ends up dead in a well at the end. Why is that better or harder, given more credence than writing a legit funny movie or silly movie?

**Craig:** Well, I think one of the things about that process, and obviously I agree with the premise of your position here wildly. Violently at that. I have written a lot of comedies and writing Chernobyl was far, far easier than writing Scary Movie 4. It’s not even close. Not even close. Also, rarer. It’s just rarer to be able to write Scary Movie 4 and have that movie come out and people go see it than it is to write something like Chernobyl.

I do think that comedies are wildly undervalued. And part of it is because critics generally aren’t funny people. And as you get older you get less interested in comedy. It just seems like that’s sort of the way the world goes. And generally speaking critics are older. And their tastes harden. And their lives also begin to turn around things that are sadder. The older the get the more your life is about infirmity, sickness, approaching mortality, the collapsing of marriages, and all these things, right? And so they like it.

**Aline:** I never thought of that. I really never thought of that.

**Craig:** I mean, like my dad, somewhere around 50, so I just turned 50, somewhere around when he turned my age just started watching documentaries about World War II and never stopped. Like it just happens. And it’s happened to me. Because here I am, like the things that I’m interested in have gotten darker because it’s sort of where my mind has gone. So there is a natural built-in demographic over-celebration of drama.

Here’s a statistic for you. You mentioned It Happened One Night. There have been seven comedies that have won Best Picture since the beginning of the Academy Awards. Seven. One of them, the last one, was ten years ago, and it was The Artist, which was in French and silent. So I don’t count that one.

**John:** Important facts.

**Craig:** In fact you have to go back to Annie Hall. We’ll sidestep the problematic aspects for this discussion. Annie Hall, 1977.

**John:** Broadcast News didn’t win?

**Aline:** No.

**Craig:** Broadcast News did not win.

**John:** Oh.

**Craig:** So Annie Hall in 1977. 44 years ago.

**Aline:** I’m going to argue also that Annie Hall also rode in under the auteur exemption. Comedies by auteurs are considered—

**John:** A David O. Russell comedy. Yeah.

**Craig:** Right.

**Aline:** Yeah. Not accidentally a male auteur are considered more phi-phi-foo-foo.

**Craig:** Prior to Annie Hall in 1977, The Sting won in 1973. And there was Tom Jones from England in ’63. Going My Way, 1944. A musical comedy. And then You Can’t Take It With You which was a proper comedy-comedy, classic adapted one-act or one-set play, and then It Happened One Night in 1934. That’s it. All of the incredible comedies that have come out over time, none of those, none have gotten Best Picture.

But Crash has Best Picture.

**Aline:** Well, I was going to say, so a lot of the movies that you think of as the definitive movies for a year are the comedies.

**Craig:** Of course.

**Aline:** There’s the ones that you’ve watched a million, billion times, and then you go back and look at what won Best Picture and you’re like, oh god, I forgot that even existed. And so it’s just a funny – but I think some of it is connected to sexism as I would. I think I’ve been that person through this whole podcast. But also what Craig said I didn’t think of which is also you know when they do those studies of who the Rotten Tomatoes critics are I wonder if you do an age breakdown that there is sort of a grumpiness. And also like a not understanding of what is funny, you know, or what people are finding funny.

**Craig:** They don’t know.

**John:** So the same discussion we’re having about movies though you could have about books. In the sense that the great American novel has to be written by a white man of a certain age. The same thing happens in literature. The same thing probably happens in music.

**Aline:** Oh, Broadway for sure.

**John:** Broadway for sure. And so I think why it matters is because when you decide that certain genres or certain kinds of writing are more valuable you pay those people more, you give them more respects. Even if it’s independent of the commercial success of these projects. And that’s challenging.

**Aline:** That’s why when I went to see Identity Thief I know how hard it is to write that movie. That’s a really hard movie to write.

**Craig:** It was hard. It was hard.

**Aline:** It is really hard. First of all, you’re walking in the shoes of a billion opposite buddy comedies with a road component. I mean, I look at the more slender comedies and think, wow, what a tiny target you had to make somebody laugh. You know, Game Night to me is like what an incredible thing to do to take something that could have been that minor. And we’ve watched that movie in our house – the movie that we’ve watched the most in our house is Rawson’s movie, Dodgeball.

**Craig:** Oh yeah. It’s great.

**Aline:** But then it’s just funny how people will then migrate to, I mean, somebody I know once who generally directs comedies is just always really searching for his awards movie.

**Craig:** Serious.

**Aline:** Yeah. Because it’s like you want to be able to get that. I understand. But I think that creative – that’s why I always think that the Writers Guild Awards will recognize comedy more frequently because writers understand how hard it is to do.

**Craig:** We get it. I mean, if you look back at 2005 in movies. That was the year that Crash came out and won Best Picture. But that same year Wedding Crashers came out. And so did 40-Year-Old Virgin. In no possible world is anybody thinking more about or watching Crash more than they have 40-Year-Old Virgin and Wedding Crashers. Those movies were massive and they were brilliant. And they were also movies that kind of changed comedy a bit as well. And no one cares about Crash.

And I’m sorry I’m beating up on Crash, it’s just it’s sort of a notorious underserving Best Picture.

**Aline:** The scene in Wedding Crashers where they sit on the steps of the building in Washington and Owen says, “You know, I think we’re getting a little old for this,” I think about and cite that scene all the time. Because that is one of the things that elevates that movie from an ordinary comedy to a truly great comedy which is the sadness of those guys kind of knowing how pathetic this is and how their friendship is based on something that’s kind of necrotic.

And it’s hard to do. Now obviously I am biased, but when I have written more serious pieces with fewer jokes in them I also find I get fewer notes. But structurally—

**Craig:** People respect you more somehow. Like they think that what is moving and dramatic to you is more sacrosanct than what is funny to you. And I always want to say it’s the same. It’s the same. You’re hiring me not for my personal feelings. What you’re hiring me for is the hope that what I think is good is also something that a lot of other people will think is good. That’s what you’re hiring me for. Taste.

**Aline:** Well, one of the funny things is that when we started in the business, now this is just like old people sitting around a table, but John was by far the grooviest of the three of us. I mean—

**Craig:** Sure. He was on IMDb.

**Aline:** Oh, but also John was like cool and had written cool movies that were more like awards-y.

**Craig:** He’s still cool.

**Aline:** No, what I’m saying we kind of caught up here and there. But I was really intimidated by John because I read Go early on and was like, wow, that script is so great. And he seemed to me like this really super cool bald guy with a leather jacket who was really kick ass.

**John:** I’ve never had a leather jacket.

**Aline:** I know. In my mind you did. The leather jacket you had in my mind was pretty cool. But, you know, John you’ve moved through a lot of different genres I would say not strictly speaking comedy. So even the ones that are a little bit lighter or a little bit more in the entertainment zone still keep you adjacent to the sanctioned things.

**John:** Our clock is quickly ticking down, so I think we need to get to our One Cool Things.

**Craig:** Let’s do it.

**John:** My One Cool Thing is a post by Jacob Kaplan-Moss called Embrace the Grind. And so it starts with a description of like how this one magic trick is done which is important because it’s just like, yeah, there’s a little magic, but it’s mostly a lot of incredibly hard work and just like thousands of hours of time to set up all these props. And you think like well no one would actually do those things. And it reminded me of – I got a chance to work with Steven Spielberg when he was going to do Big Fish and I got to help out on some other projects with him. And I saw him on set and I realized like, oh, he’s just working really hard.

And it’s a thing I think we often forget about talented visionaries. In many cases it’s not that they’re actually better, they’re just actually willing to do a lot of really hard tedious work. And both Spielberg and Tim Burton, like they just plan really, really well and carefully. And a lot of what you’re seeing that looks just like mastery is just because they’ve mastered the ability to actually just do the work.

So I urge people to take a look at this post.

**Craig:** That’s so true.

**John:** And think about just sort of like grinding through things.

**Craig:** It reminds me, you know, we just bought a new home near you guys. So we are now moving – slowly moving – it’s going to take well over a year for us to transition because our daughter is still going to school where we are in La Cañada. So we have a new home near where you guys are. And I told David Kwong and he immediately said, “Are you doing any work in it?” And I said you know what? One of the reasons we bought this house is because it doesn’t really need much of anything. Maybe little bits here and there.

He goes, “Please tell me whatever it is, because if you open a wall or do something we can set something up.” And he said like two years from now you have a party and we do something that blows everyone’s mind because it’s impossible unless you had set it up two years earlier while the walls were open. I just thought like that’s so great. I love that.

**John:** That’s David Kwong.

**Craig:** That is David Kwong.

**John:** That’s doing the work. Craig, what have you got?

**Craig:** Well in keeping with my puzzle fetish, so you know I love bringing these – there’s a new phenomenon of these puzzle packs that come out specifically to support charities. And Nate Cardin, who is I believe a chemistry teacher perhaps at Harvard Westlake, and also an outstanding puzzle constructor and of course goes without saying solver, flagged me to – he is one of the guys that runs the Queer Qrosswords. So, he flagged me to this new similar crossword pack called These Puzzles Fund Abortion.

And these puzzles are brought together by lots of folks, although Rachel Fabi is the person that is sort of spearheading the promotion of this on Twitter. These Puzzles Fund Abortion. Crossword Puzzles for Reproduction Justice. It’s a good packet. And it all goes to the Baltimore Abortion Fund.

And I have a link here. By the way, I’m just super happy as somebody that has been supporting what I guess we traditionally call pro-choice efforts for a long time, I like that we’re saying abortion now because that’s what it is. I mean, granted, Planned Parenthood as we know does a ton more than just abortion. But it is good to normalize abortion. It is a thing that a lot of people do and need for all sorts of reasons.

And so if you like crossword puzzles and you like femaductive, female reproductive rights and the access to safe and affordable abortion then please do take a look at this link in the show notes. Donate and solve.

**Aline:** That’s fantastic. Puzzles and femaductive rights.

**Craig:** Femaductive rights.

**Aline:** These are two of my favorite things.

**Craig:** Can we make femaductive a thing?

**Aline:** Yeah, femaductive. That’s good.

**Craig:** Femaductive. I mean, it’s just saving time.

**Aline:** All right, I like to have my One Cool Things on this show be things that generally you probably aren’t talking about. I have, and I’ve discussed it on the show before, I have wavy but not really curly hair. Wavy-ish, curly-ish hair. And there’s a whole area of TikTok which is just about women generally showing how to curl their hair. Sometimes men. But what are the best products, ways, towels, methods, plopping your hair, forgetting your curls to be their full curliness.

So I’m just going to make a couple suggestions. I’m hoping that somebody will then let us know if that helped them find their curl. I can’t take credit for these. These come from my hair stylist, James Carameta from Harper Salon. I’m just going to tell you two things.

