Types:
● the procedural, which consists of shows such as the Law and Order franchise and the CSI
franchise,
● Next are the shows that deal with lawyers and politics. These are shows like The West Wing,
The Practice, etc.
● Police dramas, such as, The District and NYPD Blue.
● Hero-types which consist of shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Smallville.
● Fantasy/Sci-Fi - examples here are Enterprise, Twilight Zone, Dead Zone, etc.
● Cable - Shows such as Queer as Folk, The Sopranos, and Six Feet Under are written without the
act breaks seen in commercial television.
Spec episodes- writing an episode for an existing show (mimicking style, following the rules)
Spec pilot- a possible pilot (unique storyline)
I page= 1 minute of screentime, total is roughly 50-60 pages for average TV
5 sections- teaser and 4 acts, act break occurs after strong dramatic moment
Teaser: 2-4 pages
Act One: 11-15 pages (goal)
Act Two: 11-15 Pages (obstacle/failure)
Act Three: 11-15 Pages (complicate mission/add obstacles, the lowest point)
Act Four: 11-15 Pages (prevailing)
Act Five: (closure) NOT ALWAYS AN ACT 5
Tag: 1-2 Pages
Total: 59 to 66 pages
-all margins except left margins are 1 inch, the left margin is 1.5 inches, single spaced
-first page is not numbered
Exercises:
-summarize action onscreen w/one-two sentences, split the episode in the classic act outline
-transcribe scripts
Steps to take:
- writing fellowships (Disney, Nickelodeon, Universal, Sundance, Warner Bros, CBS
- get a television agent
- live in an area where movies/tv are made
- contact people and ask for advice
Formatting:
[Link]
websites:
[Link]
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] - script format
[Link] - examples
[Link] -spec episodes/pilots
SimplySripts/Script City- tv scripts to download
[Link] - overviews the steps to take (very good
website)
[Link] ---- Contests
[Link] -Pixar Movie Layout