I Will Not Read Your Fucking Script

We know you've been working very hard on your screenplay, but before you go looking for some professional feedback, you might keep in mind the following piece by A History of Violence screenwriter Josh Olson.

JoshOlson.jpg
I will not read your fucking script.

That's simple enough, isn't it? "I will not read your fucking script." What's not clear about that? There's nothing personal about it, nothing loaded, nothing complicated. I simply have no interest in reading your fucking screenplay. None whatsoever.

If that seems unfair, I'll make you a deal. In return for you not asking me to read your fucking script, I will not ask you to wash my fucking car, or take my fucking picture, or represent me in fucking court, or take out my fucking gall bladder, or whatever the fuck it is that you do for a living.

You're a lovely person. Whatever time we've spent together has, I'm sure, been pleasurable for both of us. I quite enjoyed that conversation we once had about structure and theme, and why Sergio Leone is the greatest director who ever lived. Yes, we bonded, and yes, I wish you luck in all your endeavors, and it would thrill me no end to hear that you had sold your screenplay, and that it had been made into the best movie since Godfather Part II.

But I will not read your fucking script.

At this point, you should walk away, firm in your conviction that I'm a dick. But if you're interested in growing as a human being and recognizing that it is, in fact, you who are the dick in this situation, please read on.

Yes. That's right. I called you a dick. Because you created this situation. You put me in this spot where my only option is to acquiesce to your demands or be the bad guy. That, my friend, is the very definition of a dick move.

I was recently cornered by a young man of my barest acquaintance.

I doubt we've exchanged a hundred words. But he's dating someone I know, and he cornered me in the right place at the right time, and asked me to read a two-page synopsis for a script he'd been working on for the last year. He was submitting the synopsis to some contest or program, and wanted to get a professional opinion.

Now, I normally have a standard response to people who ask me to read their scripts, and it's the simple truth: I have two piles next to my bed. One is scripts from good friends, and the other is manuscripts and books and scripts my agents have sent to me that I have to read for work. Every time I pick up a friend's script, I feel guilty that I'm ignoring work. Every time I pick something up from the other pile, I feel guilty that I'm ignoring my friends. If I read yours before any of that, I'd be an awful person.

Most people get that. But sometimes you find yourself in a situation where the guilt factor is really high, or someone plays on a relationship or a perceived obligation, and it's hard to escape without seeming rude. Then, I tell them I'll read it, but if I can put it down after ten pages, I will. They always go for that, because nobody ever believes you can put their script down once you start.

But hell, this was a two page synopsis, and there was no time to go into either song or dance, and it was just easier to take it. How long can two pages take?

Weeks, is the answer.

And this is why I will not read your fucking script.

It rarely takes more than a page to recognize that you're in the presence of someone who can write, but it only takes a sentence to know you're dealing with someone who can't.

(By the way, here's a simple way to find out if you're a writer. If you disagree with that statement, you're not a writer. Because, you see, writers are also readers.)

You may want to allow for the fact that this fellow had never written a synopsis before, but that doesn't excuse the inability to form a decent sentence, or an utter lack of facility with language and structure. The story described was clearly of great importance to him, but he had done nothing to convey its specifics to an impartial reader. What I was handed was, essentially, a barely coherent list of events, some connected, some not so much. Characters wander around aimlessly, do things for no reason, vanish, reappear, get arrested for unnamed crimes, and make wild, life-altering decisions for no reason. Half a paragraph is devoted to describing the smell and texture of a piece of food, but the climactic central event of the film is glossed over in a sentence. The death of the hero is not even mentioned. One sentence describes a scene he's in, the next describes people showing up at his funeral. I could go on, but I won't. This is the sort of thing that would earn you a D minus in any Freshman Comp class.