After you wash your hair, put in your curling cream, and there’s many good curling creams on the market. Comb it through. Do not scrunch. Finger coil.

**John:** OK.

**Craig:** John and I already knew this. We’ve been doing this.

**Aline:** They tell you to scrunch. Don’t scrunch.

**John:** No, don’t scrunch.

**Craig:** Don’t scrunch.

**Aline:** Just finger coil the curls where you want them and then don’t touch it. Don’t touch it.

**Craig:** Don’t touch…

**Aline:** Watch TV. Make dinner. Do not keep scrunching, curling. Just put the finger curls in, go about your business. It has changed my life.

**John:** Nice.

**Craig:** I’m going to have to get on this.

**John:** It sounds like less work and better outcomes. So, I’m glad to hear it.

**Aline:** 100 percent. And less heat damage.

**John:** Good. All right. Maybe Megana who is on this podcast will be able to use that. We certainly cannot. But that’s awesome. That’s great.

**Megana:** Yeah, I have a ton of follow up questions that I’ll ask Aline later.

**Craig:** You guys need your own podcast on that.

**Aline:** I use the [Arun Co] Curling Cream. And the shampoo that I plugged last time I was on the show.

**Megana:** Yes, I remember that. OK, perfect.

**Craig:** I use shampoo.

**John:** Yeah. Honestly I don’t even use shampoo because I don’t have enough hair to use shampoo. I just wash.

**Craig:** I use a shampoo brand called For What’s Left. [laughs]

**John:** Good stuff. That is our show for this week. Scriptnotes is produced by Megana Rao. It is edited by Matthew Chilelli. Congrats to Matthew Chilelli and his husband Tao on their green card.

**Craig:** Yay.

**Aline:** Yay.

**John:** That’s very good news. Our outro this weeks is by Peter Hoopes. If you have an outro you can send us a link to ask@johnaugust.com. That’s also the place where you can send longer questions. For short questions on Twitter I am @johnaugust. Craig is not on Twitter anymore. Aline, are you on Twitter? Are you using the Twitter these days?

**Aline:** I am @alinebmckenna. I’m not there very much, but I pop in.

**John:** Tag her. You can find the show notes for this episode and all episodes at johnaugust.com. That’s also where you find the transcripts and sign up for our weekly-ish newsletter called Inneresting which has lots of links to interesting things about writing.

**Craig:** Inneresting.

**John:** You can sign up to become a premium member at Scriptnotes.net where you get all the back episodes and bonus segments like the one of scientific discovery that Aline is about to drop on us.

**Aline:** Mmmm.

**John:** Aline, thank you for stopping by.

**Craig:** Thanks Aline.

**Aline:** Yes, I will pick up my cupcake box and go.

**John:** Yay.

[Bonus segment]

**John:** All right, Aline, break the news. What have you learned? Tell us.

**Aline:** I wanted to talk about, have you guys talked about your 23andMe? Have you guys both done 23andMe?

**John:** We have because I learned that I am even more German than I thought I was. And Craig is related to–

**Craig:** Megan Amram.

**John:** Another one of our previous guests. Megan Amram.

**Craig:** She’s my cousin.

**Aline:** Well, one of the last times I saw Craig we compared our 23andMe. And we are distant cousins.

**Craig:** That makes sense.

**Aline:** We are not close. But we are distant cousins. But, you know, I was very interested in this because – so Craig you’re Ashkenazi. What percent are you?

**Craig:** I am 99.6 percent Ashkenazi Jewish.

**John:** That’s a lot.

**Aline:** So most of my Jewish friends are indeed like that. But my mother is Sephardic. Her mother was Algerian. Her father was Moroccan. She’s French. And so fascinatingly I knew that Sephardic Jews have more diverse influences, but–

**Craig:** Spanish. African.

**Aline:** I found out, yes, so my largest pieces are Ashkenazi Jew is 51%.

**Craig:** Oh my god, you’re a half a Jew.

**Aline:** I am half a Jew because my father is – no, sorry, yes, no it’s 51%. And the other bigger components are North African, of which I am 15.2 percent. And then delightfully Italian, of which I am 11.4 percent.

**Craig:** Nice.

**Aline:** What a delight. So when I found that out I was so excited I took my entire family to E Baldi. But it’s really fun to see, so Ashkenazi Jews, really I have five percent Arab, Egyptian and Levantine, West Asian and – so that’s basically like–

**Craig:** Moorish.

**Aline:** And Ottoman Empire stuff. And so it was really interesting, so you were saying as you get older you become the person who watches Holocaust documentaries, your dad, or war documentaries. And I am in the phase of middle age where I read books about Jews.

**Craig:** Oh dear lord. It’s begun.

**Aline:** So, I’m reading books about Sephardic Jews, Jews in Muslim lands, and it’s really fascinating to see how the Sephardic people peeled off from what is now the Middle East and wandered around Europe and North Africa. And so my background reflects that. And I know that some of this a little bit like astrology, right, because they’re just guessing here and there. But it’s really interesting.

And then, you know, the Ashkenazi Jew thing coexists with this other type of Jew which I think a lot of American Jews, or a lot of American people don’t really know that there is another type of Jew.

**Craig:** Oh yeah. No, we certainly – and when you meet the other – and I mentioned Neil Druckmann before who I’m working The Last of Us. He created the game and the story. And he is Israeli. Obviously he’s not like – I don’t think his lineage goes and stays within that area. But he is Israeli. He’s definitely more of a Sephardic kind of guy. And it’s a different sort of – they’re very different. Ashkenazi Jews and Sephardic Jews have a real difference to them. Believe me, I am distressed by the level of inbreeding that has resulted in me. This is not correct. You don’t want this. You don’t want to be 99.6 anything.

I’m glad my kids are not. Although I have also noticed in my kids that even though they are both 50% Jewish my daughter is definitely way more Jewish than my son. Like as far as Jewishness goes, it’s hard to describe it, but she’s more Jewish.

**Aline:** My brother’s results were less Italian and more Middle Eastern. And he definitely has different appearance things. Of course, you know, these are all–

**John:** I do want to talk about, there’s a little bit of hand-waving happening here.

**Aline:** Yes, there is.

**John:** Because it’s not like they can say like, oh, this spot of the gene on your DNA shows that you are from this thing. What they do is they take a bunch of samples from all over the world and they say like, OK, well these patterns seem to match these different places. But that Italian thing could just be because there was a community of people who were in Italy for whatever reason but they weren’t actually part of the larger Italian group.

**Aline:** That’s right.

**John:** So it gets all a little bit murky when you start to try to drill down into individual things because people will show up as like, oh, it turns out that I must be part Filipino. And then they’ll check about six months later it’s like oh no it turns out that’s completely wrong and I’m not Filipino at all.

**Aline:** Well, the 0.1 percent of my heritage which is Finnish I have questions about.

**Craig:** I also have a tiny bit of Fin.

**Aline:** Maybe that’s how we’re cousins.

**Craig:** The Fin cousins.

**Aline:** We have cousins from Finland. There’s just like two kind of very talkative, complaining Finnish people sitting somewhere.

**John:** Craig that’s where you got your teeth that don’t have cavities, as you talked about.

**Aline:** Oh my god.

**John:** Your teeth came from Fins and so therefore…

**Craig:** I have god given teeth. It is the weirdest thing. I mean, I just, you know, 50 years of living you think you’d get one cavity.

**Aline:** Well it’s funny how you get the problem that you have that other people, like I have extremely hairy – well I had very hairy legs before I lasered them. But hairy legs. Hairy arms. Like three hairs under my arms. I don’t know that everyone needed to know that.

**Craig:** No.

**John:** But that’s why they pay for the extra.

**Aline:** The bonus content.

**John:** Thanks Aline.

**Aline:** Bye guys.

**Craig:** Thanks Aline. Good talking to you.

**Aline:** Thank you. All right, bye.

**John:** Bye.

Links:

* [Arclight Cinemas and Pacific Theatres Announce Won’t be Reopening](https://deadline.com/2021/04/arclight-cinemas-and-pacific-theatres-wont-be-reopening-1234732936/)
* Final Draft 12 adds the ability to import PDFs! Download [Highland 2 here for free](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland-2/screenwriters.php)
* Check out the Highland 2 Student License [here for professors and students](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland-2/students.php)
* David Graham-Caso [Thread](https://twitter.com/dgrahamcaso/status/1380000780053139457) on his brother’s experience working for Scott Rudin
* [“These Puzzles Fund Abortion”](https://fund.nnaf.org/fundraiser/3196850) via Rachel Fabi
* [Embrace the Grind](https://jacobian.org/2021/apr/7/embrace-the-grind/) post by Jacob Kaplan-Moss
* [Writer Emergency Pack kickstarter — 8,000 decks to send out](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSYTA4bLo24)
* [Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!](https://cottonbureau.com/people/scriptnotes-podcast)
* [Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/gifts) or [treat yourself to a premium subscription!](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/)
* [John August](https://twitter.com/johnaugust) on Twitter
* [Craig Mazin](https://twitter.com/clmazin) on Twitter
* [John on Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/johnaugust/?hl=en)
* [Outro](http://johnaugust.com/2013/scriptnotes-the-outros) by Peter Hoopes ([send us yours!](http://johnaugust.com/2014/outros-needed))
* Scriptnotes is produced by Megana Rao and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

You can download the episode [here](http://traffic.libsyn.com/scriptnotes/497standard.mp3).

When You’re the Boss

Episode - 497

Go to Archive

April 20, 2021 Scriptnotes, Transcribed

John and Craig welcome back writer-producer Aline Brosh McKenna (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, The Devil Wears Prada), who brings a basket of topics for the guys to unpack. They discuss the best way to give notes as a producer/boss and why Hollywood only takes serious genres seriously.

We follow up on female figures in ethical conflicts, bad bosses, and specifying race in character descriptions. We also get an update from Oops on dealing with the onset of an on-set crush.

Finally in our bonus segment for premium members, Aline shares what her 23 and Me uncovered about her relationship to Craig!

Links:

* [Arclight Cinemas and Pacific Theatres Announce Won’t be Reopening](https://deadline.com/2021/04/arclight-cinemas-and-pacific-theatres-wont-be-reopening-1234732936/)
* Final Draft 12 adds the ability to import PDFs! Download [Highland 2 here for free](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland-2/screenwriters.php)
* Check out the Highland 2 Student License [here for professors and students](https://quoteunquoteapps.com/highland-2/students.php)
* David Graham-Caso [Thread](https://twitter.com/dgrahamcaso/status/1380000780053139457) on his brother’s experience working for Scott Rudin
* [“These Puzzles Fund Abortion”](https://fund.nnaf.org/fundraiser/3196850) via Rachel Fabi
* [Embrace the Grind](https://jacobian.org/2021/apr/7/embrace-the-grind/) post by Jacob Kaplan-Moss
* [Writer Emergency Pack kickstarter — 8,000 decks to send out](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSYTA4bLo24)
* [Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!](https://cottonbureau.com/people/scriptnotes-podcast)
* [Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/gifts) or [treat yourself to a premium subscription!](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/)
* [John August](https://twitter.com/johnaugust) on Twitter
* [Craig Mazin](https://twitter.com/clmazin) on Twitter
* [John on Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/johnaugust/?hl=en)
* [Outro](http://johnaugust.com/2013/scriptnotes-the-outros) by Peter Hoopes ([send us yours!](http://johnaugust.com/2014/outros-needed))
* Scriptnotes is produced by Megana Rao and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

You can download the episode [here](http://traffic.libsyn.com/scriptnotes/497standard.mp3).

