Lee Henman
Saturday 14th February 2009 8:19am
5,183 posts
Quote: Ronnie Anderson @ February 14 2009, 12:37 AM GMT
Just because it might be helpful to me and other writers on the forum what was your bad experience with The Writers Room. Ok they might be diferent now but as a novie writer I would be intersted to know more of the possible pitfalls of having your work developed.
It was a long time ago Ronnie - I'm talking more than a decade ago. But basically I got my script back with a polite "thanks but no thanks" letter - which admittedly was better than it deserved - this was my first bash at a sitcom after all.
But the script itself came back with some very unkind stuff scrawled all over it. The type of thing Simon Cowell might dream up in his more evil moments if you know what I mean. (Maybe it was him!)
I think one of the most cutting comments scrawled on one page was something like "Is this supposed to make us laugh? Who is this guy?" Another page had the word "shit, shit, shit" written in the margin.
Of course, I was young and impressionable and bloody devastated. Luckily my self-preservation gene kicked in and rather than give up I got mad, and for ages I had a definite "screw you" attitude to the BBC.
Then LWT read some of my stuff and stepped in to give me a commission for Hale and Pace, which ultimately went down very well with the audience and patched up my faith in my own writing, leading onto me writing gags for greetings cards for a living. (Not exactly fame and fortune but it's been a steady living).
But that's all water under the bridge now. I look back on it as just being jolly bad luck in that my first experience with the BBC was via some complete knob who they accidentally employed instead of kicking his arse straight out of BBC Centre and all the way down Wood Lane.
The Beeb have been nothing but supportive to me in recent years and I still reckon they should be a new writer's first port of call. As I say, even if it was a long time ago, my experience was a one-off I think. Plus things are done a lot differently these days, so please don't let me put you off.