Quote: Griff @ March 4 2011, 10:41 AM GMTNo. The most important thing in this writing game is being able to write something that's so good that when a producer (or agent) sees it they will bite your hand off to work with you.
It is easy to get in touch with producers. All the ways people have talked about are good - radio credits, YouTube, live performances, staged readings of scripts, theatre plays, stand-up career, whatever. Just get out there and keep doing stuff. I'm no genius writer but I've collected a fair number of industry contacts who would be prepared to read a script of mine if I sent it to them. The thing I don't have yet - in common with 99.9% of all writers - is a script that's good enough to give them.
Fair point Griff, but I did say to take the opportunity when it arises, which implies having material good enough. You need a foot in the door but if your work's sh@te then I agree you'll just getting broken toes.
I say contacts are vital though because for too long in my non-comedy writing 'career' I naively thought the way to do it is you write a good script and send it off to as many people as possible and hope they agree you're brilliant and make you a millionaire. So I think too many people underestimate the 'developing relationships' part of writing is all ...