Monday, June 28, 2010

Life's a Pitch

Attended another pitchfest yesterday - the Great American Pitchfest to be exact.  For those not familiar - a pitchfest is an event where aspiring screenwriters pay a considerable amount of money to try to sell, or pitch, their screenplay (or potential screenplay) to a large room full of production company executives.  Or those that report to executives.  Or those that report to those that report to executives.


You stand in line for a particular company - the larger, more popular ones have longer lines, naturally.  Then you're herded into a waiting area.  A bell rings and you scurry over to the numbered table, introduce yourself and then get five minutes to sell.  The bell rings again, you thank them for their time, and get in line for your next target.  Rinse, repeat.  If you don't take any breaks and happen to hit the companies with the smaller lines you can squeeze in 15 or 20 pitches in all.  I think I managed 16 - about the same as last year.


There's an art to pitching, of course.  A popular format is title, genre, comparison, logline.  Most of my meetings yesterday went like this: "Today I'm pitching a movie called Going PlaceS.  It's kind of like "Click" meets "It's a Wonderful Life."  The logline is, what if your GPS didn't take you where you wanted to go but where you needed to be?"


You can usually tell what's going to happen next by their reaction.  If they smile or seem interested, that's good.  If, half way through this brief intro you notice them yawning or counting ceiling tiles, that's not so good.


The goal is simply to get them to request your script.  Even if it's requested, the chances of it being read past page 5 are pretty small.  Of anything happening beyond that even smaller.  But in a business so heavy with competition (something like 80,000 scripts are registered - not written or submitted but just registered - each year) wanna-be writers without serious connections have little choice but take those odds as long as they may be.


My results this year weren't as good as last, which is funny because I was pitching essentially the same story.  I'd rewritten it but the premise and logline were the same.  Whereas last year 15 of 17 showed what I'd call significant interest, this year about half did.


Three people requested the script - one actually took the only hard copy I had with me - complete with scribbles and notes.  Another person asked about my other projects and ended up requesting another script I'd written called, "Getting Old is Murder" - a story that received no love whatsoever at another pitchfest a couple years back.


So fewer requests than last year, but as mentioned above just because many people request that doesn't mean anything.  I think I'd trade 15 requests resulting in nothing for 1 request resulting in something.


If nothing else comes of it at least it was entertaining.  And standing in line with my competition, chatting about story ideas it became clear that I'm certainly not the worst writer out there.  Of course, if you see a sci-fi/horror flick about giant, vampire chickens on the big screen next summer that will prove that I know absolutely nothing about this industry after all.





Thursday, June 24, 2010

The World (mostly) Cup


As you may have noticed, the granddaddy of our planet’s most popular sport is now underway, with 32 teams battling it out on lush, green fields in South Africa.

You might be a fan of soccer.  You might find the play exciting, the strategies intriguing, the players dynamic and the rivalries captivating.  Then again, maybe not.  You might find the game boring, ridiculously low scoring, even annoying (see: vuvuzelas).

Fair enough.  Few events, sporting or otherwise, appeal to everyone.  Despite noticeable progress in the last twenty years, soccer hasn’t really caught on in the US.  A passionate fan base does exist, but it’s yet to generate a fraction of the interest our more popular sports do.  This isn't really surprising.  What is somewhat intriguing though is the amount of ridicule – even hatred – soccer generates.

You don’t need to look far to find someone ranting about the problems with the sport.  Rick Reilly, for example, the once-humorous-but-increasingly-grumpy-as-he-gets-older Sports Illustrated columnist recently penned an article on ways to “fix” the World Cup. 

Americans participate in and follow numerous sports, and not just the big ones.  Slap golf, bowling, tennis, or even lacrosse on TV and some people will watch.  Those that don’t find any entertainment value in a sport usually just ignore it.  Soccer’s critics seem a little more opinionated and a lot more vocal.  But why?

It’s soooo boooooring…

Ah, if only soccer were as thrilling as other sports/games that pepper the American television landscape.  Nothing screams excitement like televised golf, for example.  (In hushed whisper) “He’s walking up to the tee… checking the wind… some practice swings… uh-oh, looks like one of the photographers shutter clicked… he’ll have to back off and start again…) 

Even more intense - auto racing, a sport enjoying all new heights in popularity.  My heart starts pumping harder just thinking about those mobile billboards speeding around the same oval track again and again and again.  And if there’s a crash?  I just hope someone has the number for 9-1-1 handy.

Televised poker.  I can see why some people find this exciting.  The lingo alone would be enough – the river, the flop, pocket aces…but when someone goes all-in?  Remember those old cigarette ads that promised you’d ‘taste the excitement’?  Someone should consider reviving that campaign for televised poker.

I’m not saying that soccer is always more exciting than these alternatives, but it certainly isn’t any less.  Anyone with an attention span wide enough to watch 18 holes of golf, 500 miles of Daytona or however many hands of poker they play to determine a champion should have no problem staying awake through 90 minutes of soccer.  Especially when the game is between countries like Germany and England – an age-old rivalry that makes Yankees-Red Sox seem ridiculously small by comparison.

Maybe it’s the collective gall of the World to call it futbol.  Football, as any American sports aficionado would tell you, is that gridiron classic played every Sunday from Boston to LA (though an argument could be made as to how much is really played in LA lately.)

Or maybe it’s the fact that, when it comes to soccer, Americans have had limited success in the past. Actually, ‘limited success’ is a bit generous.  One would be hard-pressed to find a sport where a team has had such a tradition of futility.  If you are a US soccer fan there are few that can sympathize with you.  Cubs fans maybe.

Buy American!

Perhaps the real reason, though, is that soccer just isn’t an American product.  If we didn’t invent it how good can it be?  And who cares if the World Cup is by far the most popular athletic event on the planet.  We don’t like it so obviously it must be flawed.

Whatever the case, the Cup will go on.  Fans of soccer will keep following the action half a world away and those that aren’t will no doubt continue to feel the need to justify their dislike rather than just shutting the hell up.  Thankfully for them, it will all be over soon.  A champion will be crowned and then, mercifully, they can go back to the exciting, edge-of-your-seat, nail-biting alternatives they prefer:

“He’s trying to get a read on the green…

He lines up for the putt…

….

….

….

….

It’s in the hole!”
















True - vuvuzelas aren't helping matters, but if annoying noise is all it takes to make something unwatchable then how do you explain the continued popularity of American Idol?