Scottish Jimmy
Thursday 24th December 2009 2:23am [Edited]
Edinburgh
200 posts
Get an agent.
You will get an agent if you've been asked to write a second part of a series.
Just say to the agent: 'I've got an ongoing deal here'.
The agent will advise you that you should be paid (and make sure that you do, from what I've been tutored on, a 8-14 page treatment is about a grand to 2 grand worth of work, you do the maths for a 30 page or 60 page episode (if it has legs the agent will probably say that you will have rights to commissions as viewing figures go up).
Get a contract together and DON'T WAIVE YOUR MORAL RIGHT TO BE CREDITED, the rest is by the by; just as long as you get paid for waiving them, you can arrange it that you'll be credited but they will own the material (as a production company does).
You should be paid for re-writes too, just as long as the first draft wasn't rubbish.
If you want I can email you some legal advice that I learned on my MA. Give me your email address.
It's the series producer that is supposed to pay you, he/she gets the money in from the investors.
Countless producers have told me that whatever happens the writers are the ones that get paid even before the producers do. So make sure they don't totally exploit you working for them.