**UPDATE 5-1-21** The transcript for this episode can now be found [here](https://johnaugust.com/2021/scriptnotes-episode-497-when-youre-the-boss-transcript).

Scriptnotes, Episode 495: The Title of This Episode, Transcript

April 9, 2021 News, Scriptnotes Transcript

The original post for the episode is available [here](https://johnaugust.com/2021/the-title-of-this-episode).

**John August:** Hello and welcome. My name is John August.

**Craig Mazin:** My name is Craig Mazin.

**John:** And this is Episode 495 of Scriptnotes, a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters. Today on the show we’re talking titles. A rose by any other name might spell a sweet, but a script with a bad title is at a significant disadvantage. Then we’ll answer listener questions on character names, budgets, and residuals.

**Craig:** OK.

**John:** And Craig tell us what we’re doing with the bonus segment.

**Craig:** In our bonus segment for premium members only we’re going to be discussing this simple topic: how to behave properly in a restaurant for adults.

**John:** I’ve completely forgotten. I’ve not been in a restaurant for a year.

**Craig:** Well, we’re heading there, so we better spiff up, shape up, and get ready.

**John:** But the way we may get back into those restaurants is by getting vaccinated. And so, Craig, some exciting news. You and I both have some Moderna in us.

**Craig:** Yeah. We’ve got a little bit of the Moderna in there. And, John, have you looked to see how the Moderna and Pfizer MRNA vaccines work?

**John:** I know it only in a very vague sense. I think they take these little protein things and they wrap them in little fat molecules. And they shove them into your body.

**Craig:** That’s right. Once they get them in there, this is why it’s so simple, it’s so brilliant. You know how the coronavirus has those little nubbies on it?

**John:** Yup.

**Craig:** And the nubbies are what make it so dangerous. The nubbies or the corona are what they use to get into our cells, so the coronavirus uses the nubs to get into a cell. Then it barfs up all of its DNA. Turns the cell into a coronavirus factory. And that’s how you get sick.

So, what the MRNA is, it’s basically just instructions to make the nubs. So we get infected with this stuff. This stuff gets into our cells. It tells ourselves to make nubs. Now the nubs don’t make you sick. So now there are nubs floating around and our body goes what are these nubs. Everybody attack the nubs. Let’s learn about the nubs. Let’s remember the nubs. And if we see these nubs again let’s kill them.

So when coronavirus shows up the body goes, “Nubs!” It doesn’t even know that there’s coronavirus. It just kills anything with nubs on it now. And I like saying the word nubs.

Anyway, boy what a relief. And thank you to all of the brilliant scientists and technicians and production folks who worked so hard to come up with this technology. It’s amazing. And in fact here’s a question for you John. Let’s say you’re a nervous kind of person.

**John:** All right.

**Craig:** You get the Moderna vaccine and you know that four weeks later you’re supposed to come back and get a second shot. What if you’re the kind of person that worries what if they mix it up and they give me a Pfizer shot instead of a second Moderna shot? What do you think happens?

**John:** Well, first off, on your little vaccination card it will show you what one you’re supposed to have. On the other hand it really doesn’t matter that much. I think the CDC guideline is you should try to get the same shot, the same medication, but the second one will also work. And they’re doing studies about like what if you mix and match the vaccines and they may discover that it’s even better to mix and match them. So, you shouldn’t worry about it.

**Craig:** It’s very possible. Yeah. From what I’ve read, even though of course everybody is going to follow the rules and give you the second shot of the same brand, they are identical except for the delivery methods. So, in theory shouldn’t be a huge problem.

But anyway hooray for Moderna. Woof. People, they’re opening it up all over the place. Get yourself a shot immediately.

**John:** I was able to get my shot in Utah when I was traveling there to visit some family. And I was eligible to go into a grocery store there and get a shot at eight in the morning. I wanted to feel that tremendous relief that people describe. Like oh my god, after a year I finally have this shot in me. I did not feel that emotion because I only had like three hours of sleep, so I was sort of a zombie with the needle stuck in me. I have maybe the worst vaccination selfie ever taken, so I will not be posting that.

But I still feel very good for having had it. I had a sore arm for a day and a half. Well worth it.

**Craig:** Yeah. The sore arm does fade. Everybody reacts it seems slightly differently. Some people get sick. Some people don’t. Some people get a sore arm. Some people don’t. None of the side effects are remotely comparable to what happens when you actually get Covid. So, vaccines, vaccines, vaccines, as fast as you can, as quickly as you can. Get them, get them, get them.

**John:** And more vaccinations across America might mean the return to the box office. This last week Godzilla vs. Kong opened at $16.3 million in its first two days, which would be a very low number in any normal situation, but is a very big number, the biggest number in 12 months, for a movie. So, it feels like there is some pent up demand to go see movies on a big screen.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** I am seeing my first movie on a big screen next week. I’m seeing an early screening of a cut. And it’s all with sort of Covid protocols. But it will just be exciting to sit in a dark room and see something on a big screen for the first time in so many months.

**Craig:** Yeah. You’re absolutely right. The $16.3 million would normally be an “oh no.”

**John:** Oh no! Catastrophe!

**Craig:** But what’s so fascinating is the way all this stuff sort of weirdly lined up. That there was the rise of these massive streaming services and then suddenly this plague came along that brutalized the theatrical experience. And so there was this streaming experience that kind of went, well, you know what, if we can put – because Godzilla vs. Kong, is that simultaneously running on streaming?

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** There you go. So, somehow they ran the numbers. The one thing I know about Hollywood, if they put this thing out like that then they did the math. They’re going to make money.

**John:** They’re making some money. It’s doing well overseas and especially in markets where they don’t have the Covid. It’s lovely.

**Craig:** The Covid.

**John:** Some more follow up, this time on screen deals. A listener wrote in. “In the WGA Screen Deal Guide the report briefly notes some consideration of the project’s budget. For example, the median first draft was $50,000 higher for contracts at major studios. When controlling for the experience level in these deals do you think there’s a material correlation to budget? Or what other factors play the biggest roles in increasing compensation?”

**Craig:** Yeah. We do have some budgeting tiers there for our minimums.

**John:** Absolutely. So I think when I saw the early version of that report they were making a bigger deal between major studio deals and all deals. And I think you have to keep in mind studio deals tend to include things for like bigger features and franchises and stuff where they’re hiring experienced writers to work on very big movies at higher budget levels. And those are kind of almost by definition going to be paying those writers some more. Because those are probably bigger name writers going in on those things.

When you look at the whole, like all deals made for writers, that includes a lot of scale deals made for indie features and other things that aren’t major studio pictures.

**Craig:** Yeah. We don’t divide the payment, the minimums, up between studio and non-studio. It’s just high budget/low budget is what they call it. Not that the high budget line is particularly high.

The reason that’s there is because this is one of those Catch 22s for unions. They’ve got to figure out how to allow people who don’t have a lot of money as employers to – they want to encourage them to become union signatories and hire union people, but they don’t necessarily want to hit them with the full payment of union fees, because they won’t have the money for it. So they come up with this other version. It’s a little similar to the independent film contract that Howard Rodman worked so hard on with the WGA to create.

By and large almost all of the budgets are going to fall under what they call high budget. By and large. Very tiny indies won’t.

**John:** I think it’s also important to stress and going back to when we had this first discussion about the Screen Deal Guide is that traditionally you think of the union as enforcing the minimums. Like this is the minimum they can pay you to do things. To make sure, to sort of set a floor on things. And this is an effort by the WGA to make sure that we’re really looking at writer compensation sort of at all levels. And by providing you with information about people in your cohort what are they making, what is the median salary they’re making for writing that script.

And so looking at just the studio writers that is a different cohort than sort of all writers. And it helps to know sort of where you’re falling in that order.

**Craig:** Yeah. I mean, the specific question about when controlling for experience level across deals, what’s the biggest impact on compensation. There is an implication and a question that maybe it’s connected to the size of the budget and in certain cases it can be. But probably how much they want it. So controlling for experience levels across those deals the question is are you writing a movie where there’s a big star and they really like you and they like your script and so therefore you have leverage. Are they hiring you because you’re rewriting somebody else and this thing starts shooting in three weeks?

**John:** Mm-hmm.

**Craig:** Comes down to these individual leverage factors. Hard to define.

**John:** They’re looking at these individual contracts, but they don’t have the context for sort of why this writer was able to get this deal on this contract. So it’s just numbers that they’re looking at right here.

**Craig:** Correct.

**John:** Do you want to take this follow up on gray areas?

**Craig:** Yeah, Audrey asks, “For the unnamed problematic showrunner,” that’s pretty great. I like the UPSR. The Unnamed Problematic Showrunner. UPSR. “For the UPSR does the guild help by looking at concerns regarding bad behavior? Do they have anonymous or ‘identity-protected’ way to submit these maybe gray area concerns? It seems like there is a conflict there in that the WGA should protect the up and coming writers but the showrunners are the most powerful members.”

**John:** Ding-ding-ding.

**Craig:** Yeah. “As fellow writers hearing things,” I don’t know about you John. I hear way less than people think I hear. But…

**John:** Ah, true.

**Craig:** “As fellow writers hearing things do you ever use this option even just to help document a pattern?” John, what do you think here?

**John:** Oh, Audrey has hit on a lot here. Yes. All right, so in the wake of #MeToo, and I was on the board when #MeToo was happening, a lot of discussion about building an industry-wide whistle-blower hotline. So actors and writers and directors and everyone involved, grips and gaffers, everyone involved in the film and television industry could have a way to report sexual harassment and sexual harassment and also just sort of bad behavior in general.

This idea of an anonymous whistle-blower hotline seems to make a lot of sense, and then it becomes a question of like so what are you actually doing with that. Who is responsible for following up on those things? It becomes really problematic to figure out sort of how you’re going to do it. And to my knowledge really nothing has been built. And so people are left with just going to HR for whatever the employer is. And sort of is the employer’s responsibility.

And if we look at the documented cases over the last couple years of harassment, bad behavior, where showrunners were being a nightmare, it really has generally come through studio HR, network HR, where those things sort of come out to light. And through publicity those people have been losing their jobs.

