swerytd
Monday 26th November 2007 8:30pm [Edited]
Guildford
7,542 posts
Quote: nancy daniel @ November 26, 2007, 3:08 PM
That helps alot and really adds more questions:
Are the sitcoms still being written by the British writers for America or are the Americans just buying the rights to the sitcoms and rewriting them with American writers? My guess is that we are re-writing them for America tv with American writers. Is the reason that they don't succeed because of the differences in American humor and British humor and what are the differences in the two? I watch Fawlty Towers and I can't stop laughing, but when we show it to some of our friends, some get it, some don't. These are great examples, but I would also like to find some that were big hits in America that were written by British and were acted by Americans and some that were hits in Britian that were written by American writers, but used British actors. What we might be finding out is that there aren't any, but I would think that there had to be least a few examples of each. Thanks for all of the help it has been great, but I am still searching if you have any more ideas, the more the better!
Rewriting with American writers. I suspect it's to do with Writer's Guild of America rules and memberships but you'll have to look further into that to see if it's having an effect. Probably also to do with the fact that we only have 6-8 episodes in a season, which is not anywhere near enough for an American season. Those 6-8 episodes are written by one or two people and takes about nine months from writing to finishing filming. I'm not sure about this anymore but suspect that all 6-8 episodes are written before the filming even starts, whereas in American sitcom an episode is written as they're filming and they're about 2-3 weeks ahead with stories which are not quite finished and are constantly re-written right up to and during filming. You need a big team of writers to do this and it's very difficult to do with one or two writers.
I'm guessing they don't work because of the 'perceived' differences in humour, what the network *thinks* works and tries to change something into something it's not, looking at the list of failures why buy something if it's going to be completely different. (I saw the intro sequence to the American Peep Show and it was god-awful!)
In a nutshell, British sitcoms are about losers trying to 'make it' and failing. American sitcoms are about already successful people and their problems.
Some people will laugh at stuff and some people won't; that's taste. There are people here that don't laugh at Fawlty Towers and people a lot closer to home that just don't 'get' The Office. I can't legistate why people laugh at some things but not others (I'm the only one in my circle of friends who laugh at Napoleon Dynamite and I think it's hilarious; everyone else just stares at me laughing).
Due to sitcoms being driven by talent here rather than idea, there are very few that I can recall being written by Americans for the British market. Rich Hall's Cattle Drive for BBC4, I suppose, but I've never seen it so don't know if it's a sitcom/sketch show/stand-up. He is American though. And I think he starred in it with Sean Cullen (a Canadian) so not sure that it counts!
Dan