Extracted from Michael Jacob's blog...
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Some ideas are immediately rejected, either because it feels as if they don't work, because they are areas of life which commissioners and channels shy away from...
...so by the time a new comedy series arrives on television, it has gone through several stages of approval, and been subject to notes and thoughts at every point in its upward ascent.
Despite all of the stages, and the different kinds of expertise involved, some shows work very well, some work moderately well, and some become car crash television. The audience decides, and the only way really to judge whether or not your show works is to sit at home and watch it go out. And if it doesn't work, it's too late by then.
The excitement of comedy is its imprecision. No one can guarantee a hit, and an identical writer and production team can follow a massive success with a complete turkey.
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Just some thoughts...
I think anyone who "wants to write for (established) televison" and be paid for doing that JOB would do well to reflect on the above extracts from Michael's blog. It's like if you want to be a policeman at the Met, you wouldn't turn up with a mohican haircut, facial tattoos and your typed-out amendments to existing laws that you feel need to be changed (..or a black face???) would you?
You have to write something that will "fit in", also you'll have to accept that plenty of other TV-types will put their fingers into your cooking pot too, add ingedients that maybe you don't want, and give it a stir the wrong way around the pot, etc. They want a "hit". And it's their definition of a hit, not your definition of a hit. And a hit on their terms, not yours. And it's your JOB to deliver that.
I myself don't "want to write for television" (established or otherwise). What I want to do (and do) is write for myself. Maybe other BSG'ers do this too? I dunno. If what I write is suitable for televison, then great. And I don't mind ideas from others going into my/our pot (as long as I like the ideas..) or someone else editing my work (as long as I like the job they've done..) This "attitude" may mean I never get on TV with my writing. But I would rather not be on TV, than on TV with something that I don't personally believe in.
For me writing is not a JOB, it's an art. I may well be a mediocre artist, I don't actually care except that I'll try to learn and try harder. If I am only ever going to be mediocre than I can't stop doing it anyway, as it's what I do and love doing. If I ever have any commercial success, then fine. But for me the writing can only come from the heart, and not from the wallet. But television is a BUSINESS first and foremost and writers who "want to write for televison", must recognise that and "apply for the JOB" accordingly.
Good luck with it anyway!