How To Develop A TV Show In Less Than An Hour

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  • čas přidán 27. 11. 2017
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    Peter Desberg is professor emeritus at California State University, Dominguez Hills, and recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award and Outstanding Professor Award. He is also a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in the area of stage fright and performance anxiety. The author of 23 books, he has been quoted by such publications as The Wall Street Journal, Psychology Today and The New York Times, and has consulted for companies including Apple, Boeing and Toyota in the areas of pitching and persuasion, corporate presentations, and using storytelling and humor in business presentations.
    Jeffrey Davis is a professor of screenwriting at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, and served from 2009-2019 as the department chair. Davis has also written and produced trade shows for Dick Clark Productions and counted among his advertising clients Dell Computers, Toyota of America and Honda. His has more than 30 credits to his name, including Night Court, Remington Steele, and documentaries for A&E, Discovery, and The History Channel. As a consultant, his areas have also included writing, pitching, and employing storytelling and humor in business presentations.
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 113

  • @nkanyisoinnocentkhwane3752
    @nkanyisoinnocentkhwane3752 Před 6 lety +172

    I love the interviewer, she always asks really great questions so it's like I'm in the room gaining knowledge from industry professionals. God bless film courage.

  • @xmikemac
    @xmikemac Před 4 lety +37

    Listen to your interviews almost daily in the morning before heading out to work. Not only are your questions fantastic, but you let them answer the question without interjecting your pov in the middle of them talking....unless they’re stumbling....which is what a good interviewer does. Anyway, just wanted to say that I love your show and your style. Godspeed!

  • @lilacDaisy111
    @lilacDaisy111 Před 5 lety +68

    6:27 - Unless you have characters who are very, very different and very, very specific, you don't have conflict.

  • @aedelya
    @aedelya Před 6 lety +31

    Thanks for this, the bit at the begining might be the best advice you can give any writer : before going into too much details about your story, and even before writing dialogue, gather some people and bounce ideas in the room. Especially for a tv show you'll have a lot of new ideas and concepts to use

  • @therunawayrascal
    @therunawayrascal Před 2 lety +6

    they’re dynamic together is always the best haha and they’re mad good at teaching with their knowledge and wisdom, as well as pairing their differing perspectives in a strange chaotic harmony. cussin great stuff.
    and you, Karen, are always a delight and bring so much value to each interview, beyond the right questions you ask, which really helps us listeners. always glad when it’s an interview you are an active participant in.
    seeing just how quickly collaboration can evolve and refine and better an idea is very helpful for getting out of the solely solitary writing mode.
    thank you all!

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 2 lety +1

      Meeting with Peter and Jeffrey was a lot of fun! Great to see you enjoying this and getting good value out of it.

  • @JasonLovesLife
    @JasonLovesLife Před 6 lety +16

    Very fascinating. I am not interested in pitching a TV shows, but still a lot of great insight on storytelling. Especially when working with a team on developing projects.

  • @cheruscopicproductions1596
    @cheruscopicproductions1596 Před 4 lety +21

    Some insightful tips, especially the "go with the flow" when an exec is engaged and adding different elements. Thanks for this one.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety +1

      Glad you found this one! Thanks for watching.

  • @rmpeete
    @rmpeete Před 5 lety +15

    Very useful conversation, thanks!

  • @jeremiahnoar7504
    @jeremiahnoar7504 Před 3 lety +7

    This may be my favorite Film Courage video. I feel like I was invited into an actual writers room.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 3 lety +1

      This is a good one. Glad you found it.

    • @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345
      @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345 Před rokem

      Me too. Wow. Does anyone know if any pitching can be done on the East Coast? Does one have to be in L.A.? I've structured my life so I can move there in a day. Thanks everyone!

  • @tatyananajee
    @tatyananajee Před 6 lety +1

    Love this channel ,I always wondered how I as a unprofessional pitch my tv show ideas to people who can pick them up

  • @arzabael
    @arzabael Před 5 měsíci

    These two men, these, fighting men… love and care about eachother. It took me a a few watches to think about it. Originally their bickering rubbed me wrong but it’s so obvious they’d do anything for each in the end. Its nice

  • @BillieJolene1
    @BillieJolene1 Před 5 lety +1

    This is GREAT!!!!! Thank you soooooooo MUCH!!!

  • @LaCoraStephens
    @LaCoraStephens Před 4 lety +2

    YES!!! He had me at #Frasier! One of my favorite sitcoms!

  • @rayballinger1848
    @rayballinger1848 Před 3 lety

    Great job. Thank you.

  • @peterxyz3541
    @peterxyz3541 Před rokem

    Thanks! Great education listening in on a series development

  • @BlactinaMedia
    @BlactinaMedia Před 2 lety

    loved this. So informative.

