glaikit
Wednesday 7th January 2009 8:26pm
Newcastle Upon Tyne
159 posts
Pretty much everything I write sitcom-wise could be considered 'high-concept' in one way or another, cos I just can't bring myself to write a traditional flatshare sitcom. I don't think it's in me.
I tend to do sitcoms the wrong way, coming up with the situation first then working out what kind of characters I'd like to see there rather than coming up with the characters first and then finding the situation that would suit them (I'm sure that's where I've been going wrong all these years). I'll be watching a film, see a situation and think "that'd make a great sitcom scenario" and then try to work back till it works logically in my head as something that could be made (ideally as inexpensively as possible). It's tricky (especially in the case of my latest project which I've been working out the logistics for over a year), but it suits what I think is funny and interesting, so it's the best I've got to go on.
The sitcom Bunker (https://www.comedy.co.uk/forums/thread/8072) I posted last year was an attempt at taking a high-concept (in this case the end of the world) and stripping it down to the bare sitcom elements. The idea had been in my head since 2003 and was a bugger to work out.
Whether high-concepts put off script-readers and commissioners remains to be proven (but it's probably the other way I've been going wrong all these years!). I personally love sitcoms with original or wild settings and styles (Red Dwarf, Father Ted, Garth Marenghi, Police Squad!) and strive to write something in that style.