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Posts tagged as “Fellowships”

Diversity in TV and the Writers’ Room ft. Francesca Butler & Kelly Lynne D’Angelo (PT14)

Alex and Nick welcome Francesca Butler and Kelly Lynne D’Angelo to discuss diversity and representation in television — both on screen and in the writers’ room.
What has been their personal experience working in TV? What shows influenced them growing up? What are they thoughts on diversity staffing and writing programs?

The Paper Team hands the mic over for some thought-provoking insight…

SHOWNOTES

Content

1 – Influences growing up (00:33)
2 – Cultural appropriation and experiences being in the writers’ room (11:59)
3 – Diversity staffing and the writing programs (24:58)
4 – WGA’s Diversity Committees & Caucuses (33:11)
5 – Moving forward, selling yourself and recommended shows (36:12)

Links

Francesca Butler on Twitter
Kelly Lynne D’Angelo on Twitter
Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella
The Patriot
Hamilton
All That
Roundhouse
The West Wing
American Dreams
Living Single
Angela Moore (from Boy Meets World)
The Journey of Allen Strange
The Meteor Man
Hollywood Shuffle
“Shapes” (1×19 – The X-Files)
Thunderbird House (from Harry Potter)
Jacqueline White (from Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt)
Sundance Institute/IAIA’s Native Writer’s Workshop
LA Skins Fest’s Native American TV Writers Lab
“TV Diversity Programs: Launching Pad or Scarlet Letter?”
WGAW Diversity Committees
A Different World
The Flash and Supergirl’s Musical Crossover
Insecure
Being Mary Jane
Greenleaf
The Son

If you enjoyed this episode (and others), please consider leaving us an iTunes review at paperteam.co/itunes! :)

You can find Paper Team on Twitter:
Alex@TVCalling
Nick@_njwatson
If you have any questions, comments or feedback, you can e-mail us: [email protected]

Spec v. Pilot: What You Should Be Writing Next (PT04)

Alex and Nick discuss the differences and implications between writing a television spec episode and a television spec pilot. Which script should you choose to write as your next sample? Whether it’s your first teleplay, you want to apply to the fellowships, or you’re trying to build a portfolio to get representation, the Paper Team has got you covered.

SHOWNOTES

Content

1 – Defining what “spec script” and “spec pilot” mean (00:28)
2 – The goals of writing a TV spec script or a spec pilot (02:33)
3 – Why and how spec scripts and pilots are read (10:13)
4 – Deciding what your next writing sample should be (17:13)
Takeaways and Resources (29:40)

Links

What is the difference between a “spec script” and a “spec pilot”?
Star Trek: Terran
Stargate SG-1 – “The Other Guys”

Resources

Writing the TV Drama Series – Pamela Douglas
The TV Writer’s Workbook – Ellen Sandler

TV Calling’s TV Spec Course mentioned in the episode is almost ready.
Be prepared by taking our free PDF Spec Test!

If you enjoyed this episode (and others), please leave us an iTunes review and/or rating at paperteam.co/itunes! :)

You can find Paper Team on Twitter:
Alex@TVCalling
Nick@_njwatson
If you have any questions, comments or feedback, you can e-mail us: [email protected]

Why you really need to write a TV spec script

The fellowships are coming! The fellowships are coming!

It’s common knowledge that the main requirement to apply for TV writing fellowships is a spec.
As in, a sample script of an episode based on an existing show–not an original pilot.

Despite this, the current TV industry seems to look more favorably at original pilots than specs.
That’s probably the reason you’ve asked yourself why you (still) needed to write a TV spec script.

Let’s take a quick look back at a time when specs were de rigueur when it came to breaking in.
Jane Espenson did a Frasier, Matt Olmstead wrote a Homicide script, and Dave Hemingson went for a Larry Sanders episode.
In fact, up until Enterprise, all Star Trek shows used to have an “open submission” policy when it came to recruiting fresh talent. That’s how Ronald D. Moore and Bryan Fuller got their start (among many).

Spec scripts were so prevalent in TV specifically (beyond pitching) because the medium requires a format that needs to be replicated. Over and over and over again.
You needed to prove that you could fit in that mold.

As original programming exploded, so did the request for “original material”. Which translated to pilot scripts being everyone’s calling card. Even for aspiring TV writers.

And here we are today, where (seemingly) only the writing programs and various screenwriting contests specifically ask for spec scripts.

So… Why are TV spec scripts still worth writing?

First, let’s go back to the point of a spec–

Simply put, a spec script is an exercise in imitation. You write a TV spec to showcase your ability to mimic the style, voice and narrative of the show you selected.

We just talked about television shows being about formulas and structures that are repeatable over several episodes. Even serialized shows akin to Breaking Bad, or anthologies like American Crime Story have a set number of acts, beats and stories.
Spec scripts show your ability to “fit” within those constraints. You’re already imposing them on yourself by speccing a distinct show.

Moira Walley-Beckett Ozymandias BoardMoira Walley-Beckett and the board for her Breaking Bad episode (“Ozymandias”)

Television writing is also intrinsically communal. You will be in a room with X other writers, brainstorming and breaking episodes months on out.

Unless your name rhymes with “Rick Dizzolatto”, your first job as a TV writer won’t be as some EP-level showrunner whose vision will shepherd a multi-million-dollar company (AKA a TV show).
You will likely be a low-level staff writer. And as a staff writer, you’re paid to be a brain in the room and then translate the showrunner’s voice to the page. (Meaning you’re not necessarily hired for your stylistic talents as a raconteur.)

If spec pilots exist to show your unique snowflake of a voice, then spec scripts should remind people you can deliver a producible hour of television within specific guidelines.
In other words, your ability to be a TV writer.

Specs should not replace pilots, the same way that pilots should not replace specs. They’re complimentary exercises.
That’s why the real reason why you need to write a TV spec script isn’t because it’s some mandatory requirement on an application, or just another calling card in your portfolio.
You should be writing TV spec scripts because it is your job as a television writer to write spec scripts (albeit with WGA-mandated pay).

Think of writing TV specs like practice. The exercise of speccing a show is the closest thing to the experience of writing as a TV staff writer.
It may not be as bright and sparkly as creating your own pilot, but it’s the job you’re signing up for.
Researching what the show is. Brainstorming ideas that fit in that world. Breaking and outlining a coherent story. Writing and drafting a compelling script.
That’s the grind of being a television writer. (With complementary sugary snacks.)

Write on.