Unfortunately, you know, studio HRs is not going to be the solution to the problem, the kind of things Craig and I were talking about, which wasn’t a showrunner who was abusive, it was a showrunner who was doing things we considered kind of just shitty and unethical. And that’s going to be resolved by a studio HR department.

**Craig:** Right. So, Audrey, you definitely hit on a ton of really interesting areas and some strange spots where the WGA is a bit handcuffed.

So, first things first. The guild isn’t an employer of the writers in question. So, the first thing I want to point out is that it’s really incumbent upon the employers to be policing their employees when it comes to bad behavior. That said, Audrey is right. It would be great if the WGA could be involved here.

The WGA, however, is controlled by certain fundamental laws, federal laws. And one of them is the duty of fair representation. Which means that the union has to represent all of its members equally. It has to advocate for them all equally. It can’t advocate for some more than others. What that means is if someone comes to the guild and says, “I would like you to lodge this complaint. The showrunner I’m working for is mean.” So we’re going to put this in less of a criminal area. More of a just like John said shitty behavior. He’s mean. He’s verbally abusive. It’s not against the law but people should know that this person is toxic.

The Writers Guild unfortunately, or fortunately depending on the veracity of the person that just made that report, has a duty of fair representation to the showrunner as well. So what they can’t do is just publish a list saying hey everybody avoid one of these, of our own members. Because that’s a lawsuit that will happen instantaneously and it will probably succeed. So the WGA has to be careful to not expose itself to liability. And this is why it’s so important that the studios and networks do better, because they’re the ones who are hiring people. It’s their job to figure this stuff out.

But we do what we can as best we can within the bounds of the law. That’s my sort of defense of the WGA.

**John:** Absolutely. And there have been situations where people have come to the WGA saying like this showrunner is doing a thing and the guild can help represent that writer to the employer, be there as the person who is giving testimony about sort of this is what’s been happening, which is great, but we can’t sort of like throw that member out. We can’t sort of one-sided decide this is the facts here. All we can do is sort of advocate on behalf of our member. And there could be situations in which we have to advocate on sort of both sides just to make sure that both sides are heard.

**Craig:** Which bothers people.

**John:** It’s a tough thing.

**Craig:** And I understand that. Nobody wants to hear – I mean, both sides thing is literally a slur at this point. But the WGA is not equipped nor entitled to judge and jury its members based on workplace behavior like that unless there is evidence of the sort that would, I guess, come to them from an independent third party like a studio.

If a studio says, “We’re firing this Unnamed Problematic Showrunner for their toxic behavior,” the WGA should start looking at their abilities to discipline their own members. We almost never do it. In fact, I think we never do it. But, there is an entire section of the constitution and if somebody is clearly underlined in a provable way to have done this stuff then I think it’s fair that they be disciplined by their own union. Why should we not?

**John:** Yeah. So, we talk about this in the context of the WGA, but similar situations happen of course with the DGA where you have directors who are overseeing other members. You have actors and sort of conflicts between actors. So, WGA is only somewhat special. These things are going to always happen. I just don’t think – the WGA is not going to be the solution to all these problems.

So let’s talk about what some of the better solutions are. We talk about the whisper networks which is ways you get this information out. The challenge of the network is you have to be in the network in order to get that information. And so then it comes down to really vetting. And just really taking the initiative to ask the questions of people who might know information about sort of what’s really going on here. And I do find as we said on the initial episode phone calls are better than emails for this situation because there are a lot of times where people are willing to tell you a thing but they’re not willing to write a thing.

**Craig:** Right. You know it might be good for us to reach out to the WGA and have one of their folks come on this show to walk us through what the limitations are and what is the kind of, oh let’s call it the most presumptively effective way to protect your own interests and the interests of your fellow writers who may be subject to problematic behavior.

So, because I’d love to know specifically how it’s best formed and delivered and what the proper order is. So there’s probably somebody there that’s kind of leading up this.

**John:** Oh, I have a really good candidate in my head for someone who would be great to come on.

**Craig:** Perfect. Great.

**John:** So we’ll try to do that.

**Craig:** Perfect.

**John:** Some more follow up. We talked about female character arcs and moral choices. Ted wrote in to say, “I was thinking about films with women who make moral choices and it struck me that a good candidate might be The Bridges of Madison County. Meryl Streep has to put her sense of obligation, duty familial love against her longing to throw it all away and follow the soulmate she never knew she had, the man who makes her heart sing, etc.

“I really love that movie and I do think the movement of the plot rests squarely on Francesca and her choices. I do however admit that it would be a stretch to call it a redemption story because it isn’t. It’s a reawakening story maybe. I would contrast that with Sophie’s Choice to me the choice Sophie has to make is like saying to somebody I’m going to cut off one of your legs, but you get to choose right or left. The moral choice was made by the perpetrator when they chose to put someone in the impossible situation. Sophie’s Choice is about a woman who had no choice.”

Which is an interesting way of framing it, because we talked before about how Sophie’s Choice was like, oh, there’s a woman having to make a choice, but you’re just choosing between two bad options.

**Craig:** Yeah. I think Ted’s point is correct that it’s an ironic title because if you say to somebody I am forcing you to choose between this and thing that choice is not what we think of as a free choice at all. Obviously Sophie did not have a free choice in Sophie’s Choice.

I think the arc of Bridges of Madison County isn’t quite what we were talking about. That’s more just a general character arc. I think we’re trying to distinguish between just changing in general as opposed to struggling with a moral quandary kind of thing, which we would love to see more of with female characters.

So, yeah, I mean, I think reasonable observations Ted. I don’t think I’m there with you on The Bridges of Madison County.

**John:** It did get me thinking though that when we talk about choices if it’s just a choice that only really impacts you, or 90% impacts you that’s not quite what we’re describing. Because that’s just a character growing. That’s just a character having an arc. What I’m struggling to find more examples of are women who have to make moral or ethical choices which will have consequences well beyond their own immediate purview.

**Craig:** Right.

**John:** And I’m not seeing so many examples of that. So, I would love to see more and people can write in with examples of more. But I think they probably also need to write more examples of female characters making these kind of choices.

**Craig:** Or just play The Last of Us Part 2.

**John:** Ah-ha.

**Craig:** Mm-hmm.

**John:** Yes. Craig, our main topic today is titles. And so I got thinking about this because there’s been two projects I’ve been involved with recently that have really good stories. These are things that came to me. They have really good stories and really promising elements to them and I don’t love their titles. And I’m having a little bit of a hard time grappling with them because I kind of want to change their titles. In both cases it’s not clear whether they are already too successful for us to change their title. But it just brought home how important a title is for me to be able to really think about a project.

How early in writing Chernobyl for example did you know this was going to be called Chernobyl and not some other title?

**Craig:** Well, I’m not a great title person. I’m always the first to sort of raise my hand there. And maybe that is incredibly obvious because I did a show about Chernobyl and called it Chernobyl. Didn’t go much further than that. But it seemed that I lucked out on that one. That was an easy one. Because the word itself has an enormous amount of stuff built into it. It would have been unnecessary to have done something else oblique.

**John:** The Cost of Lies.

**Craig:** Yeah. That would have just felt generic and off the point and so just thinking about something that cuts through the clutter I think that’s, you know. But I’m not great on titles. And sometimes I think that there’s the quality – there’s a quality to titles, like certain movies, where the initial impact of the title is negative and it hurts the film’s debut. But over the run of it it becomes kind of a beloved, quirky appellation that we like.

**John:** Yeah. I don’t think Star Wars is a great title just by itself.

**Craig:** No. It’s terrible.

**John:** At all.

**Craig:** Star Wars.

**John:** Star Wars. Wait, what is this? Because it’s not really about stars and there’s battles.

**Craig:** And there’s one war. It’s not even wars.

**John:** But then just through repetition well that becomes an iconic title. And Star Trek is not a great title. Just through repetitions some bad titles can become just beloved.

But let’s start by talking about some movies that have I think kind of genuinely bad titles or challenging titles and they may have suffered for it. The Pursuit of Happyness and its word misspelling. I think The Shawshank Redemption is not a great title. Do you like that as a title?

**Craig:** It’s a terrible title. It’s one of the worst titles for a good film ever, maybe the worst title for a good film ever. Because if you don’t know anything about The Shawshank Redemption and you are told that there’s a movie in theaters called The Shawshank Redemption you’re not going. It means nothing. It means truly nothing. It just sounds – Shawshank is a silly word. And Redemption as a known disconnected from a human being is a concept, so who cares?

**John:** Yeah. Cujo is a good title.

**Craig:** Cujo is a great title. Yeah, what’s that? Ooh, Cujo.

**John:** Jaws. Not a good title, Quantum of Solace.

**Craig:** No, that’s just silly.

**John:** So here’s a thing. I think it was this last year that I really stopped to think like what is Quantum – what does it actually mean? Quantum, so the minimal sort of bit of something. And Solace, oh, some relief, some respite. Oh, that’s really what he’s searching for is some bit of relief from this grief of over losing his wife.

**Craig:** Yes.

**John:** But man is it a terrible title.

**Craig:** I feel like it must have come from a poem or something, right?

**John:** Some Quantum of Solace for the grieving man or something.

**Craig:** Exactly. Quantum of Solace. I’m just looking it up right now because I never actually thought about like why, yeah. If I come up with an answer I’ll let you know.

**John:** You know what’s a good title? A View to a Kill.

**Craig:** A View to a Kill is wonderful. I love that.

**John:** The Spy Who Loved Me. Love it.

**Craig:** Ooh, I mean, how do you do better than that?

**John:** Not a great title, The Nice Guys.

**Craig:** Yeah. Well, it’s OK. I mean, it does the job of that comedy, I think.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** You know, but yeah, it’s a little soft. I agree.

**John:** And then sort of legendarily Edge of Tomorrow was originally called All You Need is Kill.

**Craig:** Right.

**John:** All You Need is Kill didn’t test well, so Edge of Tomorrow they took. But Edge of Tomorrow did not work either.

**Craig:** No.

**John:** So later on they sort of referred to it as Live, Die, Repeat. A really terrific movie. I watched it this last year again. Just really delightfully made and it deserved a better title.

**Craig:** It is really good. I think All You Need is Kill is a cool title, actually. I mean, sometimes testing is stupid. In fact, a lot of times testing is stupid. All You Need is Kill is interesting. And if people don’t like it in the moment that doesn’t mean they won’t like it an hour later. Nor does it mean that they won’t remember it which is the whole point. Edge of Tomorrow just sounds like a bad soap opera. That is the most generic nothing title in history. So, I think that was a mistake, especially because as you point out the movie is really good. So, it did suffer from that. And Live, Die, Repeat just sounds like a bad shampoo instruction. That’s just goofy as hell.