Which brings us to an ugly truth about many aspiring screenwriters: They think that screenwriting doesn't actually require the ability to write, just the ability to come up with a cool story that would make a cool movie. Screenwriting is widely regarded as the easiest way to break into the movie business, because it doesn't require any kind of training, skill or equipment. Everybody can write, right? And because they believe that, they don't regard working screenwriters with any kind of real respect. They will hand you a piece of inept writing without a second thought, because you do not have to be a writer to be a screenwriter.

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340 comments
mcgill256
mcgill256

Damn, life sure is difficult for successful artists.  If only all the people who haven't made it understood their plight, perhaps through more articles like this one, they would finally be sympathetic to their needs and stop bothering them.  Until that day, people like Mr Olsen will continue to deal with people considering them experts in their field and asking them for help.  Which, by the way, in almost any other profession is considered a complement.

And guess what...  Without writing this article about his supposed plight from having become successful, 90% of us wouldn't know about it.  He could just say "no, I don't want to read your script" to the people in his life without getting on a pedestal to tell the world why he dosen't have time to help.  You don't want to help people?  You don't have the time?  Then don't.  Most people don't feel the need to write a multiple paged blog post about their lack of desire to be charitable.  But good on you for standing up for your right to be self absorbed.  It reads way better than how the screenplay for Jack Reacher translated to the big screen (who am I kidding, I'm too busy reading blog posts from assholes to watch that POS).


Ant--
Ant--

Oh no, oh boo hoo, im famous for screenwriting and people ask me to read their script. Next thing your gonna tell me is doctors get asked medical advice off the clock, and psychiatrists are asked to analyze people they just met at a Best Buy. It happens, get over it. So one person asked, and then acted like this guy is a dick, so he writes a manifesto showing he is a dick. 

Every person in this story is a dick, i'm a dick, get over it. If you don't like being asked about things related to your profession, do something else. If you dont like that some screenwriter didn't drop to his knees to worship you and you first attempt at screenwriting, thats your mom's fault for making you think your special. And if you don't like my comment here, just remember that not everyone has to be a backslapper. 

Ant--
Ant--

Oh no, oh boo hoo, im famous for screenwriting and people ask me to read their script. Next thing your gonna tell me is doctors get asked medical advice off the clock, and psychiatrists are asked to analyze people they just met at a Best Buy. It happens, get over it. So one person asked, and then acted like this guy is a dick, so he writes a manifesto showing he is a dick. 

Every person in this story is a dick, i'm a dick, get over it. If you don't like being asked about things related to your profession, do something else. If you dont like that some screenwriter didn't drop to his knees to worship you and you first attempt at screenwriting, thats your mom's fault for making you think your special. 

Tita
Tita

SOOOooooooooooooooo many dumb people in the comments that completely MISSED THE POINT!!!! 

The point of his whole story is that when he gave an honest and helpful critique, he was met with an asshole and rookie attitude of a guy that only really wanted pats in the back and no actual critique!

He wasted his time and effort giving an honest and thoughtful critique; only to be demonized by an unprofessional and inmature rookie.

THAT is what pissed him off, THAT is why he will no longer be "reading your fucking script."

"You", being all these asshole noobs that are all about receiving flowers and no serious critique in order to grow as artists.

Shheeeeesh! Reading comprehension FAIL, people!

Tita
Tita

SOOOooooooooooooooo many dumb people in the comments that completely MISSED THE POINT!!!! 

The point of his whole story is that when he gave an honest and helpful critique, he was met with an asshole and rookie attitude of a guy that only really wanted pats in the back and no actual critique!

He wasted his time and effort giving an honest and thoughtful critique; only to be demonized by an unprofessional and inmature rookie.

THAT is what pissed him off, THAT is why he will no longer be "reading your fucking script."

"You", being all these asshole noobs that are all about receiving flowers and no serious critique in order to grow as artists.

Shheeeeesh! Reading comprehension FAIL, people!

Tita
Tita

SOOOooooooooooooooo many dumb people in the comments that completely MISSED THE POINT!!!! 

The point of his whole story is that when he gave an honest and helpful critique, he was met with an asshole and rookie attitude of a guy that only really wanted pats in the back and no actual critique!

