Deferenz
Wednesday 21st January 2009 10:43pm
West Sussex
799 posts
Quote: David Bussell @ January 21 2009, 5:22 PM GMT
Sound advice from Steve and Deferenz.
Even sounder advice, in all honesty, would be to bury it somewhere very deep and begin working on your next sitcom without giving it a second thought. Your first script is invariably going to be an embarassment to you a year down the line so why inflict it on others?
It's not what a beginning writer wants to hear I realise (I would have scoffed at the thought of my first script not being saleable) but come back a year from now and tell me you don't agree with me.
I agree with you - but with a caveat.
Even though your first script will most probably spend the reminder of its existence on a memory stick, I think it is still good to try and get something positive from it in the way of feedback from either your peers or someone who knows the game. Even with a first script that will never be picked up by a prod co, it can still be beneficial to a new writer to know that, at least in some areas, they are ticking the right boxes. Personally speaking, the feedback I got from my first script gave me enough confidence to continue trying and wanting to improve the craft of my sitcom writing.
Def.