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Tonight’s question The plot element that comes immediately after the rising action is called _________. Place your answer in the top post’s comment section at www.cmat131.wordpress.com.

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Tonight’s question. The plot element that comes immediately after the rising action is called _________. Place your answer in the top post’s comment section at www.cmat131.wordpress.com. What’s on? Analyzing TV. CMAT 131 Prof. Jeremy Cox. Today, we’ll talk about. ... How to write a script. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tonight’s question

Tonight’s question

The plot element that comes immediately after the rising action is called _________.

Place your answer in the top post’s comment section at www.cmat131.wordpress.com.

Page 2: Tonight’s question

What’s on? Analyzing TVCMAT 131

Prof. Jeremy Cox

Page 3: Tonight’s question

Today, we’ll talk about...

... How to write a script. ... The elements of a script. The television critique that’s due Thursday.

Page 4: Tonight’s question

What no one can teach you, or “the limitations of every fiction-writing class” How to be creative How to be a fantastic writer (but “good

enough” is doable) To have the intuition it takes to know a good

story when you see one Times is an issue. Even a whole class devoted

to script-writing can’t teach you everything. We have a few weeks.

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The good news

You CAN learn the basics (i.e. how to develop characters, write dialogue, plan your story)

Like all other kinds of writing, you get better the more you do it. So don’t fret. I will take this into account in grading these assignments.

You will turn in a draft of your final assignment – a screenplay. I will offer ideas and help you fix your mistakes. Only the final submission will be graded.

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Elements of a play’s structure

Unity Plot Character Dialogue Exposition Preparation Setting

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Unity

All elements should relate in a consistent way to all the rest, all heading in the same direction toward your purpose.

Extraneous elements (“What was the deal with the dog with the shifty eyes.”) only detracts from the audience’s impression of the work.

So even if it’s brilliant, if a scene or character doesn’t contribute to the purpose, it has to go.

Page 8: Tonight’s question

Plot

Hilliard tells us the plot’s “structure is based on a complication arising from the individual’s or group’s relationship to some other force.”

Think Homer Simpson’s relationship to his boss, Mr. Burns, being complicated by the arrival of Burns’ cherished teddy bear, Bobo.

This is the conflict, and it comes as soon as possible in a play. Harkening back to our TV news days, it’s akin to the “You” in “hey, you, see, so.” It makes the audience care about the characters.

Page 9: Tonight’s question

Plot

As we learned last week, the plot doesn’t stop there. It continues with with a series of crises (rising action),

each relating to and developing the initial conflict. These crises build to a crescendo (the climax). One

force wins; the other loses. You can end there or keep going (falling action) to

show the audience the consequences of the turning point.

Page 10: Tonight’s question

Plot tips

As always, grab and hold the audience’s attention. Conflict comes so early that you will often have to

unfurl your exposition as the conflict unfolds. Dialogue and actions show who your characters are.

You don’t have to say where they are and who they are. You can show it as the action develops.

Don’t just have characters doing random things to move the plot along. They are always responding to the central conflict.

Page 11: Tonight’s question

Character

“Just because you are a character, doesn’t mean you have character.” – The Wolf (Harvey Keitel) in “Pulp Fiction.”

Characters drive the action. They speak the dialogue. The qualities of the character determine the action,

and the action reveals who the characters really are.

Page 12: Tonight’s question

Character tips

Show don’t tell. Don’t just say who a character is or have another character say it. Show us through their actions and reactions.

Keep the number of characters to a minimum. Don’t make them stray “out of character” to bend to the

whims of your plot. Be consistent with what they’ve said and done before.

But remember that these aren’t carbon-copies of real people. They are dramatically heightened versions of reality.

Page 13: Tonight’s question

Dialogue

Just as you heighten and condense the action, so should the dialogue be heightened and condensed.

Characters should speak differently depending on the person, just as people speak differently in real life. Some are academics and use big words. Some have sat in too many business lectures and speak in a series of “win-win situation” cliches.

Page 14: Tonight’s question

Dialogue tips

Every exchange should move the plot forward. Avoid repetition. Avoid stereotyped forms of speech. Just because

someone is from the rural South, for example, doesn’t mean they sound uneducated.

Page 15: Tonight’s question

Exposition

Reveals the background of the characters and the situation so the audience understands the present circumstances.

It dribbles out during the rising action, as naturally as possible.

Page 16: Tonight’s question

Exposition tips

Too much explanation will sound stilted and awkward. Condense, condense, condense. Tell us only what we

absolutely have to know to be up to speed. Generally, steer clear of narrators. They yak over the

action.

Page 17: Tonight’s question

Preparation

Also known as foreshadowing, it’s the SUBTLE planting of material through action and dialogue that gets the audience ready for future events.

Like clues in a mystery. Hilliard writes: “The audience members should never

be able to say, ‘Oh, how surprising!’ [at the climax] but should always say, even if they didn’t expect it, ‘Why, of course!’”

Page 18: Tonight’s question

Preparation tips

Be gradual. Don’t pile on with clues all at once. The audience shouldn’t be able to guess where they

action is heading, but as it unfolds they should be able to have “seen it coming.”

Page 19: Tonight’s question

Setting

Where the action takes place: the time, place, environment, locale, fantastical realm, a skewed version of the world as we know it (“The Invention of Lying”)

Settings are designed as a kind of arena for the actions of the characters to be most effectively rendered.

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Analyzing the TV show

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A few words first from the Museum of Broadcast Communications

“Balanced criticism avoids blatant appeals and gratuitous savaging of media people and projects. The critic serves as a guide, offering standards or criteria for judgment along with factual data, so readers can make up their own minds.”

Source: http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=televisioncr

Page 22: Tonight’s question

Assignment

Choose a 30- or 60-minute drama or comedy. It must be scripted. No reality shows (“The Voice,”

“American Idol,” etc.) No news or interview shows (“SportsCenter, an Orioles game, “Meet the Press”)

Spend your 500 words analyzing how the seven elements we discussed earlier (dialogue, setting, character, plot, etc.) relate and interact.

Page 23: Tonight’s question

Considerations

Did the plot make sense? Did the actions follow what you would have expected the characters to do (at least after the fact)?

Was the writing crisp and dramatic or boring and stilted? Did the ending feel natural or too pat or out of left field? What was the central conflict and how did the writer(s) develop

it? Were the characters believable? If they were unbelievable for

the sake of farce (“Family Guy”), did they at least behave in predictable ways?