He wasted his time and effort giving an honest and thoughtful critique; only to be demonized by an unprofessional and inmature rookie.

THAT is what pissed him off, THAT is why he will no longer be "reading your fucking script."

"You", being all these asshole noobs that are all about receiving flowers and no serious critique in order to grow as artists.

Shheeeeesh! Reading comprehension FAIL, people!

nervbratze
nervbratze

What a great Mentor. He for sure made it all the way to the top on his own. Never needed help from anyone. Or god forbid, anyone to read his script. What a dick.

AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@nervbratze That's the point, he wasn't a mentor! He didn't solicit the script, he was asked by someone he barely knew. He did not owe the writer anything and when he actually tried to help he was not given any appreciation.

barneybarn
barneybarn like.author.displayName 1 Like

A response to Josh Olsen by Caperton Miller (movie-goer)


I will not watch your fucking movie. 
That's simple enough, isn't it? "I will not watch your fucking movie". What's not clear about that? There's nothing personal about it. I simply have no interest in watching your fucking movie. None whatsoever.

You see, my standard response to the movie industry when they ask me to see their fucking movie, wether it's a trailer I'm not interested in at the local cinema, or a 30 second ad that's interrupting my Youtube cat video sessions at home, is this. I have two piles of links on my desktop. One is episodes of TV shows I want to see from subscription services like Netflix & Hulu. The other is links to cat videos. If I watch one of the subscription episodes, I start to feel guilty about all those cute cat videos I'm missing. Sent to me by real friends. Who own real cats. But if I watch one of the cat videos I feel like I'm not getting my monthly 12 bucks worth from Netflix or Hulu plus. So if I don't watch Cat Videos OR season 3 of Mad Men and instead shell out 12 to 18 bucks to see your "major motion picture", then I'm just being a dick. To the cats. And Mad Men. Season 3.

My point is this. Every now in then you get cornered and see some trailer or ad that looks like it's gonna' be a movie paying homage to the really great films of yore like 2001 and Blade Runner. So you pay the 18 bucks, put on the stupid 3D glasses and suddenly you're watching a total piece of shit like Oblivion staring Tom Cruise. What the fuck!!!

Movie industry, here's some free advice. If you really want me to watch your fucking movie, go see some real movies yourself before you write a piece of shit like Oblivion and hire like Tom Cruise. Go watch pictures by people like Scorsese, Bergman, Hitchcock or Kubrick. (Except Eyes Wide Shut). But if all you want is my fucking 18 dollars for your piece of shit movie like Oblivion then just advertise to people who watch the Jersey Shore. Hell, they might even tell their friends. Then you'll become a millionaire for making crappy films enjoyed by idiots who don't really understand real cinema. And all your dreams will come true. But me?

I will not watch your fucking movie.

smnsmn
smnsmn

Oh, and there's more. I just re read the blurb at the end where he's credited as the writer of the Tom Cruise movie "Jack Reacher". His name isn't even on the movie, which btw sucks. 

smnsmn
smnsmn

If Johnny Depp can work a 14 hour day and then stand by his car, exhausted, for 2 hours signing autographs, that bitch can take a look at the first 10 pages of a hopeful's script and decide if it's worth reading or not.

AND - he's one of the luckiest people on planet earth, period. He can pay it forward one inch.  What if no one ever agreed to read HIS first script???

AND - even if he's a selfish, ungrateful prat, which he is, there's a right way and a wrong way to say "no."

No excuse.  C.*.N.T.

ps - he didn't even write History!!!

It was a graphic novel that he adapted. Check out his other credits.  He's a feeble less-than-nothing pig, another vile little div stinking up the business I love with his rotten I'm so much better than you because you're not as lucky as I am bullshit.  I hope he dies broke and slow. Fuck. Him.

AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@smnsmn completely different. Johnny Depp doesn't work a 14 hour day and then give FREE acting lessons to amateur actors who then brush off his advice because they disagree with him.