Yeah, so I like All You Need is Kill for that.

**John:** So Hollywood often gets it right though as well. So, the famous examples of like movies that changed titles and they’re iconic because they changed title. I read Pretty Woman back when it was called $3,000. $3,000 is not a good title for that.

**Craig:** No.

**John:** Scream was originally titled The Scary Movie.

**Craig:** Yup.

**John:** When I saw Moana in France it was Vaiana. And Moana and Vaiana are both good titles, it’s just they couldn’t clear Moana as a title in parts of Europe, so they had to retitle the entire movie.

**Craig:** You know why, right? I mean, they could clear it. They didn’t want to.

**John:** Well, because there was a porn company. But there’s also a brand–

**Craig:** Porn star.

**John:** Porn star. But it was also like a Spanish trademark. A Spanish brand trademark. So there were multiple reasons.

**Craig:** Multiple reasons.

**John:** Hancock was originally Tonight He Comes, which is a great joke.

**Craig:** [laughs] I think Tonight He Comes would have been awesome actually. Personally.

**John:** So it went from Tonight He Comes to John Hancock to finally just Hancock. But I didn’t know that Atomic Blonde was originally called Coldest City.

**Craig:** Oh, well, Atomic Blonde is a way better title than The Coldest City.

**John:** Absolutely. Sometimes you see the posters, like well that can’t be called The Coldest City. It has to refer to her hair color.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** There was a Black List script called Move That Body, which ultimately became Rough Night. A better title.

**Craig:** That’s a better title.

**John:** Story of Your Life became Arrival.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** Arms and the Dudes. I can’t believe they went into production with that title. But War Dogs.

**Craig:** Well, because the article that that story was based on was called Arms and the Dudes. So, I think that was never actually meant to be the title-title. It was just the article title.

**John:** And of course most famously Teenage Sex Comedy That Can Be Made for Under $10 Million That Your Reader Will Love, But the Executive Will Hate is…?

**Craig:** American Pie.

**John:** American Pie. And I remember talking to somebody at a party when they were shooting this movie and they didn’t – it was before they actually had the title American Pie. And so they had some short version of that long title that they were referring to. And then it became American Pie.

**Craig:** And that does point out that when we’re writing spec scripts the title that we’re putting there we are not actually accountable to. Everybody understands that ultimately the studio can change the title if they so desire which means you can treat that title in an interesting way. The most important thing is to not put a boring title. That’s the key.

**John:** Yeah. So let’s talk about titles from a screenwriter’s point of view, because while ultimately these movies could change title down the road, like the second Charlie’s Angels went through a gazillion titles, and Full Throttle was just something they pulled off a shelf someplace. Having a title on your script is important because it helps frame the reader’s expectation the same way that the title on the movie will help frame a viewer’s expectation. So you want a title that just does something for your script and it certainly doesn’t work against your script.

And when I say frames expectation, hopefully it’s setting expectation about the genre, like what kind of movie this is, and ideally sort of who your central character is. And so Indiana Jones feels like there’s some character in it named Indiana Jones. Hancock feels like it’s going to be about a character named Hancock. That can be useful. Cujo is a dog. Jaws is a shark. It gives you some sense of what this thing is that you’re about to read so you turn to page one with some set up in your head for what it is you think you’re going to experience.

**Craig:** And sometimes that is a mood. Maybe all the title does is imply a certain kind of whimsy or thoughtfulness or sorrow. You want the title to simply offer some nub – let’s go back to the vaccine concept. Your title needs nubs because you want somebody to catch on the nub. And it may have–

**John:** Like Velcro.

**Craig:** Yeah. Exactly. And it may not be the thing that you think it is, but it has to be something. The problem with a title like Edge of Tomorrow is it is nubless. It is smooth. Like a Ken doll downstairs. It has nothing to cling onto. You just glide right over it.

So, that’s what we’re trying to avoid. So you have an interesting example here in our notes. The Talented Mr. Ripley. That could be anything. If you don’t know what it is it could be a musical. It could be a story about an inventor. It could be a Willy Wonka rip-off. Or it could be this strange story of sociopathy in 1950s Italy.

And that doesn’t matter. What matters is there are nubs on it.

**John:** Yeah. So you know that there’s going to be a character named Mr. Ripley and The Talented Mr. Ripley, there’s something interesting about that.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** So I’m turning the page to see who this Ripley character is. And I’ll be the judge of whether he’s talented or not.

**Craig:** And what do you mean by talented, sir? So that’s a nub. It’s prompting a question, which is good.

**John:** So, Craig, as you are approaching a project, so Chernobyl we talked through, and The Last of Us obviously has its title. That sort of already comes with it. But sometimes as you’re reading a friend’s script, or as you’re approaching something, like how do you have that conversation about this is not the right title? And what do you do?

**Craig:** Well, you say, listen, the title is – this is how it struck me. I’m only me. So, I can only give you this anecdotal datum. And that is that it made me feel bored, or confused, or just put off.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** And the context it put me in was thinking that this script was going to be lame, or homework, or a horror movie, which I don’t want to see, but it turns out it’s not a horror movie at all. So I just basically share with the person my response and then they can go, all right, well Mazin was the one weirdo that didn’t get it. Or, OK, three people have sort of said the same thing to me. It’s probably true.

**John:** Yeah. The last two weeks we’ve been talking about opening scenes and in many ways the title is the scene before the opening scene. It’s that first bit of information that you’re giving the reader about what kind of story this is. And if you can’t find the right combination of words to sort of unlock that thing you’re going to be running uphill a lot. Or worse, looking in the wrong direction and you have to pull them back with those opening scenes to make it clear what it is you’re actually trying to do in the script. And sort of who the central characters are.

So, examples from my own life. So my first movie, Go, when I wrote the short film version of it was just called X. And it was just the first segment of that movie where Ronna is trying to make the drug del. It’s called X. And it makes sense because the ecstasy that she’s trying to sell is just called X in the movie, so that made sense.

In wouldn’t have made sense for the whole movie, because if I had just called the whole movie X it’s either a biography of Malcolm X or it is X-rated. It doesn’t actually track for the whole movie. So, for a while my working title was 24/7, sort of like what you do every day, and that you’re just sort of going through the loop of a day. It’s fine. It’s not great.

Go, which I think serves it really well, was a title for a completely different pitch that I did over at Imagine, which was a vastly different comedy. But I just really liked that title. And so I took Go and it became the title of this script. And it’s really hard for me to envision Go under any other title.

**Craig:** Well, and that’s the sign of a – well, I think a good title plus time.

**John:** Yes.

**Craig:** And so some of these, like for instance The Shawshank Redemption without time, terrible title. Plus time, well people did catch the movie eventually. It was an absolute bomb in the theaters in part I think because it was entitled The Shawshank Redemption. But once people caught up with it on video it became a beloved classic. And at that point everybody knows the phrase The Shawshank Redemption. So, the movie had to drag the title along.

**John:** Yup.

**Craig:** But ideally you have a title that doesn’t put people off, but in fact invites them in. And then the movie is well and widely seen and that title and the movie, the experience together, becomes a feeling. And that feeling is what you’re aiming for.

**John:** Yeah. We have no ability to time travel back and do an alternate universe experiment to see what would have happened if we had changed the title, but Big Fish might have been titled Edward Bloom. Because it’s the story of a man and the vision of a man’s life. And a thing we discovered as we did sort of more focus grouping on it is that people thought Big Fish was going to be about fish. That it was going to be a fishing movie.

**Craig:** I mean, that makes sense.

**John:** Yeah. And it was a real thing we ran into. And I think we kind of only discovered that when we were doing the Big Fish musical and as we were coming out of our Chicago tryouts we actually had a good discussion about when we transfer to Broadway do we change the title from Big Fish to Edward Bloom. And we could have. But then we lose any momentum we have in connection to the original movie. And we realized that while people loved the original movie it wasn’t a giant hit like a Pretty Woman kind of hit movie, so there was a real discussion about whether we should change it to Edward Bloom, or Big Fish: The Story of Edward Bloom. Just somehow better frame what the actual experience was of the musical people were going to be hopefully spending $100 on a ticket for.

**Craig:** And that’s a very common thing. When you are moving from one genre to another sometimes you do want to just change the title.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** And that makes total sense. Big Fish is a tricky one. Right? It’s got the word fish in it which is a dominating word. Fish. I am now thinking about fish. And if I don’t know anything about Big Fish it could be about a restaurant, but probably if somebody said guess what Big Fish is about I’d be like it’s a competition about fishing. Because that absolutely makes sense.

**John:** And because second to your thought is like, oh a big fish in a small pond, but it takes you a while to get to that level, that metaphorical level. You’re thinking more literally at the start.

**Craig:** Always. Always. And, yeah, so that’s a tricky one. And I think, yeah, I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall of that discussion about whether or not to change its name. That’s interesting.

**John:** So, some practical advice for screenwriters. I would say if a title hits you, and you like the title, write it down. Put it in your notes document on your phone. Because titles are really important and if that title gets you excited about writing that idea and you can write an idea that fits that title really well that’s great. It’s great when you have that synergy of this feels like the right name for this thing that I’m describing.

But, don’t stop yourself from writing the thing you really want to write because you can’t think of a title for it. Because I see too many people who will burn weeks trying to think of a title for a thing when they should actually just be sitting their butt in the chair and writing the script. A title will not sell. A script will sell.

**Craig:** Yes. Of course, we sit there thinking about the title because it beats writing.

Hey, John, have you ever seen the Fellini film Nights of Cabiria?

**John:** I’ve never seen Nights of Cabiria.

**Craig:** It’s great. Do you know there’s a musical based on Nights of Cabiria?

**John:** I don’t. It has a different title. What is the title?

**Craig:** It sure does. Sweet Charity.

**John:** Ah! Yeah. And so let’s think about why Sweet Charity is a phenomenal title.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** You’re going to meet a character named Charity.

**Craig:** Yup.

**John:** And Sweet Charity feels like it has a sassy, sexual quality to it. It feels a little old timey, but not too old timey. It feels right to me.

**Craig:** Yes. It’s very welcoming. It’s warm. Nights of Cabiria doesn’t mean anything to an American audience. Some of them are going to hear Nights of Cabiria and think it’s Knights.

**John:** That’s what I thought you were saying.

**Craig:** So Neil Simon did the book and then Bob Fosse directed it and, of course, no surprise starred Gwen Verdon. And I think they together, combined, I don’t know if it was Neil Simon who was kind of title genius, or not, but kudos on that name change. That was huge. Well done.

**John:** Yeah. And so, again, if you were the writer who like Craig you’re hearing from three different people saying I don’t think that’s the right title for your thing, take that seriously. And do some work and it may be worth swapping stuff out because you don’t want to let your name for a thing keep it from finding the audience it needs to find.

