TheProcess.Ink

Tom Benedek

Outstanding screenwriters, TV writers-showrunners, directors, producers, actors, executives agents managers and other cultivators of truth and beauty discuss their creative process with Tom Benedek.

  1. #15 - Jim Burnstein (screenwriter) at University of Michigan

    11/29/2016

    #15 - Jim Burnstein (screenwriter) at University of Michigan

    Jim Burnstein (Love and Honor, D3: The Mighty Ducks, Renaissance Man ) discusses his screenwriting career and shaping the next generation of young writers at UofM   We Talk About: Working in Hollywood while living in Michigan The journey to the first feature film production Teaching Shakespeare to soldiers and Renaissance Man The importance of re-writing your screenplay The value of talent versus the value of discipline Taking notes on your writing and giving notes to others Collaborating with a writing partner   Quotes from the Show: "The best thing about being a writer is you can write on the moon. You don't have to wait for somebody to give you a job. It only takes one great script to get you in the game." "I do not believe that you can teach talent any more than you can teach speed. A good track coach can make you faster, but he can't make you fast." "I look at the first draft like a dream. You don't know what it means. You don't know why you wrote it. That's what the process of discovery is. Why did you tell this story? What is it about it that you emotionally connected to?" "If you're playing defense as a writer, you're going to lose." "Teaching is the job that keeps me sane. Writing is a little bit of a lonely job. It's you and your imagination, and that's great, but you want to be with people. You are more fundamentally sound when you're teaching others because it makes you more aware of what you need to do." "Human beings, if nothing else, are natural storytellers and consumers." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    1h 3m
  2. #8 - Stephen Nathan (TV writer-showrunner) in Santa Monica

    10/11/2016

    #8 - Stephen Nathan (TV writer-showrunner) in Santa Monica

    Stephen Nathan (Bones, Joan of Arcadia, Family Law) discusses career in executive producing sit-coms and one-hour drama series and offers a detailed look into a ten-year run on the hit comedy-procedural Bones.   We talk about: The future of consuming visual content Writing and executive producing Bones for a decade  The special 200th "Hitchcock" episode of Bones in Technicolor The evolution of two central characters  Balancing plot and character within episodes Social media fan support -- the positive and the negative Transitioning from New York and the stage to LA and a role in Bonanza  The demanding schedule of a showrunner Cross-training with playwriting   Quotes from the show: "Ten years on one show... I could have become a doctor." "There are two characters; we pick them up at one part of their lives, and then, when the series ends, you leave them in another part of their lives." "The more controversial something is-- or the more upset the audience was-- the more they talked about it, and the more people wanted to see what they were talking about." "I have felt so lucky and so fortunate to be able to do what I love, and eat because of it. I don't take that lightly." "There has to be an element of truth. That holds true for any genre, any literature... What's the ticker? What's that little piece of humanity that's the reason we watch the show?" See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    49 min
5
out of 5
4 Ratings

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Outstanding screenwriters, TV writers-showrunners, directors, producers, actors, executives agents managers and other cultivators of truth and beauty discuss their creative process with Tom Benedek.