And while paying it forward is great, and I hope that people do their best to 'pay it forward,' he is in no way obligated to do so.

wayne.schoeneberg
wayne.schoeneberg

Well, I have to admit, that was insightful. I have asked any number of professionals to read my screenplays long before I knew what I was doing. I am still not sure I know what I am doing but I will certainly consider all of this before I ever ask someone to read one of my scripts again. I also agree with you that one will not stop writing just because of a bad review. On the other hand, I sincerely wanted the bare knuckles reviews. I have never learned much from a pat on the head. By the way, if you get some free time ...

la_cineaste
la_cineaste

I will not finish reading your f***ing article, Mr. Olson, for overuse of expletives. A little visit to a therapist would have been a better use of your time.

snuh
snuh

The depressing part about this is that "A History of Violence" was based on a graphic novel- so really Olson only wrote an adaptation not an original idea.... and the graphic novel is better.

Binkconn
Binkconn topcommenter

A History of Violence was over five years ago. Suffice to say someone has become a little bitter about their own screenwriting career?

pzang7
pzang7 like.author.displayName 1 Like

I am not against cursing where it's needed. But wouldn't a simple "No," suffice? Someone who has put their heart and soul into a script shouldn't then be kicked in the balls, as well. "No," or "I can't" would work just as well. And dude, you are not Robert Towne. Your horse is a little high. Ain't it?

johnnewman_136
johnnewman_136 like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

Oh I remember you now - you're that guy who got handed a screenwriting job as soon as you turned 18, whose innate and instantly recognizable genius made it unnecessary for anyone to actually read anything you wrote first. You're the only writer in the history of screenwriting who didn't need a break. Well good for you.

For the rest of us who slog away at our scripts, all the while trying to stifle the despairing voice that keeps saying "Why bother, nobody's going to read it anyway?" the road to success requires perseverance, a thick skin and the drive to keep chasing down leads, to keep asking for someone to read what we've written no matter how many times that request is met with deafening silence.

And the worst part is I get it, I understand where you're coming from - writing of any and all kinds is undervalued in our society. That's why director's and producers not only have no qualms about asking for free scripts and free re-writes, they think you're a greedy asshole if you dare ask for payment! That's why one can pick an article at random from the online version of your local newspaper and find entire chunks that descend into outright incomprehensibility. Editors? Who needs  editors?

The answer, however, is not to stop reading people's scripts but to be brutally honest in ones evaluations, which, perhaps, might help to re-establish writing to the exalted position it truly deserves.

flarp
flarp like.author.displayName 1 Like

It's a shame people read YOUR scripts, sir, given the fact that A History of Violence couldn't even domestically make it's money back.



AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@flarp a movie's box office revenue is not wholly dependent on the script... There is also the influence of actors, editors, and a director. To fault him entirely shows ignorance of the film industry.

sharonabennett
sharonabennett like.author.displayName 1 Like

This is hilarious! I laughed several times. I have always kind of figured that people in the industry (actors, producers, writers, etc) really have a lot to deal with as far as people pestering them. Guys, he's angry because this sort of thing probably happens all the time, and he's in a no-win situation. (If he's truly honest, like he should be, then he will be hated. I don't think it works quite the same way when you give out medical advice. Stories are like children to writers. It's very hard to admit to their warts.)


Also, I think there really is something to be said for a cr*ppy hack writer who thinks he's God's gift to humanity. I was once in a creative writing class (loooong ago, in high school) and this one kid... well, we were basically supposed to read for 5 minutes each, but the teacher was being extra polite and didn't interrupt him. Two thirds of the class and several snores later, the teacher finally worked up the nerve to tell him that maybe- just maybe- some other people should have a turn too. I wonder whatever happened to that kid.

