Breaking into TV writing How to get your first job, build your network, and claw your way inside the writers' room

Anton Schettini

Book - 2024

"Seasoned screenwriters love to tell young screenwriters, "Work on your craft, and the attention and work will come." This is false. TV writing is a walled-off industry that embraces those with a pre-existing network and keeps away those without one. There is little information for the aspiring screenwriter about how to break in, meet people, and start rising up. Even those who study TV/Radio/Film are taught to simply "get a production assistant job," but there is so much more to it than that. Breaking into TV Writing contains all the crucial information left out of most screenwriting books. When looking for helpful guidance and resources, aspiring TV screenwriters are often left with few helpful answers and far too... many unanswered questions: What should your first script look like, and when should you show it to your boss? Which assistant jobs are worth your time? How do you break into the elusive TV writers' room? What kind of money can you expect to make in the various roles in which you might find yourself? Anton Schettini provides a rare insider's glimpse of the modern-day network and streaming TV writers' room. Here, you will find practical advice, career-path strategies, and first-hand accounts for how to establish your network, grow within it, and acquire the necessary tools to become a TV writer. The industry would love to tell you to put your head down, work hard, write a lot, and pay your dues; Schettini will show you why that hackneyed mantra is misleading, and how you can put yourself into the best position to break through all the barriers and see your work on the TV screen"--

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Subjects
Published
Nashville, Tennessee : Turner Publishing Company [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Anton Schettini (author)
Physical Description
xii, 234 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781684429868
9781684429875
  • Why should we listen to you?
  • First step : move to LA
  • My story
  • The writers
  • The life of an episode
  • Pilots
  • Streaming and mini-rooms
  • How to behave in a writers' room
  • Getting your first job
  • Job posting red flags
  • Meet people and bother them
  • Assistant jobs
  • The financial realities of being an assistant
  • Negotiating your assistant salary
  • The assistant attitude and when to quit
  • If you can, skip it : a final word on assistanting
  • Screenwriting competitions
  • Workshops, fellowships, and labs
  • Be creative, make things, and use what you got
  • A quick note about stand-up and improv
  • Another note about agents and managers
  • First of all, just write
  • Your script
  • Economics of a TV script
  • IATSE Local 871
  • WGA
  • A freelance economy
  • Is this career for you?.
Review by Library Journal Review

TV and film screenwriter and producer Schettini, who has worked behind the scenes on The Late Show with David Letterman and 2 Broke Girls, offers a helpful guide to becoming a television writer. In seven parts, the book covers everything from landing the first job to writing a script. There's advice on appropriate writers' room behavior, identifying red flags in a job posting, working as an assistant, negotiating a salary, and freelancing. Schettini also discusses the economics of TV scripts and the benefits of writers' unions. The book includes a glossary of industry terms and a long list of resources (from Facebook groups and workshops to screenwriting competitions and writing programs) that offer a solid starting point for readers on a mission to make a name for themselves in the industry. VERDICT College students and amateur writers will devour this book, filled with clear instructions, interesting tidbits, and insight on the workings of writers' rooms. University libraries will most benefit from this purchase.--Noelia Martinez

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