Lee Henman
Thursday 5th February 2009 6:54am [Edited]
5,183 posts
Quote: Kevin Murphy @ February 5 2009, 1:04 AM GMT
I'm not sure this post deserves its own thread. I won't be offended if the mods append it to another relevant thread.
A few hours ago I attended a BBC Comedy-North "workshop" on writing comedy for the Beeb. It was part of the Northern Laughs mentoring/development scheme mentioned in a couple of other threads, but the information given out at the talk is probably relevant to all regions, so I thought I'd put it here rather than in a north-specific thread.
Given that the competition for said scheme is likely already pretty intense, I don't expect I'm shooting myself in too many feet by sharing what I learned.
I've done a reasonably lengthy write-up on my blog at
http://texturbation.com/blog/?p=996
You can skip the indulgent preamble in the first half of the post if you're just interested in the bullet-pointed good stuff.
If you've been doing this a while, or even just reading these forums for a while, I reckon most of it will not be news to you. But maybe there's one or two things of use.
At the very least, it's all most definitely current.
Hey Kevin - I was there too. I bobbed up with the inestimable James Harris of these very boards. You may or may not have noticed me sneaking out for a slash during the projector bits and getting squuiffy in the bar afterwards.
Nice to attend an event specifically to help out North Eastern writers. Precious little of those about.
UPDATE:
Just read your blog entry. First of all - holy shit dude, you took some serious notes! I managed to jot a few commissioner notes down and draw a cartoon cock. But cheers for posting this. Anyway, a fair summary of the proceedings, mostly. The BBC speaker was Kristian Smith - and yes he was nervous but I thought he did a sterling job for somebody uncomfortable with public speaking.
To be fair - from the clips they showed, the League Of Gents bit got laughs because it's intrisically LOL, visual comedy (the pissing into the glass etc). You forgot to mention the We Are Klang dancing horse clip, which also got laughs.
The cash part - 3 grand an episode is for an absolute beginner and fees are always negotiable - but that's still 18 thousand pounds for a few month's work, plus those all-important repeat fees.
Good work! Screw comedy, you should be a reporter!