  • @MaryJaneHancock
    @MaryJaneHancock Před 4 lety +4

    Good analysis. Thank you for posting

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks Mary Jane, glad this one found you.

  • @markwesley9151
    @markwesley9151 Před 3 lety +3

    This was extremely valuable - and entertaining. I learned something.

  • @ezecreative
    @ezecreative Před 6 lety +1

    Another awesome episode...

  • @howardkoor9365
    @howardkoor9365 Před 7 měsíci

    These guys know their stuff!

  • @bornshamir7792
    @bornshamir7792 Před rokem

    Good insight. Thank you.

  • @stevegeorge7773
    @stevegeorge7773 Před 6 lety +5

    Their book shelf looks interesting. I wonder what they are reading and how they approach it (writing) with their craft.

  • @jackhudkins542
    @jackhudkins542 Před rokem

    So helpful...thanks.

  • @BekaErelashvili
    @BekaErelashvili Před 9 měsíci

    Great interview, as always ! Thank Karen for what you are doing for us !

  • @1sihingable
    @1sihingable Před 4 lety +1

    Frasier is awesome! I loved when the brothers sniped at each other.

  • @TheHilltopPillbox
    @TheHilltopPillbox Před 2 lety +2

    Very useful information! Thank you! I have been developing a show for three years and it is nice to see that I have been on the right track...for the most part. A couple of networks were interested, but pulled out for different reasons. It's a solid premise, I shot a professional sizzle reel, and the pilot is solid, although I keep tweaking it.
    And, I agree - comedy is MUCH tougher to write than drama, but it is also very rewarding when you nail that moment!

    • @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345
      @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345 Před rokem +1

      I'm so confused in regard to the sizzle reel. I did a year of fundraising/crowdfunding and shot the sizzle, but was told it was a waste of time and money. The people you pitch to DON'T want your vision of the actors, etc.

    • @TheHilltopPillbox
      @TheHilltopPillbox Před rokem

      @@ninaangelamckissockauthor2345 Yes, I have heard that, too. I have also heard that some executives will take you more seriously when you have put a decent amount of money into a project.
      The real litmus test as to whether they are interested is when they throw different ideas at the show. If you say "sounds good", or "I never thought of that", then they will be much more apt to back your show.

    • @TheHilltopPillbox
      @TheHilltopPillbox Před rokem

      @@ninaangelamckissockauthor2345 Also, when I shot the sizzle reel, I used Union actors and a professional crew so it looked like it could be a real show. I also made it painfully clear to everyone that they were only hired for this ONE reel - not the whole show.
      Executives usually understand that, but it is good to mention in the pitch!

  • @howardkoor9365
    @howardkoor9365 Před rokem

    Thank you gentlemen

  • @rahulbohra8338
    @rahulbohra8338 Před 3 lety

    One of the best.....

  • @Deelusi
    @Deelusi Před 3 lety +1

    lol, the interview ends with "I was afraid to look at you" and that caught me off guards

  • @LightFilmsWithPhezileZu
    @LightFilmsWithPhezileZu Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you.

  • @AmigoBrazucaq
    @AmigoBrazucaq Před 3 lety +2

    I like the show she pitched. Reminds me of Dharma and Greg (hopefully a bit more subtle).

  • @mayureshbelsareauthor
    @mayureshbelsareauthor Před 3 lety

    My takeaway would be 'You need to be open for collaboration'. Great video

  • @mrdorf2784
    @mrdorf2784 Před 4 lety

    My word, this is insightful!

  • @misssecondstar
    @misssecondstar Před 2 lety

    This was incredible. I'd LOVE to see more interviews where you just do this same thing with other professionals like this.

  • @CriticalNerdTheory424
    @CriticalNerdTheory424 Před 3 lety

    I wish y’all made videos like this again

  • @JoannaG-cy6dy
    @JoannaG-cy6dy Před 3 lety +1

    this interview is gold

  • @howardkoor9365
    @howardkoor9365 Před rokem

    Great interview

  • @savedbygrace.slowedreverb

    Writing for tv is "like walking the streets of New York."
    Well I'm in luck

  • @dianelunda2561
    @dianelunda2561 Před rokem

    Good technique and strategy

  • @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345

    Loved these two and how they interact. I'm inspired and scared to death to pitch. But I'm almost ready! I need to find a licensed agent. Suggestions, anyone? Thank you! Nina

  • @rashidiigraffiti
    @rashidiigraffiti Před rokem

    stoyrtellers in a jam session...very very insightful...

  • @Cochise85
    @Cochise85 Před 4 lety +3

    I could listen to these 2 guys all day,
    Very informative & entertaining

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 4 lety +1

      Not a whole day, but here is the full 2 and a half hour interview - czcams.com/video/XkqueJePFuw/video.html

    • @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345
      @ninaangelamckissockauthor2345 Před rokem

      Me too. I'll listen to this over and over. Lots of notes.

