Sunday, February 12, 2017
The Most Easily Avoidable Mistake Young Writers Make
The Most Easily Avoidable Mistake Young Writers Make
Youve worked on your spec pilot for months. Youve taken a course in pilot writing. Youve read two books. Youre so desperate for information youve read through the archives of this blog.
Youve got a dynamite premise. Its EXACTLY what every network is looking for right now. Howd you tap into the zeitgeist five minutes before everyone else? And those characters -- they just jump off the page. Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep are even willing to audition .
Your story is ingenious, shows the unlimited potential of your series, and has a inspired twist. Think: THE USUAL SUSPECTS but better!
And its laugh-out-loud funny. Move over Mel Brooks. Theres a new sheriff in town and its YOU .
If ever there was a slam dunk, a home run, a cant miss THIS IS IT.
So how come readers stop reading on page three and toss it into the reject file?
Answer: Typos.
You could write the greatest spec pilot of all-time and if you have typos on the first three pages youre dead. Its just that simple.
Its amazing how many writers will pour their hearts and souls into their scripts and then skim over the proofing process. The message typos send is that you lack dedication and judgment even if we both know that isnt true.
So before you turn in your masterpiece, go over it with a fine tooth comb, and then have a friend or two do the same.
Now you may be saying, Well, wait a minute Levine you have typos in your blog all the time. Yes, but Im not turning it in to CBS. We all make typos and we all overlook them. Thats why its so critical you go that extra mile. You enlist some help. The competition is steep. Give yourself an edge by presenting a proofed-proof script.
As always, best of luck!
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