Finck
Friday 24th October 2008 4:06pm
Manchester
3,485 posts
From James Henry's blog:
"While we're still on jargon, a quick email to various colleagues brought forth the following (genuine) reasons for scripts being rejected:
"We feel the script lacks primary colours." (the writer in question says "My offer to specify in the directions that the main character dresses in a pillar box red pullover throughout failed to retrieve the project from the bin").
"There are too many funny bits, and not enough other bits."
"We like the writing but we're not doing grey" (as Oli has suggested, is there perhaps a glut of execs with synaesthesia?)
"This is too intelligent for an ITV audience."
"Hattrick is not at home to whimsy."
"It's very very funny, but it begs the question 'why?'"
"It's great. We love it. The script made me laugh out loud. We're not doing it."
Email from one writer to another: "Well we got the notes from ITV and basically they don't want jokes about people, ideas, books, places, history, travel, cars, politics or things. So far in the script they have approved something about a meat auction."
And from a director about a script that was made: "I don't bother looking at the bits in italics" i.e. the stage directions."