SlagA
Tuesday 12th January 2010 10:22pm [Edited]
Blackwood
5,335 posts
Quote: Dolly Dagger @ January 12 2010, 1:49 PM GMT
It's interesting the idea of watching comedy other people has created keeps cropping up. I wonder though if it doesn't make someone's work derivative...?
I keep thinking that if comedy is born out of life's incidents but if we mainly get inspiration from other people's work we're getting it second hand and the result would be diluted...?
I'm 100% behind that, DD.
I find when I'm writing I actually stop watching other people's comedy, even the desire to watch other people's fades. It's partly my paranoia about being derivative, although admittedly it's not hard to see the style of my favourite writers present in some of my stuff (not all of it). It's also partly the fact that I'd prefer being a producer rather than a consumer. When it comes to true highs, nothing beats writing your own.
To get me started again, when I'm really stumped I'll sit for hours doing nothing but holding a pen and pad. The mind drives the body but the body can (in a very real pavlovian sense) drive the mind too. Putting yourself in a particular place and position for writing, with writing impliments, is a way you can train your mind to get used to switching from normal life to writer mode. But if it's to elicit the correct response, you need to be doing the same routine even when you're in the groove.
Another way is to treat every piece of writing as you would a script extract. Even posts here. Read it, edit it, until it's the best you can make it. It's all part of the craft.
Soots and RC make good points too.