Kev F
Tuesday 28th June 2011 6:05am [Edited]
Bristol
689 posts
Quote: Frantically @ June 27 2011, 11:07 PM BST
Not taking un-critiqued votes seems a bit unfair. Some people may gain and others lose ...I know the rules have been stated etc. etc, but I'll be honest, I didn't read them fully myself and it seems wrong.
The online voting system is not perfect, and the checks and balances I've tried to keep in place this time round may not have been as stringent as some would have liked, but the underlying method remains the best for this kind of thing. The vast bulk of the voters voted for almost all of the scripts, giving us as representative a cross section of views as possible. If you look at the voting table(s) in the files (mine's and Dan Sweryt's) you'll see trends very clearly emerge, with scripts in the Top Ten getting a lot of Yesses, scripts in the bottom ten getting a lot of Nos, and scripts in the middle getting a wide range of votes (tellingly it's Treading Water which lives up to its name, floaing slap bang in the middle).
A Maybe vote cancelled out a No vote, and some got a pretty even mix of both, hence the scores in the single figures, either plus or minus. They were fun to add up, with me pointing at a screen going "one, zero, one, zero, one, two, one, zero, minus one, zero.." and so on. While a clear Yes took two whole Nos to wipe out, which should make the system err towards the positive, especially if anyone were trying to ballot-stuff.
Having reviews with the votes is, I hope, the most helpful part of the process. The writers of 43 scripts now have, at the very least, a bit of audience research from 25 or more people who've read their scripts. These aren't script reports by paid script editors, but they are the views of a self-selecting jury of your peers and as such must tell us all something about the quality of the work we submitted.
Of course on Saturday 4 or 5 scripts will be subjected to the ultimate test, an audience's laughter. Of course there'll be voting, and the audience will declare a winner, but it's finding out whether your script entertains a paying crowd that is the real test of comedy. If they don't laugh, of course, you can always blame the actors.
When and if we try this again, most entrants will have a better idea what to expect, and those who found the online criticism too bruising and humiliating may, understandably, not want to subject themselves to it again. But hopefully it will help others and might prepare some for the harsh world of professional writing.
Kev F Sutherland
Executive Producer
The Sitcom Trials
Quote: Marc P @ June 27 2011, 10:16 PM BST
Kev F... Love that Executive Producer credit by the way. That one is a yes from me!
According to Wikipedia: An executive producer is a producer who is not involved in any technical aspects of the ... process, but who is still responsible for the overall production. Typically an executive producer handles business and legal issues.
So, pompous as it sounds, when Declan & Simon started producing their series of The Sitcom Trials in 2007, it clarified things to call me EP rather than Producer. I've kept the same nominal title for the James Parker produced 2009 season and the Manchester Sitcom Trials. I'm not producing them, but they're being done under license from me.
Kev F