Godot Taxis
Wednesday 4th February 2009 6:20pm
5,741 posts
Quote: Griff @ February 4 2009, 12:40 PM GMT
Hi Lord Meldrum. I think you'd have to be more specific with your setting for us to advise.
Let me briefly tell you what happened with one of my sitcoms.
I wrote a sitcom based in a guest house (much like 'Rising Damp') except that the tenants were all housed under various Government schemes - care in the community, mental health patients, ex convicts, substance abusers, asylum seekers, and so forth.
Then after I'd written it and submitted it to The Sitcom Trials, I read about Simon Nye's "In Our Country" which has been commissioned for BBC2 and deals with immigrants from various countries trapped in a guest house because of Government paperwork issues. Then I read that "In My Country" is mired in controversy because there is a suggestion the idea was stolen from another writer who submitted it to the BBC (I won't list the details here, you can Google them, but the aggrieved writer has a very strong case.)
So it turned out that my idea (hilarity in nasty public-sector accommodation) was similar to at least one and possibly two other projects being considered.
Was it because we all remembered the brilliance of Rising Damp and consciously or subconsciously wanted to write a modern twist on that idea? Who knows.
I've reworked my project now - and it's on at the Trials next month - but it's still probably too close to "In My Country" to be of any interest to anyone now. So I would say, the more original the idea you have come up with, the more worthwhile it is to write up.
Also, there isn't much similarity between The Office and Spinal Tap except they are both mock-docs. If somebody came up with a mock-doc about a rock band (a mock-rock-doc?) then perhaps they should be worried about "it's been done before".
Griff, there's also Heartburn Hotel with Tim Healy from a few years back that was about Asylum seekers housed in a guest house.