BTW, I want to say that I think screenwriters are the unsung heroes of the movie industry. It's so weird (to me) that most people don't see that. If you have a so-so actor, or for some reason the actor you want isn't available, you can still make it a good movie. But if you don't have a good screenplay, the movie will bomb. Everything rests on the screenplay! 

tyler159
tyler159 like.author.displayName 1 Like

The angry responses mostly stem from the fact that people don't respect all it takes to master the craft of writing well. The effort--sweat equity--one invests in mastering his craft has intrinsic value. Furthermore, the time it takes to read and then compose a worthwhile critique of someone else's work is priceless. Time being the one commodity we all have in finite supply, and one we can never get back once it is spent. Chaucer said it best,  "Ars longa, vita brevis" 



walterjac
walterjac

@tyler159 - And you become a master by writing then having it critiqued. His real problem trying to appease the guy whose script he read. You don't. The fact he agonized over it I suppose says something, but the idea that 'I made it, screw the rest of you' is why Hollywood can continue to dick over writers, pay them crap and toss them when they slip up. It doesn't help when writers act like rats from a sinking ship, willingly stepping on each other or ignoring the others to save themselves.

Nina
Nina like.author.displayName 1 Like

This would be a classic piece if it hadn't ended with a footnote telling us this dude is the tool responsible for the Reacher fiasco. 

dave1231
dave1231 like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Wow ... what an arrogant, selfish, snob of a prick you are.  This
'skill' you have is not something that took you YEARS to learn...it took
you YEARS to find someone in the business willing to READ your stuff.
Lighten up, dude.  Yeah, so this guy couldn't handle criticism...sure
sounds like you can't either.  All to often I see 'professionals' like
you respond like this.  "I'm a pro, you're a lowly wanna be...now off
with you!"  Well you were a wanna be back in the day...

AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@dave1231 writing CAN take years to hone. Anyone can write some sentences, but learning how to write a story that many people could read AND enjoy isn't something you decide to do in an afternoon, but can take many scripts/manuscripts.

HollywoodDepression
HollywoodDepression

I wish my boyfriend would read this article.  My boyfriend met someone from film school and, being the impressionable person he is, starting taking nighttime screenwriting classes soon after.  He has literally been "writing" for less than 6 months but is convinced he has not one, but two sellable scripts on his hand.  Mind you, he has never written creatively before in his life.  The only people who sees his scripts are his mother and some ex-actor he pays $150 an hour.  And all of this would be fine if he hadn't turned into an arrogant ass who is completely full of himself.  I stopped reading the scripts because he took my critiques too harshly and yelled at me or pouted if I gave my honest opinion.   P.S.  I know I need to break up with this douche-bag.

macmooreno
macmooreno

@HollywoodDepression The ability to separate artistic criticism from personal sleight is a mark of maturity.  This is a concept that haunted me in the tenderfoot times of my craft.  Hopefully he has mellowed out a bit.  Or you've broken up with him.  Hope all is well with the both of you (together or not haha).

tanya.beatty
tanya.beatty

This guy sounds very disrespectful & should've learned from yourcritique rather than take it personally. I would feel the same way asyou if I had an experience like that. However, I feel that in thisindustry it is so hard to be seen that when you have a connection tosomeone who can help, it never hurts to ask.  Most people who aresuccessful have had help or a connection to get them where they are now.So in my opinion, it doesn't hurt to give back & help someone gettheir foot in the door.

laksham1976
laksham1976

I know a guy who trains racehorses, but yet he writes really neat and nifty  screenplays.  Finally someone (me) took the time to read one of them and it was produced.  But as a rule I hate when people ask me to read their script because I actually read them.  So I'm a dope -- sue me.   I'm happy that I took the time to read a few things by the aforementioned horse trainer/writer, but you have to know that for every horse trainer who writes great stuff, there are a thousand horse trainers who write atrocious stuff.  Everybody has a script or an idea.   The best way to get rid of someone you don't like is to ask them to read your script.  They'll never read it and they will avoid you for centuries.  That's really good advice, so it might be a god idea for everybody in the world to write at least one screenplay.   I do, however, dislike the tone of this Voice piece, but kindly don't talk back to me in hipster jargon about how I "don't get it."  Trust me, I get it.  The entire motion picture and TV business is filled with delusional no-talents -- and many of them are very famous.  I just finished reading a script that was so bad -- just awful -- but a major studio will make it for about $35 million.  I am not joking.  Naturally, by the time it goes into production, it will be a totally different story, but the writer had a hit once --- by accident I assume.  the movie will lose money and the guy's next script will sell for more.  One last thing -- for aspiring screenwroters -- never enter a screenplay "contest."  They should be illegal.   

