Television writing is the art of writing a TV show. Television is an exciting medium for writers because they get to control everything from the stories that are told to how the sets are built. TV writers develop stories, write scripts, make edits and revisions, and help determine what an episode looks like.
- TV scripts are shorter . Writing an episode of television takes less time and results in fewer pages. TV episodes are either 30 minutes or 60 minutes long with commercial breaks, while feature films are at least 90 minutes long.
- TV shows have different narrative structures. A movie has a clear beginning, middle, and end, while TV shows are episodic and allow for multiple beginnings, middles, and ends. Each TV script is part of a larger narrative, with multiple character and story arcs divided across a number of episodes and seasons.
- TV scripts don’t have to resolve every story right away. Every episode will come to its own conclusion, but they don’t have to be wrapped up neatly; the stories and characters will continue to grow into the next episode. TV writers can take things slow, play with cliffhangers, and allow plots to develop over time.
- TV scripts are dialogue-driven. TV shows typically focus on the writing rather than the visuals to drive the story. Movies are more cinematic than most TV shows and involve more considered cinematography.
- TV shows require more writing in the long-run. Individual episodes are shorter than movies, but require more writing over the course of a season or entire series.
Before you begin writing your script, it’s important to understand how to structure an episode of TV. Let’s examine how a standard one-hour television show is structured. Typically on network television, there are about five acts roughly lasting about 11 pages each. Here’s how Rhimes views the structure of each of the acts:
- Act I: Introduce your characters and present the problem.
- Act II: Escalate the problem.
- Act III: Have the worst-case scenario happen.
- Act IV: Begin the ticking clock.
- Act V: Have the characters reach their moment of victory.
It’s helpful to think about how you want each of your acts to end as you begin to lay out the structure for your episode.
The other essential components of your episodes are your A, B, and C storylines:
- A storyline: The A storyline involves your main character and is the core of your show.
- B storyline: The B storyline is secondary and helps the narrative keep moving forward.
- C storyline: The c storyline, sometimes referred to as “the runner,” is the smallest storyline and holds the least weight.
- Work these out ahead of time and properly set your story up for them, rather than dumping a twist at the end of each act just for excitement’s sake.
Writing a TV comedy, or sitcom, is a different process from writing a TV drama. Here’s what makes them different:
- Tone. TV sitcoms are funny, tackle lighthearted topics, and intend to make viewers laugh. Dramas are more serious and take time to develop a story rather than telling jokes.
- Story Arc and Pace. Sitcoms have a quick narrative pace, they focus on the build to the climax, have less act breaks, and introduce the conflict before the end of act one. The more time the characters spend solving a problem, the less room there is in the script for humor. Dramas are paced slower, have more act breaks, and spend more time developing the story, building to a climax, and arriving at a conclusion.
- Run Time.
- Sitcoms run for approximately 21 minutes without commercials
- while dramas run for about 43 minutes without commercials.
- One page of a script in Final Draft equals about one minute on air, so a 21-minute sitcom script should be around 20 pages long, and
- a script for a 43-minute long drama should be about 40 pages long.
How to Pitch a TV Show
Once you have a great concept for a show, there are three things you’ll need in order to pitch it to network executives:
- A treatment. A treatment is a document that provides an explanation of your TV show’s setting, main characters, and storyline. Every treatment should include a title, logline, synopsis, summary of episodes, and character bios.
- A pilot script. A pilot is the first episode of a TV series. Your TV pilot needs an opening that is going to grab your viewers and says something important to your audience about the show they are going to watch. Without a compelling pilot, you don’t have a TV show. Pilots are crucial for hooking an audience and setting up your characters and storyline for an entire season.
- A show bible. A show bible, also called a story bible or a series bible, is a document that contains the history of your characters, an outline of every episode in the first season, and how you see the show expanding into future seasons. Writing a show bible forces you to think beyond the pilot episode and can help you see the bigger picture of your show idea.
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