Ed Parnell
Tuesday 29th May 2007 5:04am
LONDON
360 posts
The writers room is a good idae because of two reasons
A) It is a filter for people who are not familiar with the industry to submit to. Although this is not a comfort, it does mean that those in charge don't waste time with ideas which don't have legs or are plainly unworkable. Now, this also means they turn down a lot of good stuff simply because they don't recognise it.
B)You would be amazed at some of the stuff which gets sent in. Ideas written in handwriting, strange paper...photocopied sheets where the numbering is wrong.
Both of these are positive in a negative way, if you see what I mean.
On another forum I was talking to someone who works in the Production sector of the BBC, who praised the writers' room. Personally, I don't like this system, because it discourages talented people. I have not seen (although I have to be honest and say I haven't read that many) any work on here which didn't at least have potential. It's because people are learning the art of it. Some are very gifted.
The only way of getting work, or at least getting something constructive is to approach someone who is working in the same sort of style that you are. Or someone you respect. You can't build a working relationship with someone you don't respect or whose work you don't rate. That is a recipe for disaster.
I'm not saying working with a producer is a piece of cake, but you are working with someone who at least has some sort of idea of what works and what doesn't. Like any working relationship you have to develop it. There will be things both of you will say which the other will not like. It's all about compromise without sacrifice.
All this means you are having their attention. Now, the writers room filters out - in my opinion wrongly in many cases - material which producers can't or won't use. Releasing them to work on your script or someone elses' or whatever.
There is obviously a finite amount of time these people have or are prepared to spend on work. So getting them to spend time on yours is no mean feat in itself.
I am not advising you or anyone to pester producers. Do not send things cold. Be professional. Approach them as you would approach anyone else.
I'm babbling I know, but I want to say that it's not a dead end street. The Writers Room is far from perfect, asalmost every writer knows, but you would have even further problems and longer waits if it didn't exist.
This doesn't excuse the ineffiency or poor comprehension of even getting a title right, though. That's just lazy.