**Craig:** Right. Exactly.

**John:** Cool. All right. Let’s go to some listener questions because we have related things about character names. Hey Megana Rao, would you join us here and ask some questions our listeners have sent in to you?

**Megana Rao:** Great. So Esteban from Puerto Rico wrote in and he asked, “I’m having a hard time choosing names in my script because I get caught up trying to find names that add some sort of mystique or flavor to the character. Shaun from Shaun of the Dead must have been chosen for the play on Dawn of the Dead. Maximus literally means greatest. And Hannibal rhymes with cannibal.

“Is it pretentious of me to try to choose names like this? Should I just pick any name and think about naming later in the writing process?”

**Craig:** There’s another, well, beats writing, doesn’t it? I’ll sit here and whack off to theories about names.

I mean, so yes, Esteban, no question that this is a trap. 100% there are some really interesting names out there. Some of them movies only get away with because they were in books prior. Like Hannibal Lector, if that didn’t exist in the book before I question strongly whether that would have happened. And Shaun of the Dead is obviously just because it rhymes.

You can get wrapped up in that mystique or flavor of the character. Just know that ultimately no one cares. God’s honest truth, no one cares. If you’re chasing somebody writing an article and pointing out how brilliant your name choice is because did anybody realize that Darth Vader meant Dark Father. Eh, who cares? It doesn’t matter. You know, think about it for a bit and if nothing is compelling you immediately just pick a name and start writing and you can always go back and change it, no problem.

Names matter. I want my names to matter for that character’s truth. Who are they? Where do they live? Who brought them up? Are they upper class, lower class? What is their background? That’s the sort of thing that I’m looking for from a name. Like, you know, in real life instead of meeting somebody and hearing that their name is Louis Cypher. Oh, Lucifer, I get it.

**John:** I get it now. So, yes, and it’s not a waste of time to be thinking about your main characters’ names. Your protagonist should have a distinct, interesting name that really suits the character that you are excited to write every time it’s underneath your fingers. It feels like the right person.

And so a project I’m working on with somebody else we spent like a good half hour batting back and forth these two character’s names and trying to make sure that they felt right together but they also felt distinct. Just that they had the right quality to them. And it’s just – it’s got to feel right. And so if you pick a name that feels right, great.

General rules for sort of screenwriters is try to avoid using the same first letter in character’s names because that just becomes confusing on the page. You don’t want your reader to have to do any extra work to sort of keep people separated. I also try to avoid having too many names that clump together in sort of one category. And so if I have a Bob I don’t also want a Tom, a George, a Phil, a Ron. Things that sort of all sound like white guy names all in a bunch and have about the same number of letters. You want to try to space those things out. So just make it easier for your reader to keep these characters separated.

But, yes, it can be a trap to be spending too long thinking about a character’s name and also trying to be too clever and too metaphorical with what that character’s name really represents.

**Craig:** I think your 30 minutes certainly perfectly acceptable. You start heading into hour two, move on.

**John:** Yeah. You should start writing and then find and replace later on if you come up with a better idea.

**Craig:** All right. Megana, what else do we have?

**Megana:** Cool. So Raychel asks, “I’m a BIPOC writer and it’s important to me to write characters that reflect the world around me in terms of ethnicity. Some of my white friends say I should specify ethnicities either through characters’ first names or through the description in the action lines. I want to avoid using ethnic names because I think it just feeds into the stereotype that all minorities have different names. 80% of my minority friends have middle class middle-American names, mine included, because that’s what we are.

“Another reason I got this note is because my script is heavily based in nerd culture. There’s the assumption made that most nerd culture is held by white people so I should specify ethnicities because it would make my script more interesting and add context on the characters’ perspectives. I’m open to my characters being any ethnicity, so I hesitate to specify. When I read the script I see it as a multi-ethnic cast, but I know that we tend to see things through the lens of our world and if a white exec is reading this script the likelihood of them reading it as an all-white cast is probably pretty high.

“I’m curious to know your perspective on this as two white men. Is there a way to encourage a view of multi-ethnic characters without actually specifying writing specific things that point to it? Or is this a burden of specificity I must take on?”

**Craig:** Well, that’s an interesting run there. I have some things to say to Raychel’s white friends. I will say it to them in white. Ladies in gentleman, what are you doing? I think that certainly there is no need to specify ethnicities through names because I agree with Raychel that people have all sorts of names, whether they are ethnic minorities or not, whether they’re BIPOC or white. There’s probably an Emily of every kind of possible ethnicity. And so there’s no need to use names as some sort of signifier.

And similarly if you don’t want to specifically signify that certain characters are a particular kind of ethnicity then there is no reason to do that either. However, you do have a desire to make sure that this cast does reflect the world around you and that it is multi-ethnic. So what I would recommend, Raychel, is that you insert a page before the script begins. I have done this.

And in it you simply write in as concise and clean and short as you can a paragraph that says this cast should look like the world around it. It is a multi-ethnic cast. I have not specified individual characters’ ethnicity, but presume that it is a mix of white, BIPOC…whatever/however you want to describe it. And just sort of lay that out there as a very short purpose statement. And then you’re good.

**John:** I think Raychel has more opportunities here and I think she’s maybe scared of some of her opportunities, so I want to really focus in on things she can do. And not that she needs to do it, but things that she can do. So, this is a mild defense of some of what her friends are saying.

I think when they’re bringing up the idea that by choosing names for characters that point us toward specific ethnicity you’re anchoring something in the reader’s head. That’s a valid way to do things. We’ve talked about this on the show before that it is a way of signifying that, hey, don’t default white this character. And that’s really what I think Raychel is asking in that last paragraph is as she knows that the person reading this script might have a default-white bias. And Craig’s dedication page might be helpful, but Raychel as a writer can also do specific things on the page to break that bias and sort of challenge that bias. And so picking names for characters, first names, last names, whatever, can do it.

Maybe what her friends are trying to encourage her to see is if there is some interesting dynamic between a person who is in nerd culture who is of a specific ethnic or racial background that could be explored, that could be interesting to explore. She doesn’t have to do it, but that’s the process of getting notes and having a conversation with people about your work is that hopefully it is sparking some new ideas. And so maybe there is something that she’s not exploring yet that she could explore. She may not want to explore it, but there’s an opportunity here.

So, again, none of this is stuff that she needs to do, but these are things that she could be doing and it’s worth asking if I do this will I succeed in making these characters more specific and less of a type that we’ve seen before.

**Craig:** Yeah. That’s all true. I’m kind of looking at this last thing she said which is a “burden of specificity I must take on” and I respect the thought there which is what white people get to do is write scripts that aren’t about race. And so I think it’s fair and reasonable and just that BIPOC writers should also be allowed to write scripts that aren’t about race.

**John:** 100%.

**Craig:** And similarly there’s no reason why including a well sampled representation of ethnicities necessitates a discussion about race or a movie about race. So, I think that you’re right there are absolutely opportunities. And I think she’s got a pretty good grasp on the ways in. But also I think we have to let writers of color off the hook in terms of having to advocate for a representative cast only if yoked to content. You know what I mean?

**John:** 100%.

**Craig:** So I would say, Raychel, you know what you want and hopefully we’ve given you a couple of ideas of how to get to what you want. But the most important thing is you are in absolute control here and you are able to get the end goal of what you want without having to do other things. You don’t have to like John said. But you can.

**John:** The other thing that Raychel says is that all of her friends have sort of Middle America middleclass names, which is great, but even in that there is specificity. So Raychel herself, her name is spelled Raychel. Great. There’s a little texture there that’s not the way that 90% of Rachels are spelled. Those little things also matter. And so we’re always looking for what is it that’s going to help me – what is the thing about that name that is going to help me remember that character in the script. And that’s a small thing, but it does still matter.

**Craig:** That’s a good point. Every name is spelled 400 different ways. And so when we were hearing from Esteban about this name concentration, one thing that he can consider in his toolbox is just screwing with the spelling. My sister is, you ready for this? Do you know what my sister’s name is?

**John:** No, tell me.

**Craig:** Karen. Ha. But, she spells is Caryn. So she’s always been that poor kid that had to like correct everybody’s spelling. I mean, she didn’t spell it. My parents did it for her obviously. She was a baby. But I always like that. I like that she had that kind of kooky spelling and I think it’s gotten her a little bit off of the Karen hook with her own kids, but not by much. [laughs] They still call her a Karen all the time, which is pretty funny.

**John:** Well, a thing about interesting spellings of names in a script that does not help the movie at all. It doesn’t help the movie because as an audience we’re never going to hear the interesting spelling of that name. But it helps for the reader because we don’t get a face to put to that name, but if you have a slightly interesting spelling of that name that is useful. And I get some little bit of information about a Karen spelling a normal way with a K versus how your sister spells it just because it’s different. I get a sense of where she grew up or choices her parents are making. What generation she’s in. It does matter some.

**Craig:** It evokes things.

**John:** Yes! That’s what it is.

**Craig:** And it will be helpful for the actors, too. I think it’s the kind of little – it’s a nub. It’s another nub.

**John:** It’s all about nubs this week.

**Craig:** You got to add the nubs.

**John:** Megana, what else do we have?

**Megana:** Great. Danielle asks, “I was hoping you could go over budgets in relation to being a writer. I would love to know a few of the elements that sneakily add dollar signs to a film or TV show’s budget so I can keep that in mind while writing. For example, I’ve got to assume that my limited location, small cast script is low budget, but because it’s 90% at night, has a scene in a pool, and involves monsters it’s actually not as low as I thought.”

**John:** Yeah. Let’s talk about some budget stuff. And this is going to be a very quick general overview and we can do a more in-depth episode at some point. But the most important thing you need to remember about in terms of budget is that time is money. And the more time it takes to film a thing that’s generally the higher budget you’re going to be going into.

And time is in some ways reflected by the number of pages you’re trying to shoot in a day. So, feature film might shoot half a page a day, or two pages a day. A TV show might have to shoot eight pages a day, because their schedules are shorter, their budgets are tighter. Time is money in ways that sort of can’t be overstated.

But the other things you’re pointing out here, Danielle, are factors as well. So, how many locations you’re going to. Because each location you’re going to have to pay for that location and move from one location to another location. That’s expensive. There’s a reason why so many of the Blumhouse movies take place in a single location. It tends to be cheaper.

The more actors you have. That’s an expense. You’re paying those individual actors and the hair and makeup and wardrobe and all the things for those actors.

Visual effects, both practical effects and digital effects, they cost money. You have to really budget those carefully and not just assume what things are going to be expensive because it could be wrong. Like a little bit of rain, not expensive. A big downpour in a big wide open shot? That can be expensive. So, how you’re doing it matters a lot.

And so when you’re putting together a budget for a show the first AD and production manager they’re going to be asking a lot of very specific questions about what do you actually need to see on screen, because that’s going to impact the budget.

