Thursday, March 15, 2018

TV Script Project: Day 5 - The Middle

Please read:

After the Beginning: now what? Working through the middle
You began typing the moment you had an idea. You started off strong. Now three sentences in, or three scenes, or even three pages, you've reached your first stumbling block: what happens next?
With prompts and experience, most writers can get started. What's difficult is continuing through a murky middle. Here are some tips to slog through the worst part of your writing experience:
1. Most of the time we get stuck when we don't know what our characters want. Give your character a motive (a desire, or goal, etc.) to keep him/her moving forward.
2. Forward march: Move the plot forward by adding conflict and action. Involve your characters in a specific action or direct conflict with another character. This is particularly helpful if you are bored.
3. Put yourself in your protagonist's shoes: go inside a character's head. This is a common error that young writers constantly forget to do. Get your character's perspective. What would you think in a similar situation? What would you see if you were in this scene? What would you notice? What would you say? What would you do?
4. Skip forward in time. Advance the time period and move forward with the plot. Skip a line to indicate you've changed time (either forward or backward).
5. Skip to another setting/location. Move your character to a new setting. What happens there? Describe the setting/location, and the actions of minor characters.
6. Skip to a scene happening at the same time, but in a different location. 
7. Press forward: If you need more time to research details and don't want to stop to look up a fact or information, indicate what you need to look up by BOLDING or CAPITALIZING a note to yourself. You can also insert NOTES using your word processor feature under the insert menu.
8. Skip to the next major plot point. If you know where the story is going, but don't know yet how to get there, skip a line and write the next scene.
9. Go back to brainstorming. Use your journal to try out some new things. If you don't know (or are stuck on):
  • Your characters: write a character sketch, draw a picture of your character, or develop your character's background history
  • Your setting: draw your setting, find a picture of an appropriate setting on the internet, describe your setting using imagery--what sounds, smells, tastes, textures, and sights would one experience in the setting
  • Your plot: list possible challenges or problems that a character might face in a similar situation or setting. Decisions characters make (or don't make) often create conflict. Create a mind map or use a graphic organizer to focus on plot elements.
  • Your theme: create a premise for your story. What do you want to communicate about the human condition? What lesson or experience are you trying to relate?
10. Obviously, use the index cards and outline you created and push forward. If the middle is giving you trouble, skip to the end and write that. You can also go back and fill in the middle.

Continue writing your TV scripts. You should have completed 2-3 pages last class. If this is not the case (or you don't get much written today in the lab) please catch up by writing at home or during an advisement period. You want to aim to complete your script draft Monday.

HOMEWORK: None. Although, if you are behind, catch up with the rest of us. We'll be completing our episode script next class. 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Game Review Article; Ready Player One

  Please write a review of the Atari 2600, NES or Sega game you played. Your article should include the following: 1. A researched historic...