Wednesday, May 13, 2020

TV Script Project: Pilot

Television scripts are comprised of:

1. A slugline (all in CAPS) indicating EXT (exterior) or INT (interior): LOCATION, and time of day.
2. Description (left-justified) written in paragraphs that are NOT indented. Skip a line between paragraphs for easy reading. A general rule is to limit your scene action to four or five descriptive and specific lines PER action.
3. Dialogue has the character's name all in CAPS, indented to about 2.5" or 3" (5-6 tabs over); A character's dialogue appears under the character name. It is NEVER centered! Instead, tab over 3 tabs so that your dialogue occurs at 1.5". ACTOR NOTES (if used) should be in parenthesis and 4 tabs over (2"). 
  • Keep your dialogue specific. 
  • Do not waste your plot time with incidental or unnecessary dialogue! Tighten your script!
  • Remember to describe necessary and important action in the ACTION tags (that which is describing the action/setting or what a character does that is not clear from the dialogue. See #2 above).
4. Transitions. Transition notes are RIGHT justified. FADE OUT, CUT TO (are the most typical transitions); DISSOLVE TO, or INTERCUT are used less frequently.

WRITING THE TV SCRIPT:
REMEMBER: You are not the director or cinematographer for your episode. You don't have to worry about directing notes or camera movement in general. See the sample TV script samples as examples for the kind of writing you should be doing!

You might find it helpful to jot notes on index cards for the different scenes you are including in your pilot script. Use the index cards to help you progress. If you get stuck during an act, move on to write the second or third act, then come back if necessary and complete your 1st. You don't have to write a script from beginning to end, but from scene to another scene. You can always organize your scenes later.

Your scripts should be formatted for TV script format and range between 15-20 pages in length. (A half-hour pilot).

FAQ:

In a 15 page script, you might have each act about 5 pages long. Of those 5 pages, 1 or 2 pages should be dealing with your subplot.

In a 20 page script, you might have each act about 6-7 pages long. Of which about 2 pages should be dealing with your subplot.

You may, if you need to, have a longer script. But 16-18 pages is a good target. (18=6 pages per act.)

Your pilot is due around June. See Google Classroom for specifics.

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