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Who Hates Whom / Bob Harris

Who Hates Whom: Well-Armed Fanatics, Intractable Conflicts, and Various Things Blowing Up A Woefully Incomplete Guide by Bob Harris

"The geopolitical equivalent of scorecards that get hawked at ball games. Only Bob could make a user’s guide to our increasingly hostile world this absorbing, this breezy, and—ultimately—this hopeful."
~ Ken Jennings, author of Brainiac

 

Jane in Print
Serenity Found: More Unauthorized Essays on Joss Whedon's Firefly Universe, edited by Jane Espenson

Flirting with Pride and Prejudice: Fresh Perspectives on the Original Chick-Lit Masterpiece, edited by Jennifer Crusie and including Jane Espenson's short story, "Georgiana"

Finding Serenity: Anti-Heroes, Lost Shepherds and Space Hookers in Joss Whedon's Firefly, edited by Jane Espenson and Glenn Yeffeth

 
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Jane in Progress

 

Monday, September 22nd
Speculations



I haven't been to the mail bag for a while, Gentle Readers, for a number of reasons that have to do mostly with the mail bag's contents dwelling variously in my home, my office, my backpack, my hotel room, etc. The letter I'm looking at now, from Gentle Reader Rich, originated in Montreal. From there it went to Beverly Hills and then finally made its way to me here in Vancouver.

Rich is asking about choosing a show for which to write a spec script. He is toying with the idea of writing a novelty spec -- an episode of a show like Buffy that is long off the air. The problem, Rich, is that most agents and most shows these days want to read original material -- spec pilots or scripts for short films. Even plays. The primary place for which you'll need scripts for shows that already exist is for the ABC/Disney writing fellowship, and it only accepts scripts for shows currently on the air. So I'm afraid you'd have a tough time finding a reader for your vintage spec.

I recommend you write a fellowship-ready spec if you're at all interested in the program. You mention that you like House but are concerned about your lack of medical knowledge. You might find that this isn't the obstacle that you think it is. You don't need an M.D. to find out everything you need to know about one specific disorder. You might want to start by watching some episodes of those shows that follow real patients with hard-to-diagnose diseases. I'm talking about Diagnosis: Unknown or Mystery Diagnosis. Don't lift the exact story from one of their episodes, but these shows are wonderful for suggesting starting places and possible misleads.

There are other good shows to consider as well. I would think that Mad Men would be a fun choice. Since you only have to please the ABC/Disney readers -- not create a script that will be usable industry-wide -- you can be much more idiosyncratic with your choice of show.

Then, after you've got that done, you should really dive into the world of original material. Be bold, don't make a generic cop show or family show. And don't hold back, hoarding your favorite story until you're in the position to sell it for a thrillion bucks. Put it all out there.

You're reaching for a big prize, use a big reaching thing.

Lunch: mac and cheese from craft services, served piping hot on set. Yum!

Jane on 09.22.08 @ 08:26 PM PST [link]

Friday, September 5th
More Bad Jokes!



Friend of the Blog David sends in a great example of what we were discussing last time -- the Bad Joke Joke.

This is from an episode ("Beers and Weirs") of Freaks and Geeks. In the scene, Neal distracts Lindsay while Sam and Bill swap out her alcoholic beer for non-alcoholic:

NEAL
So, what kind of music are you gonna play tonight? You should play some Chicago. They have a really hot horn section.

LINDSAY
I don't know. I think I'm gonna play some Zeppelin, Foghat, maybe some Sabbath.

NEAL
Friday night -- always a good night for some Sabbath.
(off her puzzled look)
'Cause Friday night . . . is the Sabbath . . . for the Jews.


Heh. Now that's a good bad joke. It totally comes out of character and out of the relationship between the two characters. And it has that magical quality of being funny at the same time as we understand why it's not a big laugh-getter. A great example against which to measure other examples of this difficult genre.

Lunch: noodles, sushi, canned tonic water




Jane on 09.05.08 @ 04:58 PM PST [link]

Monday, September 1st
How to Tell a Bad Joke



I'm still in Vancouver, and will be for another month. While I'm here, I'm continuing to read the book I mentioned before, "Best Television Humor of the Year". The year in question is 1956.

I came across an example of a very-difficult-to-execute joke type in the book. The type is the Intentionally Bad Joke. Here's how it played in an episode of "The Life of Riley," as one couple says goodbye to their neighbors, who are heading off on vacation:

PEG/RILEY
Bye! So long! Have a nice time in Portland.

GILLIS/HONEYBEE
(as they exit)
Good-bye! We'll drop you a card!

RILEY
(calling after them)
Hey, Gillis! Don't take any wooden cement!

PEG
What?

RILEY
(realizes he's told a lousy joke)
Well, you see, Portland, and cement, er... er... and so I said wooden cement... oh, never mind--


I actually had to do some research on this one, Gentle Readers. It seems that cement doesn't come from Portland, but that there is a material called Portland cement. Let's just assume it was better known in 1956. (Or perhaps it's absolutely huge right now and I'm just out of the cement loop.)

My guess is that the exchange above doesn't work for you. It doesn't work because the secret of the bad joke joke is that it has to come out of character. Riley doesn't have any particular attitude in the scene, no reason to try to make a joke. Here's the exact same joke, really, from an episode of "Ellen":

LAURIE
Hey, Ellen, why don't you turn on the stereo? How about a little Edith Piaf?

ELLEN
Yeah, everybody likes a good rice dish.


The extent to which that works for you as it lies there on your screen probably depends on the degree to which rice pilaf is more familiar to you than Portland cement. But in the context of the episode, it worked. It worked because Ellen was nervous. She was on a date in which she didn't know what was going to be expected of her. The joke came out of her nervousness and the audience laughs at its badness because they're really laughing in sympathy with her situation. The worse the joke, the more nervous she must be.

Here's another one, from the same episode. Ellen is frantically paging through Reader's Digest, desperate to distract herself.

ELLEN
Oh. Look at this: "Laughter in the Military." It seems that there was a lieutenant whose his actual name was Lou Tenant. Well, you can imagine the mix-ups.


It's not hilarious. It's not meant to be. But it's funny that, in her emotional state, SHE thinks it's funny.

Ellen also specialized in the elaborate squirm, explaining her jokes in long rambling monologues like the one from "Life of Riley" only far more complicated. I would not recommend you try this in your comedy specs -- it's a very specialized skill. Blocks of dialogue that require a very specific delivery are not good in specs.

Another note on the squirming phase of the bad joke joke: this is a place in which it is important NOT to write the line "I'll shut up now." That is a clam (an old familiar joke). If you've heard it, don't type it. A funny joke about a very recent tragedy can probably still be squirmed out of with the line "too soon?" But the clam clock is ticking on that one, too.

Lunch: left-over room-service lamb chops. Cute and delicious.

Jane on 09.01.08 @ 05:21 PM PST [link]


 

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