tropicdonna
tropicdonna

He says, 'He is currently adapting One Shot, one of the best-selling Jack Reacher books for Paramount.'... No he is NOT!  He is making a new movie that may sell a lot of tickets but he didn't adapt anything.  Jack Reacher is 6' 5" and he doesn't own a car, never did and maybe never will.  The major premise of the book is that he WALKS.  I guess you can't make a good action movie w/o a car chase, but at least it could have been a borrowed car!

AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@tropicdonna You do know that the writer doesn't cast the movie, right? Right? Otherwise you are betraying ignorance of how film making works.

ArtsBeatLA
ArtsBeatLA

 @tropicdonna  Actually, yes he is - well, was at the time this article ran... Chris McQuarrie took over that job. In any case, you clearly cannot define the term "adaptation" -- just because you disagree with some of the choices the studio has made, does not mean the film is *not* an adaptation of the book, accurate or otherwise.

si00
si00 like.author.displayName 1 Like

I loved it!  it happens all the time, so even though have had several scripts made into films, I don't tell people I write anything!  It's easier!  Great article!  

NeonMosfet
NeonMosfet

I got three director types, on Twitter, who want to read my fucking script

 

Angela Garcia@NeonMosfet

Dr. Bob
Dr. Bob like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

As a physician, I get asked all the time outside of the hospital (birthday parties, dinner parties, etc.) to take a look at someone's rash or give medical advice regarding a friend or family member's illness. I never, ever would be so arrogant, pompous and self absorbed to act as Mr. Olson to not give my medical opinion and not help someone out. When a budding medical student wants to learn the art and science of medicine, I gladly welcome them into the world of medicine and let them shadow me - even though it takes up my time. Mr. Olson obviously has forgotten where he came from - and at one point in his life - he had to ask someone to read one of his scripts. Mr. Olson - you have a duty and obligation to your craft - don't be an ass about it. I guarantee that helping out other writers can only help you yourself become a better screenwriter and better person.

percival.constantine
percival.constantine like.author.displayName 1 Like

@Dr. Bob You can't compare writing and medicine. While there are many important technical aspects to writing fiction, especially when you're talking about screenplays, it is far more subjective. Two men can read the same screenplay and one can regard it as the greatest thing he's ever read while the other can look at it as the equivalent of used toilet paper. And despite those technical aspects, many people view comments on a person's writing as far more subjective than comments on a person's medical condition.

If someone asks you to look at their rash and you do and tell them it's something that doesn't look good, they aren't going to hold that against you. That's an objective observation, it has nothing to do with your personal feelings. But if someone asks you what you thought of their screenplay, that is definitely a very subjective thing and it can cause problems in relationships. Did you not read the story about how Olson DID read someone's story, tried to be as tactful as possible, and was still regarded as an asshole for it? Or did you just stop reading after the introduction? 

And in regards to the shadowing thing, please. That's not a legitimate comparison at all. Having someone shadow you is inviting them to come and follow you around as you work while asking questions. When someone shadows you at your job, you are, by definition, AT YOUR JOB. As in you are still performing your work duties and ARE STILL GETTING PAID. That's not what Olson was being asked to do. If the writer in question was asking to shadow Olson, that would mean he follows Olson around as Olson went about his work duties. For a writer, shadowing isn't exactly productive. If you're going to train a new writer, shadowing is not an option. Doesn't matter how many classes you've taken, shadowing a writer as he writes won't accomplish a damn thing, because you'll just see a guy sitting in front of a computer, typing.

