Crindy
Wednesday 6th April 2022 11:36am [Edited]
189 posts
Gonna try and get something in for this. Not sure I have anything I'd consider a potential winning entry, but this new 'one contest every two years' caveat and the loss of the annual BBC comedy contest kinda makes me feel like you can't let these sorts of windows pass you by if you're not 100% ready any more. Plus £46 is probably worth it for the feedback alone. Anything else is a bonus.
I'm a bit confused by the request for 'any ten pages of any episode script' (think the last couple of BBC submission windows had that criteria as well). I've always been told that writing multiple episodes of one idea is a waste of time (if you've got the time to write six scripts, write six unique and interesting pilots, not six episodes of the same exact thing). But now everyone seems to be all 'Why, yes, of course, we'd love to read pages 22-31 of episode 7'.
I assume they do this because a) these contests aren't so much looking for scripts that will actually get made, more finding writers with solid comedy writing chops that they can then help develop and b) there can be few things more soul-crushing than reading hundreds of 'first ten pages of the pilot episode' from a bunch of amateurs. But, I dunno, feels a bit weird. Like I should stop crafting scripts with tight, interesting high concept plots*, and just focus on packing ten pages of contest-winning knob gags into the middle somewhere.
And I know that every ten random pages of every script you write should be packed full of contest-winning gags, knob-based or otherwise, so it shouldn't matter, but still. Feels like you're skipping crucial aspects of writing like seamless character introductions, strong pilot writing, plotting, etc, when you can explicitly tell everyone who your characters are and what the story is in the supporting material, then point the reader to ten random pages. I remember when "But it gets good on page 23 if you keep reading!" wasn't a good enough excuse for your first 10 pages being three blokes with exactly the same speech pattern sitting in a pub together pointlessly bantering on about their favourite types of jam.
Ah well, back to writing Jamie and his Magic Knob of Justice - Series 8, Episode 5: "The Favourite Jam Conundrum" before the deadline.
* Not that any of my plots are especially tight, interesting or high concept, but the intention is usually there.