Saturday, 27 September 2008
The Hope Lottery
Friday, 18 July 2008
Get thee to a library
Wednesday, 9 July 2008
The state of British TV
Ratings for British TV have been dropping for the last decade. Experts say that this is because we have other alternatives, multi channels and the Internet. All of this may be true in part but the bigger reality is that people are deserting them because British TV is not very good. The success of soaps over the years shows not that the British public love soap but that they love drama. The networks have tried to satiate this need by just giving us more episodes of what we already have to the point that schedules are now packed with soap operas.
There is good drama on TV, occasionally it’s British, mostly it’s not. House, The West Wing, Battlestar Gallactica, Mad Men, the Sopranos, CSI – the list goes on, all brilliant, all American. It didn’t always used to be like this. I spent the 80s and 90s deriding the awfulness of American television, was it as bad as I thought it was – probably not, was it as good as it is now - defiantly not. What was the main factor in the improvement of American television, I am not sure I know, but certainly a big factor was HBO. HBO raised the bar. They produced great quality, intelligent, brilliantly written drama. Audiences loved it and the quality of the programmes, along with the usual 22 week run, meant that large extra incomes could be generated by DVD sales. The networks saw what was happening and upped their game – they didn’t have a choice.
Where is the British HBO to raise the bar. The answer should be where it has always been, the BBC. The licence fee is designed so that the organisation does not have to chase commercial revenue, it does not have to worry about advertisers and so is placed to take a few risks. Why doesn’t it? If you were to look at the BBC schedules they are not dissimilar to the commercial channels – safe, generic, reality based, lowest common denominator crap. You can see the fear inherent in the decision making process just by looking at the Radio Times. It doesn’t have to be this way it really doesn’t.
I hope that these past few years have been the low point in British TV. My fear is that they are not.
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
Why can't life...
Then one day you wake up –in your 30’s, and you realise that you have missed the chance of life being like this. And then you realise that even if life were like this you would get a snog, which would be nice, but you’d have to walk home wet – which wouldn’t. It doesn’t really matter anyway because you are so fat from drinking sugary soft drinks that no woman is going to look at you.
Not that I’m bitter you understand.
Sunday, 6 July 2008
Red Planet Prize
I reverted to the old random picking and combining of shows to create something new and sparkly by use of an old shoebox and bits of paper technique (possibly a technique that requires a catchier description). It has to be said it didn’t really work for me unless you can think of a great new TV show that is a cross between Jonathan Creek and Shameless – it’s the story of an alcoholic unemployed magic designer who could solve crimes but can’t be arsed – actually that still sounds better than Ultimate Force.
No thanks to the shoebox I think I now have an idea that works and am now looking to develop this. If you want the Jonathan Creek/Shameless idea I am prepared to sell it to you at a not inconsiderable cost.
Thursday, 3 July 2008
My Brilliant Plan
Well, maybe not brilliant, maybe quite flawed – but a plan.
In 3 months – the time I plan to remain “between jobs” I will:
Write a screenplay - probably the longest of my longshots. Never written one before –halfway through a first draft - proving to be every bit as difficult as I thought it would be. If nothing else it will make me a better writer.
Write a 60-minute piece for Red Planet and for the portfolio. My last 60-minute script was written 6 years ago and wasn’t entirely successful. It is the script I never speak of – sshhh don’t mention its name.
Write the world’s greatest sitcom – last sitcom did OK and got me invited status at the Beeb. Now need to nail the follow up.
I also plan to start submitting to News Revue, maybe get a little money off that (very little from what I hear) so that I can actually use the term writer – I may just whisper it to start off with, put in an embarrassed laugh when I say it.
I need to get some more contacts, not just industry people but peers to bounce ideas off and provide support.
Oh and finding a muse would be nice. I do actually have a muse, his name is Tim. Much that I appreciate Tim’s musing abilities, it would be nice to find a muse that looked a bit like Holly Willoughby.
I am a ....
I don’t know - probably not. But the alternatives:
Between jobs – probably closer to the mark but it does sound a bit too much like:
Unemployed – which is of course literally true
Dosser – no comment
Mind you I have just left my job of three years and I couldn’t tell you what I did then either. Well I could do but I would lose interest half way through my own sentence.
Polished
Day 3
So why am I doing it?
I have always wanted to write television. As a kid I marvelled at the writing of Alan Bleasdale, Willy Russell, Alan Plater, John Sullivan, Jack Rosenthal and many more. I knew it was what I wanted to do. But I was a realist, knew I never had the talent, would never be able to create such great characters or line so good it would seem to come out of the screen and slap you round the face.
I left school and took a day job – insurance – hated it. After 4 very long years, and after seeing a few episodes of LA law, I decided to train to be a lawyer. After three years I came to the sad realisation that I would make the worst lawyer in history, I thought it would all be runing round a corner like Harry Hamlin (as it turns out it’s quite hard and not a little boring). All the time I was doing this, digging away at my soul, was a unwritten script –a sitcom. Then one day I sat down and wrote it. I didn’t really know what I was doing but the script got written.
Then I sent it to the BBC.
And they didn’t hate it.
OK at no point did they use the word genius which was a little dissapointing but they said I had potential and as a writer I was able to understand the subtext – I was Alan Fecking Bleasdale.
I was on my way.
That was nine years ago. You will see from what I have written below that it didn’t quite work out that way.
Anyway will talk some more later. Have to go and polish an old script to send to a producer.
Wednesday, 2 July 2008
Nothing to see here.
To be frank I expect the readership of this blog to be roughly one person – me. So why am I writing it? Well, I have a lot of things to do in a short period of time and I am a card-carrying procrastinator/ lazy fecker. This blog is designed to hold myself “publicly” accountable.
Just checked the stats on my hit rate – still at 1.
Now I realise I’m talking to myself and feeling a little self-conscious. Stop looking at me – oh, yea – you’re not.
Tuesday, 1 July 2008
Don't give up the day job.
Well sort of.
Actually the day job gave me up, my contract came to an end and rather than find another job I decided it was time to put up or shut up. You see I have always wanted to be a television writer – I say always, I did for a brief period want to be an astronaut but, in fairness, I was only 5 years old at the time. My dreams of exploring the big old blackness of space ended when I grew up and realised that my selected career would involve a risk of dying in a hideous fireball – this was about the same time in my life that I realised that I was a coward.