Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Open.com Navigation
Our special feature on forecasting sheds light on how to choose the right model, offers advice from Jack Stack and more.
Get startedWhen starting a new script, what are the greatest frustrations and challenges you face?
ATTIE: “Just staring at a blank page, and knowing that at some point, it has to be full of words. It’s hard to say what idea will spark a storyline, or at least give you something to shape your thoughts around. Sometimes you spend days feeling like you’ve got nothing at all. But once you get that first burst of inspiration, that’s when you can apply a bit of craft and build something out of it.”
How do you stay focused and accountable to your goals in getting new ideas/projects off the ground? How do you make sure great ideas don’t bite the dust?
ATTIE: “For me, it’s always been deadlines. Of course, I’ve mostly worked in TV, which is all about deadlines. But even in movies and freelance writing of different kinds, I think it helps to have someone — a producer or collaborator — set some kind of timeline and be at least semi-serious about holding you to it.”
Are there any pieces of conventional wisdom in your field that you have defied along the way?
ATTIE: “I don’t know enough of the conventional wisdom to defy it, I’m afraid. I’m not especially proud of this, but I’ve never taken a screenwriting course, and while I did read a couple of books about screenwriting — Syd Field and the usual things — it was before I’d written a line of dialogue in my life and I had no idea what most of them meant. The best way to learn and to improve is to do it, and then watch lots of movies and plays and better TV shows and analyze them for yourself.”
What is the hardest part of your craft?
ATTIE: “The hardest thing for a writer, in my experience, is managing that time when you’re not actually writing, which is when you’re most prone to doubt your own ideas, to think that what you committed to paper earlier that day was silly and pointless. It’s hard to tell people to simply have more confidence in their ideas, but if you can’t do that, establish a period of the day in which you write, and then do anything possible to take your mind off of it after that.”
Have a New Year's Resolution to cut costs?
Get a head start with our latest crash course, Cutting Business Costs.
Javascript is currently disabled. Please enable javascript for the optimal OPEN Forum experience.