**Craig:** Yeah. All of that is absolutely true. I’m thinking about some of the sneaky things. Elaborate costuming.

**John:** Oh yeah.

**Craig:** Will have to be created specifically and tailored specifically. And that will add money, especially because they can never make just one. They have to make multiples. Any kind of stunt adds money. Stunt actors/stunt people/stunt performers cost more, obviously, than say just regular background people. So if you have a scene where someone gets thrown through a plate glass window and lands in a diner next to another table they’re not able to put just regular old extras in there. There’s glass breaking. You need stunt people in there.

So, that costs money for sure. Background in general. Amounts of extras. Extras in quantity, which is how we often think of them, cost money. You aren’t necessarily going to take on a lot of extra expense by shooting mostly at night. Sometimes it actually saves you because there are certain locations that you can get that are cheaper that you can only do at night because during the day it involves other things.

So sometimes you actually get a break. And technically I don’t believe there’s a night penalty. You work 12 hours, whether it’s at night or during the day, the payment is the same for everybody.

Scenes in pools, the reason why pools, food fights, any kind of dirt or gunk is expensive is because of resetting. So people get thrown into a pool. OK, they’re in the pool. They’re wet. Get them out of the pool. We have to do another take. Get them out of the clothes. Put the new clothes on. Dry their hair. We do their hair. We do their makeup. Get back. Well, 45 minutes just went by. And like John said, time is money.

So if you start thinking about things like that you will be able to ward off some of the easier pitfalls to avoid, if you want to, Danielle.

**John:** Yeah.

**Craig:** If you want to.

**John:** That’s really the question. What are you trying to optimize for? Are you trying to optimize for this production that you’re trying to make yourself? Then you’re going to make certain choices. Like The Nines was a movie I was going to make myself and so I was deliberate in sort of how I was constructing things so that it would be possible for me to shoot it. Like a lot of it was set here at my house at a location I could control. And then we could spend a lot of money on certain things that would add a lot of production value. But I could really contain it in a way.

But if you’re writing a script that you’re hoping to sell, the expense of it should not be even on your top ten list in terms of your priorities.

**Craig:** Yes. And it is also important, Danielle, to safeguard the things that you love and care about. What I try and do, I mean, we did it on every movie I’ve ever done, and on Chernobyl, and again we’ll do it on The Last of Us, where you go through with the producer and you kind of go what’s costing us more money than you would hope. And sometimes you hear things and you’re like, oh that? Oh geez, no, I can just change it to this. I don’t care about that.

And then there are other things and you’re like, well, we’ll be spending the money on that because it matters. And you have to occasionally say it’s actually important that they go into the pool and so that’s going to be a longer day and we just have to bake it in. And if we can trim somewhere else or revise a little bit to save some money somewhere else, you know, so be it.

So just be smart, be practical, but also protect your creative desires.

**John:** Great. Megana, can you give us one last question?

**Craig:** Yeah, one more.

**Megana:** Of course. So, Mary asks, “Quick question. I received a check from the WGA and I am Canadian and not in any unions. They had asked for my info which I gave months ago. The two scripts I wrote were made into TV movies. Does my agent get 10% of my residuals? The amount is around $3,000. Or, is that all mine?”

**John:** Yeah, so the simple question is does your agent get commission on residuals. And there’s an answer that I can point you to, I can give you a link to. The answer is no. So in general agents don’t get commissions on residuals unless they were able to negotiate a specific residual for you that was higher than what the WGA standard residuals would be. And so your agent did not do that. You’re just getting the standard WGA residuals for having written these two TV movies. Congratulations. Those residuals are yours. Your agent did not get you those residuals. The guild got you those residuals.

**Craig:** I’m still going to say I think this is a foreign levy just because of the amount and because she’s not in the union and the things that she wrote were not union signatory. So that wouldn’t generate residuals. It would potentially generate foreign levies which would come from the WGA. But regardless, both of them work the same. The WGA has negotiated the residual rates for its members. And the WGA, DGA, and MPAA have negotiated how the foreign levies come from other countries and are then distributed. Your agent didn’t negotiate any of it. Your agent gets 10% of what they negotiate and zero percent of what they do not.

**John:** Yeah. I just want to underline what Craig said there again. Your agent gets a commission on the things that they got you. The things that they negotiated for you. And they did not get you those things, whether these really are foreign levies, or they are residuals. They didn’t do it. So they don’t get the commission on that.

**Craig:** I had an argument with an agent about this once years ago. He’s not an agent anymore, he’s a producer. And I said, you know, it’s pretty rare that I have an argument about something and I have zero percent concern that I’m wrong. I’ve never been in this situation. Even at my most strident there’s still room for one percent of like, oh geez, I hope I’m not wrong about this. But in this one? Zero percent.

You didn’t negotiate it. You get none of it. Period. The end.

**John:** Megana, thank you for these questions.

**Megana:** Thank you guys.

**Craig:** Thanks Megana.

**John:** All right, it’s time for our One Cool Things. My One Cool Thing is a performance by Sarah Smallwood Parsons. I think it was from UCB.

**Craig:** I know this one.

**John:** It’s just so good. And so it’s a song that she sings called The Song in Every Musical that No One Likes. I just love when someone identifies a trope, points it out, and performs the trope so brilliantly and she does that here.

And so it’s talking about in most stage musicals there’s like an older man who sings this song that is just kind of filler and it’s while it’s going on you’re like it’s fine, but then you go on to the next thing. She very hilariously talks through why this song exists and it’s just so great. So, let me play you a clip.

[Clip plays – Sarah Smallwood Parsons]

Also I want to commend the YouTube algorithm for pointing me towards this thing because I was not looking for it at all. It showed up in the little sidebar and I’m like, well, that was good. And it was delightful.

**Craig:** You know what I love is that in the lyrics she cites two kind of prototypical the song in every musical that no one likes roles, Sentimental Man from Wicked, and Mr. Cellophane from Chicago. And both of those performed by Joel Grey. So poor Joel Grey.

**John:** Poor Joel Grey.

**Craig:** He finally gets trotted out to do these songs where he’s like I can only do this. And this is how it goes. I mean, he’s an amazing performer. It’s just that those two songs – in Cabaret you could hardly accuse him of being that character. But it’s pretty funny that those are the two.

**John:** I really like Mr. Cellophane.

**Craig:** I love Mr. Cellophane.

**John:** I totally get what Mr. Cellophane does, but honestly you could skip that track and your life would actually be fine.

**Craig:** I also love Sentimental Man. I do. It’s one of my favorite songs from that show. But, you know what? I’m a weirdo.

Here are my One Cool Things of the week that I’m using in conjunction. I realized after staring at my Apple Watch for the 4,000th day in a row that I’m like why is it one watch face? I feel like I’m not using this thing right. So I went to look for a different watch face and I found there’s a site called Facer. There’s a subscription version of it where you get a billion watch faces, but I think the free one seemed to chuck up enough for me.

And so I pulled an interesting Apple Watch face off of Facer and I also subscribed to a weather service called Carrot which has various amusing options, but is very full-featured. And what I love now is I can look at my watch and I can see on my watch in a very easy way what the daily low and what the daily high is going to be. And the humidity. And then I can see also what’s coming up on my schedule and blah-blah and all the little watch complication stupid thingies.

But it was nice. I spiffed up my watch. The whole point is you can have a new watch every day if you want and I hadn’t changed it in forever. So Facer and Carrot together. Yeah.

**John:** Yeah, you’ve inspired me Craig. So I’ve been using, it’s called Modular Face, for most of this time. And it’s great. I really have no complaints about it. But it’s not super exciting.

**Craig:** No.

**John:** I may switch it up a bit.

**Craig:** Take a look at Facer.

**John:** Cool. That is our show for this week. Scriptnotes is produced, as always, by Megana Rao.

**Craig:** Damn straight.

**John:** And edited by Matthew Chilelli.

**Craig:** You know it.

**John:** Our outro this week is by Chester Howe. If you have an outro you can send us a link to ask@johnaugust.com. That’s also the place where you can send longer questions.

For show questions on Twitter I am @johnaugust.

We have t-shirts and they are great. You can find them at Cotton Bureau.

You can find the show notes for this episode and all episodes at johnaugust.com. That’s also where you find transcripts and sign up for our weekly-ish newsletter called Inneresting which has lots of links to things about writing.

You can sign up to become a premium member at Scriptnotes.net where you get all of the back episodes and bonus segments like the one we’re about to record on restaurant behavior. Craig, thank you for a fun show.

**Craig:** Thank you John and Megana.

[Bonus segment]

**John:** Craig, what do I do when I go back to a restaurant? Please talk me through it because I just have no idea what a person should do in a restaurant.

**Craig:** First of all, pants. Incredibly important.

**John:** Oh my god, pants. Yes.

**Craig:** Shoes. Shirt. We are on the cusp of returning to indoor dining, depending on where you live it’s probably already happening to some extent. And I have been going to restaurants in Los Angeles for nearly 30 years and I have seen some pretty bad behavior.

**John:** So pre-pandemic bad behavior. So, maybe it’s a chance for a reset. A fresh start and we’re going to start behaving better in restaurants. What are some things you would like to see from your fellow restaurant patrons?

**Craig:** So the easiest one, just as a blanket rule, be incredibly kind to your server. They are not cooking the food. They are also not responsible for you not getting the food on time. They are literally doing nothing except asking you what you want and making recommendations, telling the kitchen, and then bringing it to you when it’s ready. That’s what they’re doing. And so there’s no reason to make them the brunt of your ire.

There are times where you get hangry. And there are times where things go terribly wrong. And, yes, of course there are times when a server may be rude or just bad at their job. It’s possible. I like to remind myself that they have been on their feet for hours, days, weeks, months, years. They’re doing the best they can at a job that doesn’t even pay minimum wage. It’s a tipped job.

Which leads me to my next thing. Tips.

**John:** So, you should tip these people who are bringing you your food, and cooking your food, and making it so you can enjoy your food prepared.

**Craig:** I mean, our system requires tips. Because they’re not paid what they should be paid. They will not make it if they don’t get tips. So, everybody has different tipping philosophies and different tipping percentages. And what I like to say is make your tip roughly aligned with the amount of money you have. If you go out to dinner and it’s some crazy dinner and it’s a $400 bill, some super fancy restaurant, well percentage wise, percentage makes that worth their time, which is great. And I think if that was kind of a once-a-year splurge for you because you are on a budget I don’t think there’s a problem tipping 15%. I think that’s a good baseline. 15% feels like the baseline to me. I wouldn’t go below it.

20% I think if you can. And you know what? If you’re flush, 25%. Because you are their employer, whether you know it or not. You’re the ones that are actually paying them their salaries. So try as best you can to be generous when you can when it’s warranted.