  • @Madi-dt7bo
    @Madi-dt7bo Před 3 lety +3

    I love that she’s legit pitching her script 🤣

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 3 lety +8

      She's not a screenwriter and she made that story up just for the fun of this segment.

  • @SquaredbyX
    @SquaredbyX Před 5 lety +14

    300k a week is my take away from this

  • @olikah4667
    @olikah4667 Před rokem

    I like their interaction 😂😂😂 are they friends? Imagine being taught by these two in class? I’m a burgeoning screenwriter and I have been learning a lot from this channel. Thank youu for all the work you do❤

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před rokem

      These guys are great! Friends and writing partners. We hope you continue to find helpful information here!

  • @Fr3k3
    @Fr3k3 Před 3 lety

    this was such a great video hahaha

  • @iosyntropy
    @iosyntropy Před rokem

    the thumbnail is what ive always wanted to sit in on

  • @OlliOtter
    @OlliOtter Před 11 měsíci

    The example at 8:28 is something they used almost to a tee in a joke in the first few episodes of Avatar The Last Airbender. When they’re in one of the air temples, Aang and Sokka both see a Lemur. Aang screams “Lemur!” At the fact that a cute piece of the culture he knew was in front of him and was excited to see it, and Sokka starts salivating and says “Dinner” with absolutely no understanding for the significance of that animal, only caring about his stomach 😭

  • @Ellenchattergirl
    @Ellenchattergirl Před 4 lety +3

    I haven't watched this yet, so I hope I'll enjoy this.
    Update: interesting as! I like humans

  • @nathanericschwabenland88888

    my premise is based on Kanto From Pokemon closer related to the games than detective pikachu

  • @ShorkGamer
    @ShorkGamer Před 6 lety +46

    Now I know how bad scripts are made. Pure formalism and no inner drive to tell the story how it wants to tell it self.

    • @BillieAkman
      @BillieAkman Před 4 lety +2

      How a story "wants to tell itself"? What?

    • @Burgalo2001
      @Burgalo2001 Před 4 lety

      What do u want from people who have nothing in IMDB? No offences but those guys have zero success in this realm

    • @freddie5ive
      @freddie5ive Před rokem

      these guys are on some real trite sitcom vibes

    • @defiverr4697
      @defiverr4697 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@BillieAkman exactly. Writers are mini gods, they tell the story they want to tell.

    • @defiverr4697
      @defiverr4697 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Burgalo2001i had to look them up. Yes, you are correct that their credits are old, no problem. But i am listening for not what they have written, which is useless because i can watch any sitcom and see what was written and get the drafts of the show to see the differences between drafts at the wga library, but rather the thought process and steps of "generating" ideas and story progression. All sitcoms steal plots from one another. So no need for plot generation, its situation comedy and situations repeat themselves. But the character responses to those situations are what needs to be "generated." And their dialogue has be unique from other sitcoms. Raymond will not sound the same as Fraiser watching an opera because they have different personalities. Sitcoms are really personality studies, not plot studies. And hence why sitcoms have titular named shows. The beat writers steal plots, but create fresh personalities, and the thought process to generate personality-based reactions is what the writers room is all about. And their thought process is still valid because in spite of having few credits. Besides, they are PhDs and are professors. They still know what they are doing. Ian Gurvetz wrote Becker and nkw teaches at Chapman and he has the same process, yet he is teaching now. I can their process and apply it to new characters, and steal the plots. This is the procedure and it has worked for the sitcom world flr the past 70 years. Its a landlocked format. It is what it is.

  • @Z5Z5Z5
    @Z5Z5Z5 Před 3 lety +1

    not gonna lie i totally got hooked by the title

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před 3 lety

      We enjoyed this one. Hope you found some value in the video as well!

  • @Teebiscuit12345
    @Teebiscuit12345 Před 4 lety +1

    The interviewer and the interviewees were great, I'm just mad that bootlicking is prominent in the industry. Sometimes it works though.

  • @Crowka274
    @Crowka274 Před 5 lety +1

    Non profit foundation Vs Scheming sibling. Thats all they hang their hats on.

  • @Krwler
    @Krwler Před rokem

    With hindsight, some of the nuggets here literally saved my career

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před rokem +1

      Please explain

    • @Krwler
      @Krwler Před rokem

      @@filmcourage I used to be a brash “idealistic” artist who thought that passionately/rigidly defending my writing would not only work - but displayed self belief. This video and others really helped me understand that the note givers are ultimately your bosses, and no matter how big you are (and I’m small fry) you always have someone to answer to to. Even studio heads have to answer to shareholders. When one of the gentleman mentioned that Spielberg has to take notes, that really hit home. I’ll never be on the level so it sobered me up quickly.

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před rokem +1

      Thank you for sharing! This is a topic that has come up more in some recent interviews. We agree that this is one of those lessons that can easily make or break a career.

