jacparov
Saturday 16th February 2008 1:45am [Edited]
Southport
1,446 posts
Quote: David Chapman @ February 15, 2008, 8:35 PM
I normally think of a setting and then try to make some situations. The characters evolve from that.
Interesting, as an exercise in writing recently I am writing a draft based purely in a trapped lift and two characters. I'll never send it off but it is proving interesting - and difficult.
So you just think of say a type of bar/workplace/home or whatever and go from that?
Quote: SlagA @ February 15, 2008, 8:39 PM
For me, it's the premise or world first. Mine are normally bizarre because I do have a slight issue with relating to the real world.
Once I have the world I get the characters needed to drive it. For example, I needed a robot for one show but wanted 'cheap and unique'. I constructed a list of famous robots and listed their characters. The robot we created then had a list of traits unlike any in the other well-know robots characters. And I made him humanoid for cheapness. Not Kryten humanoid but identical to human. I do this with other characters by looking at role within the sitcom. I list what is crucial for that character to possess and then slot in reasons to hate the other people in their world.
I tend to draw relationship maps linking people by relationship type (if any) and positive and negative feelings (What will make these people ally or oppose each other?)
Finally I think about locations. A few of ours are seen as one-camera varied locations but we have been working on a violent and anarchistic studio sitcom with a few basic sets that avoid the 'flat' setup.
I would never of thought of doing it that way, but I quite like the idea. Do you have any examples of the sitcoms on your website slaga?