**John:** So, my husband and I are known for just befriending waiters. And so we will go to a breakfast place regularly and just become friends with waiters. And we have a list of friends who are waiters now. And so everything you’re saying about treating folks who are bringing you your food like human beings who are doing a job is absolutely valid.

My second sort of question though is how should people behave with other people dining in that restaurant at the same time?

**Craig:** Great question.

**John:** It’s not a simple relationship in like it’s me and my server. It’s also everyone around you. And I think when I have frustrations at restaurants it’s generally not with the people who work at the restaurant, it’s with the people who have chosen to come into this restaurant.

**Craig:** Right. So, the easiest one that I think everyone can agree on is get off your goddamn phone. I don’t mean to say stop staring at your phone. If you’re staring at your phone quietly because you and your spouse are in a chilly moment at dinner, so be it. But if you get a phone call and you need to talk to somebody, get up and walk out.

**John:** Step outside.

**Craig:** Go outside. And you may think, why? I’m not talking any louder than I would to the person across from me. And you know what? I don’t know why. I don’t know why it’s so much more annoying, but it is.

**John:** It’s so, so much more annoying.

**Craig:** It’s so much more annoying.

**John:** You use a different kind of voice when you’re talking on the phone. It’s the worst.

**Craig:** Get up and get out. No one wants to hear your crap. So, that’s the easy one right off the bat. Second one. This is a real weird one. And it’s not going to be an issue for a while because the restaurants are mostly spacing everybody out. But when you are back in the normal time and you’re in some, usually it’s in a city, so there’s not a lot of space, so the tables are really close together. Please be aware of your own ass as you are getting up and moving between tables.

Because if you’re not, and you’re just not paying attention, you can be rubbing your butt on someone else’s table. They don’t want that. I don’t want that.

**John:** No.

**Craig:** If you are of a size where it’s inevitable, just as you stand up just say excuse me I need to make way through so that you’re acknowledging to somebody I’m coming through now, so I don’t want to put my butt on you. I am paying attention. And then they can help sort of move out of the way and then you can go. But don’t just casually rub your butt on people’s tables. It drives me crazy.

**John:** Yeah, so New York restaurants are notoriously very tightly packed. LA restaurants are not quite as packed in terms of how many tables they’re trying to stick together. But certainly much more so than the Midwest. And I think sometimes you come from the Midwest where there’s 10-feet between tables and giant booths and all these things. And you come here and you’re like oh my god these two-top tables are so tight and so close to each other.

Yeah, they are. That’s just how it is. You have to sort of get used to it. And you have to find your own little zone of privacy even though you are six inches from the next person.

**Craig:** Yeah. I think also if you can say thank you.

**John:** Oh yeah.

**Craig:** And say please. You don’t have to, right, you’re buying it. But there’s something that rubs me wrong about somebody who comes up, hey folks how are you doing, what can I help you with? Yeah, give me this. Oh, OK. I will gimme it to you. And then you bring it to them and you put it down and they’re like, eh. OK, well enjoy. Mm-hmm. Or people that don’t acknowledge the waiter. Like literally just won’t acknowledge them.

So just try to remember these are people. Be polite. Say please. Say thank you. And if you need to get their attention try if you can to do it silently. Just the yelling across the restaurant for Miss or Sir is also kind of disruptive.

**John:** You have to make eye contact, do the little hand gesture that indicates hey there’s a thing when you get a chance to come over to the table and there’s a thing.

And it’s a skill you have to learn how to do that, but you can do it. It’s like getting a drink at a bar. You have to be present but not obnoxious to get them to come over.

**Craig:** That’s a great way of putting it.

**John:** Let’s talk about children in restaurants.

**Craig:** Sure.

**John:** Because I think most of my experience really has been breakfast – we go out to breakfast much more than we go out to dinner. And so I see a wide range of sort of how children are present at restaurants. And I want to sort of both defend parents and also put some edges on what’s acceptable behavior both for a kid in a restaurant and for other people being annoyed by kids in restaurants.

I think kids exist and kids need to be able to go out to restaurants as well. And if you’re going to a restaurant where there are going to be kids, you’re going to a restaurant where there are going to be kids and you cannot just be annoyed by their existence.

**Craig:** I like to stand up in the middle of a Chuck-E-Cheese and demand silence!

**John:** Silence! I cannot hear the band! [laughs]

**Craig:** [laughs] Please would you sit down! I am enjoying a pizza.

**John:** So, if you’re going to a restaurant with your kids you’re going to figure out hopefully strategies for keeping your kid entertained during the time in which you sit down, they have food in them, and they’re getting out. So you bring stuff for them to do at that table.

But all kids are different and they’re going to be going around a little bit. And stop treating other people’s children like they are a burden upon you, because they are not. It’s just the future of humanity.

**Craig:** They are the future of humanity. Of course, there is the other perspective which I think is reasonable. And that is if you are there with your kid and there’s two of you, whether it’s partners or friends, whatever it is, and a kid has a meltdown which they can sometimes have.

**John:** Oh yeah.

**Craig:** Pick them up. Walk them outside. Because that’s a very simple thing you can do to make everyone’s life around you easier and also I think make your life easier.

**John:** And it’s better – also it’s better for the kid as well. To make it clear that there’s a range of what you can do inside a restaurant and if you can’t do those things we’re going to go outside until you can–

**Craig:** Until you calm down. Exactly. The parents that infuriate me are the ones that don’t seem to notice that their child is on the floor screaming and crawling toward me. And this is not Chuck-E-Cheese. At that point I want to say like do you not care about – I mean, I get that your choice is, eh, screw it, let Braden scream and crawl. I don’t care. I’m having lunch. But we’re also here, too.

**John:** Yeah. So that parent was probably making the right choice for when Braden has a meltdown at home.

**Craig:** Yeah.

**John:** There’s a whole valid approach to sort of just let them have their meltdown and they get through it.

**Craig:** Right. Ignore it.

**John:** Ignore it. Great. No, not when you’re in a restaurant and you’re putting that burden on everybody else around you.

**Craig:** Correct. Every single one of these things that we’re saying comes down to simply being considerate. Being considerate.

**John:** What are you looking forward to most eating in a restaurant when you can eat in a restaurant? Have you and Melissa already talked about where you want to go first?

**Craig:** Well we’ve been to some outside restaurant experiences which were very nice, but not quite the same as the old ways. I think, you know, having a good old fashioned noisy loud restaurant, you know one of those two-hour dinners with friends in some sort of packed place will be fun. I like the energy. I like the bustle.

**John:** Yeah. I’m looking forward to something a little bit more like that. Because, yeah, you can do that outdoors but it’s challenging. It’s not quite the same experience. And I’m looking forward to getting back to breakfast. That was always the thing that we used to do on Saturday morning is to get up and let the kid sleep and go to breakfast. And so I want to do that again.

**Craig:** I think it’s right around the corner. That actually reminds me of one other thing I would suggest to people is be aware of time. Because the restaurant needs to keep moving you in and out. Some restaurants are fancy and when you sit down you realize you’ve bought a chunk of time there. And they are really reluctant to kick you out. But just be aware of how much time you’re chit-chatting before you’ve ordered.

Everybody has that moment. At some moment somebody at the table has to go, hold on, hold on, everybody stop talking. Let’s figure it out. And then we can get back to our conversation. And also at the end of the meal you’ve had your dinner, maybe you’ve had dessert, and now you’re just yacking away which is fun, because you’re catching up with people, but still be aware that there may be other people waiting for a table. There may be a reservation that you’re cutting into. And by holding that off you may also be reducing the amount of tip money that your server can get. So just be aware of it.

**John:** Yeah. Definitely. May be time to move that conversation from this restaurant to the bar next door.

**Craig:** Yeah. And definitely if you look around and you’re like oh lord we’re the last one – don’t be the last ones there.

**John:** No.

**Craig:** Just don’t.

**John:** Don’t.

**Craig:** Don’t. Don’t do it.

**John:** Craig, thanks. I’m looking forward to a meal at some point.

**Craig:** Thanks John.

**John:** Bye.

Links:

* [12 Great Movies with Terrible Titles](https://screenrant.com/best-movies-worst-titles/) by Margaret Maurer
* [That Song In Every Musical That No One Likes](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXKUgjYh7lo) by Sarah Smallwood Parsons
* [Facer](https://www.facer.io/featured) for smart watch faces and [Carrot](http://www.meetcarrot.com/weather/applewatch.html) a weather app for the Apple Watch.
* [Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!](https://cottonbureau.com/people/scriptnotes-podcast)
* [Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/gifts) or [treat yourself to a premium subscription!](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/)
* [John August](https://twitter.com/johnaugust) on Twitter
* [Craig Mazin](https://twitter.com/clmazin) on Twitter
* [John on Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/johnaugust/?hl=en)
* [Outro](http://johnaugust.com/2013/scriptnotes-the-outros) by Chester Howie ([send us yours!](http://johnaugust.com/2014/outros-needed))
* Scriptnotes is produced by Megana Rao and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

You can download the episode [here](http://traffic.libsyn.com/scriptnotes/495standard.mp3).

The Title of This Episode

April 6, 2021 Scriptnotes, Transcribed

John and Craig tackle the tricky territory of movie titles: what makes them great, why they’re important, and how a bad one can tank a good movie.

We answer listener questions on writing diverse characters, surprising movie expenses, and residuals.

Finally, in our bonus segment for premium members Craig outlines how to behave in a restaurant.

Links:

* [12 Great Movies with Terrible Titles](https://screenrant.com/best-movies-worst-titles/) by Margaret Maurer
* [That Song In Every Musical That No One Likes](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dXKUgjYh7lo) by Sarah Smallwood Parsons
* [Facer](https://www.facer.io/featured) for smart watch faces and [Carrot](http://www.meetcarrot.com/weather/applewatch.html) a weather app for the Apple Watch.
* [Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt!](https://cottonbureau.com/people/scriptnotes-podcast)
* [Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/gifts) or [treat yourself to a premium subscription!](https://scriptnotes.supportingcast.fm/)
* [John August](https://twitter.com/johnaugust) on Twitter
* [Craig Mazin](https://twitter.com/clmazin) on Twitter
* [John on Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/johnaugust/?hl=en)
* [Outro](http://johnaugust.com/2013/scriptnotes-the-outros) by Chester Howie ([send us yours!](http://johnaugust.com/2014/outros-needed))
* Scriptnotes is produced by Megana Rao and edited by Matthew Chilelli.

Email us at ask@johnaugust.com

You can download the episode [here](http://traffic.libsyn.com/scriptnotes/495standard.mp3).

**UPDATE 4-9-21** The transcript for this episode can now be found [here](https://johnaugust.com/2021/scriptnotes-episode-495-the-title-of-this-episode-transcript).

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Apps

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Recommended Reading

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Screenwriting Q&A

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