  • @melodine707
    @melodine707 Před 5 lety +2

    Can someone recommend "a room" for average people?

  • @maatoha9097
    @maatoha9097 Před 2 lety

    Damn i love the guy on the right

  • @brownjovi
    @brownjovi Před 3 lety

    46:35

  • @deniseger9898
    @deniseger9898 Před rokem

    Hi I'm pitching a show that's easy as hell,and offshoot of the present show "farmer wants a wife". Cassidy Jo is gorgeous, funny, outgoing and Lil aggressive. Sadly Alan is too laid back for her. I'd like to see her like Bachelorette with 10 city guys and 10 country guys all trying to win her love. City guys would take her on dates 3 in New York, 3 in philly(LAs weather isn't great right now) and 3 in Atlanta. Then the 9 country guys would to 3 In nashville, 3in Austin and 3 in Charlotte then Break it down to the top 2 final dates and then the winner. It would be GREAT!

  • @Thingsarechanging
    @Thingsarechanging Před 6 lety +30

    What did these guys write?

  • @TYTfan
    @TYTfan Před 4 lety +3

    This should have been 3 hours longer.

  • @grantgreyguda
    @grantgreyguda Před 8 měsíci

    👍 👍

  • @alejandrolescano7531
    @alejandrolescano7531 Před rokem

    What is the name of show they are talking about?

    • @filmcourage
      @filmcourage  Před rokem

      Hi Alejandro, Thanks for watching! This was a brainstorming session about a made-up TV show. We presented the basic idea and then Peter and Jeffrey added their details to it.
      Thanks again.
      FC

  • @gutenbird
    @gutenbird Před 3 lety

    I have a great idea for a show. A man gets in a wreck with a man who has no insurance. The man is bequeathed to become the man’s butler.

  • @I_think_its_funny
    @I_think_its_funny Před rokem

    😅 did he just use my country as the home of the "blind orphan"?

  • @Pumpkinshire
    @Pumpkinshire Před rokem

    what if the wealthy brother promised his dad on his death bed to look out for his kid brother. the dad made the kids work hard and one was a burn out the other exceled. the foundation is a drug rehab made for the one brother for him to have a job and propose but he never asked his brother what he wanted to do, he gave him something only he wanted not something his brother wanted. at the end of the show they shift to the brothers secret dream of marine biology research

  • @Lp-ze1tg
    @Lp-ze1tg Před 10 měsíci

    Is this info still valid after 5 years?

  • @smashcrookspranks
    @smashcrookspranks Před 6 lety +19

    that tv show idea blows.

  • @user-jh2yn6zo3c
    @user-jh2yn6zo3c Před 3 měsíci

    They kept going after the camera left and wrote the pilot for Succession

  • @not_enoughmana
    @not_enoughmana Před rokem

    LMAO 😂 #JonCryer

  • @JenerallyxSpeaking
    @JenerallyxSpeaking Před 3 lety

    first i will watch this 46 min long video, then i'll use the next 14 min

  • @Juan-Blasquez
    @Juan-Blasquez Před 4 lety +1

    Two minute pitch! Zzzz exited time watch the whole video though

  • @user-ir8mf7km6w
    @user-ir8mf7km6w Před 3 lety

    WRITE HOW TO GET A JOB ON A SHOW!!

  • @iosyntropy
    @iosyntropy Před rokem

    the classic dynamic of the two old pros who cant stand to listen to eachother wax on because theyve heard eachother say everything they say. people like that get so easily annoyed and analytical, they get themselves into a place where nothings ever original, everythings an eye roller, and anything that is good is still just meh. because of the competitive pretentious nature of the industry of writing any form of copy and how all the people in it have learned to interact best, remaining alphas of their craft. theyve completely lost the spark they had in early hungry years, where things were amazing and new, now that theyve experienced all of that world and have no where else to grow. theres so much more of life to enjoy and take from and make more with but these guys have gobbled up everything in the rook and now just stay in the room comparing everything to everything in the room. get out of the room that is your hardened judgemental spirit, enter places where you start a novice rather than stay begrudgingly in places you have nothing new to see in.

    • @iosyntropy
      @iosyntropy Před rokem

      yea these goats are just as attached to their first ideas as anyone. i wish theyd have a discussion with eachother about speaking over eachother and ignoring eachother during conversations where they both want to speak. trust the other will let you get your idea out before they get too far with what their saying. think slow.

    • @iosyntropy
      @iosyntropy Před rokem

      all in all this was really helpful. its all about how to give your story "legs". truly a series writing lesson

  • @geoffreydonaldson2984
    @geoffreydonaldson2984 Před 2 lety

    It’s BUDDHIST, not “Taoist”…

  • @soldiersam7424
    @soldiersam7424 Před rokem

    Did she pitch "Two and a Half Men"?