Olson was asked to read someone else's work. That means he has to put aside the work he is BEING PAID TO DO in order to do a favor to someone. Do you understand that? He needs to NEGLECT HIS PAYING WORK to fulfill that obligation. 

A correct comparison isn't if someone asked if they could shadow you. A correct comparison would be if someone asked you to leave your practice or hospital during your designated work hours to come and examine them, without being paid for it. Something tells me you'd be a lot less willing to "gladly welcome them into the world of medicine" if that was what they required to be welcomed.

To conclude, there's a famous anecdote about a writer at a cocktail party, possibly George Bernard Shaw. The anecdote goes that the writer was told by a surgeon, "when I retire, I plan to write." To which the writer replied, "when I retire, I plan to operate on people."

In other words, writing and medicine are not even close to being the same thing. They are completely different disciplines. Trying to act as if they are the same thing shows just how ignorant you are on the subject of writing.

tanya.beatty
tanya.beatty

@Dr. Bob Well said! We all started somewhere & should not have a problem giving back if we are doing something we truly love & are passionate about!

Maria Ross
Maria Ross like.author.displayName 1 Like

I started out hating you but at the end loved this article. Amen! As a branding consultant, I get asked for free advice all the time. People offering to take me out for coffee and "pick my brain." My brain and experiences are the goods I sell to make a living! However, I do believe that if you can support other people and network, Karma will be good to you. But it's people that just assume it is no big deal that upset me. Would you ever ask a farmer to give you some of his crop for free? Would you ever ask a carpenter to build you a cabinet for free? No. Service professionals are not valued in the same way because people think, What's the big deal? it's only time? But I loved what you said about it being about the years of experience, work and sweat it took to become an expert. It also means it is time you take away from either earning money or helping your own close personal friends, as you so well stated.

And as a writer myself who just came out with my first small business branding book, I actually cannot stand when people SAY they want feedback on their writing but they really don't. That guy's response to your critique was selfish and immature. Just because the outcome was not what he wanted to hear doesn't mean the time you spent and the feedback you gave wasn't valid.

If you can't take the heat, get out of the kitchen, I say! Toughen up, learn how to take feedback and be grateful that someone has taken the time and consideration to be honest with you. Sheesh.....

I loved your movie. Now I love you more! Thanks for this.

Anonymous
Anonymous like.author.displayName like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 3 Like

What a wanker - never heard of you before - a trite tirade. You've re-defined the phrase oxygen thief. The stuff about Picasso complete and utter bullshit.

Willy Handin
Willy Handin like.author.displayName 1 Like

Very Imformative article, thanks for the educational read.

vic
vic

Actually I lied. I read the whole thing ... which I very seldom do.

vic
vic like.author.displayName 1 Like

I tossed this article after the first sentence ....

bet her right her
bet her right her like.author.displayName 1 Like

YOU WILL NOT READ MY F-CKING SCRIPT!

Why would I let you read my screenplay?

Your stuff sucks.

Quite frankly my dog's poop is better the the poop you write.

You would probably take my creative ideas bit by bit and steal them for your own self, due to your total lack of imagination and vision.

Heck I should be paid should just for this comment here.

There is always somebody better than you, and in your case, almost everybody is better than you.

Rest assured, YOU WILL NOT READ MY F-CKING SCRIPT!

AspiringWriter
AspiringWriter

@bet her right her And I'll bet he's grateful for that :)

 Also, ideas cannot be copyrighted and are not property. You can't steal something that's not property, so anyone could use your ideas as long as they are not using the expression of that idea (copying complete lines of dialogue, scene description, character names/descriptions).

Fitz
Fitz like.author.displayName 1 Like

@bet her right her

"Quite frankly my dog's poop is better the the poop you write"

 Best of luck with the writing, buddy. 

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