Quote: Alfred J Kipper @ April 4 2013, 7:23 PM BST
All that and you're still not bothering to think about who is offering this 'great prize'. The practical reality is you will get whatever the rates are for an aired radio sketch, 30 odd quid or something per sketch and that's it.
Unless you send in several from each category of such quality they want to air, they will not think you're remarkable, they will think you're roughly the same as the hundreds of other sketch contributors. This will get you paid some reasonable money, enough for a nice meal out to celebrate, but it won't get you anywhere with the BBC. By all means put the 'credit' on your CV, but I think when they read where the credit is from they won't be taking it very seriously. It really is a show for the people who can't and won't get produced any other way. It's an olive branch.
It's possible they could use the best sketches of the series for higher profile shows including TV, then you should get a better credit. I don't have a clue if this is in their future plans tho. No it does you no real harm, other than take a lot of your spare time to write 30 plus sketches. It may be good practice, unless your material, style or technique is not good in which case you're just practising how to write badly.
Like I said, I see it as an olive branch, a PR stunt mainly, and yes it fills some airspace and may feasibly help uncover a new writer for them, but their sketches would have to be brilliant and stand out from the rest to get them this notice. The Beeb/producer will still have all the hundreds of unaired sketches, and okay, you have faith not a single one of them will find their way into the head of some unscrupulous reader or producer with ambitions of their own. So go ahead, but allow me my own views. It's a damn sight easier for them, with industry contacts and friends to do something with a half decent sketch idea than it is for you, whether you thought of it first or not.
Back to my first point - you're looking at me and not at who's running this. Now try looking at who's running this. I'm not, it's the BBC. What do their WR rules say? 'No sketches or sketch shows.' This tells you all you need to know, really. They put a show out for you because they won't have your stuff in their mainstream shows, which are all sewn up. Sketches and shows only go to recognised writers. If you want to be a professional sketch writer I reackon it'll take you 20 years to even get a meeting with a BBC producer, unless you're an unearthed Peter Cook, and like I say, unquestionably brilliant.
Wouldn't you be better trying to be a writer first, meaning a proper narrative writer, and send them what they ask you to send? I'd say it's a quicker route to becoming a BBC sketch writer than sending in sketches to over competetive comps, tho both are undoubtedly extremely hard routes to real success.
Unfortunately you're entirely wrong again. I was lucky enough to be asked to go in and write on a couple of episodes of Newsjack off the back of a few sketches I sent in towards the end of series 7, and was subsequently told about SWYW by one of the producers when it was pitched. I only got a little bit of material on NJ but I had two days experience of how these shows work, what they want and how my own material needs changing, so it was absolutely invaluable to me, and all from sending in a few sketches to a non com show.
When swyw got commissioned I did a little wee in my big boy shorts because I realised this is a massive opportunity to impress someone I've already met, and possibly get more radio credits and build from there. I am by no means special though and certainly not unquestionably brilliant as you seem to think you have to be to get noticed, I've managed three credits since I started submitting for NJ midway through series 7 and I've developed hugely for the experience.
All it took was for one producer to like my style and now I have the opportunity to get myself noticed more. If this gets any further it is up to me to work my arse off, as I did when submitting to SWYW, but anyone could catch their eye with some well written sketches and a unique style, so you couldn't be more wrong about this not leading anywhere. I lucked out as I think my sketches can be a bit flabby sometimes, but I was given pointers by the people I met and hopefully I'll improve whilst retaining what I'm good at. There are a lot of excellent writers here who could make a big impression with these producers, you are just putting people off this because you've either not had the same luck or you've just not submitted the right stuff.
After meeting one of the producers at a seminar thing I was invited to off the back of NJ, he told me to submit ideas to him if I had anything good. He gave me advice on how to put it together and how much work I should be doing to prepare something to pitch. I am now in the process of fleshing out a radio 4 idea that I will eventually send over to him once my brain has become less frazzled from SWYW. I have always written other things in addition to sketches, people are capable of doing both if they put the effort it. Like I said there are lots of reasons you can come up with to not write something, but it is far more productive to think more positively. So now off the back of all this I have the opportunity to get my narrative work seen properly by someone who knows a little bit about me and my style already, I think that comes under the category of a f**king good result don't you?