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bobdole
06-22-2008, 06:09 AM
Hello,

I would like to know if it could be an interesting idea for me to move to L.A. (Hollywood)? I'm an aspiring screenwriter looking for a buyer. I have 2 features specs completed, 1 short completed, 1 feature unfinished and I'm working on my fifth.

It seems really difficult to find relationships when you live on the other side of America. It looks like e-mails are an improbable way to get noticed. Maybe if I knock on the doors of some production companies in Hollywood, ask to talk to the assistant of the producers, give away a few USB keys of my writing samples, resumes, synopsis, loglines, etc... It does look like a good idea, don't you think?

Please answer me back I would really need to know your opinion.

Jean-Michel

Medievalist
06-22-2008, 06:32 AM
This is a really really bad idea, one that well, pretty much everyone else has thought of, and they're now out here, and not having any luck. Jobs are not easy to come by outside of the service industry, and rent is really really high.

I wouldn't do it. I really wouldn't. There's a reason there are jokes about "Hi, I'm Bob. I'll be your waiter tonight. Would you like to read my screen play while you wait?"

Monaco
06-22-2008, 09:15 AM
Bobdole, seems like you don't know much about the realities of life in L.A. There's a REAL lot information out there and it might be a good idea to read it before considering moving there. Personally, I think that a great idea + a killer query letter would do a much better job for anyone. Did you ever query by snail mail?

icerose
06-22-2008, 10:09 AM
If you can't get noticed through a query letter chances are you won't get noticed in person either.

If you do plan on moving out there, have a job ready and waiting. If you want it to help you into the industry, get a job with the studios or an agency. But don't just step off the bus, luggage and script in hand, and expect everything to turn out okay. That could very easily turn into a disaster.

Good luck and I hope things go for you.

Medievalist
06-22-2008, 10:35 AM
And check out the high cost of living; everything costs more in L.A.

mario_c
06-22-2008, 10:49 AM
I'm biased because I live just outside of NYC, and I'm planning a mini vacation in LA for the Screenwriters' Expo :D Anyway, my plan has been to get noticed as much as possible before I go to LA to network. There are chances to build a resume out East, complete with networking, agencies, prodcos and whatnot. Of course, you will eventually need to have THE MEETING and have the time and money to jump on a plane and go a-pitching in LA. Fine, it's easier to have a LA address.
And why not? I've gone to LA as a young man and I don't hate the town. People who whine about rents in LA should spend one day browsing apartments in NYC. And my life is currently pretty devoid of any direction so why not dive in? Yeah I know, it's tempting. Or just go for pitch conventions or other industry happenings, like Triggerstreet parties, and get out and network if you can afford it.
So do what you want, but go as a professional and not as another dork with a script. Like the hundreds who registered their script today, and the more hundreds who are too ignorant to but are in LA anyway. Enter contests, write prodcos, join Inktip and the Representation Directory Online and Zoetrope. Make short films and review scripts and movies and do whatever it takes to show that you love writing more than anything else in the world. You can do this in New Jersey or Florida or Minnesota. But be ready when you put everything on the table.

zagoraz
06-22-2008, 12:58 PM
Definitely do your research. Don't just jump on a bus and think it's going to happen quickly. It won't. Write at least two more scripts before you even think about making the move. I was in the same quandary as you in late 2005, and I decided to make the move. I had written four screenplays and had placed in a few contests, so I had a little bit of confidence in my writing ability. I didn't know a soul out here, but I lucked into a non-paying internship at a management company that turned into an assistant gig a few months later.

This was in early 2006. Throughout the year I made a ton of contacts in the industry, simply by networking with other assistants. In April of 2007 I got an agent. Scripts went out. No bites. In October I got a manager, then the strike happened. Lost manager. Nothing happened for several months, then last month, wham, optioned my first screenplay. So I've been pretty lucky, having all this happen in about 2 1/2 years.

But guess what? None of the scripts I've had any amount of success with were written before I moved out here. They were all written since I made the move. So if you're serious about it, and you are writing at a competitive level - moving here is worth it. If I hadn't moved out here, none of what happened to me would've happened, because every person that has helped further my career as a screenwriter has been someone I have met out here.

If you do decide to come out here, have enough money to last you at least six months. You're going to pay $1000+ a month for a crappy apartment in the valley. Your $400 a week assistant job that you have to get to make the contacts you need is going to suck - if you are even lucky enough to get one of these jobs. The competition is fierce. People will work for nothing just to get their foot in the door. The pay will barely cover your rent, not accounting for the higher car insurance prices, ridiculous cost of gas, or the inflated grocery prices. You better really want it, because L.A. for an aspiring writer is a freakin' boot camp. Not trying to scare you, just trying to be realistic.

LIVIN
06-22-2008, 05:18 PM
One benefit of living elsewhere is the increased likelihood/ability of writing a different script. Meaning, if you live in the middle of nowhere, there's a possibility that you have a unique perspective and can corner the market with your middle of nowhere script.

Mikem
06-23-2008, 03:38 AM
I can't speak to living in L.A. as I am located in Denver, but I can speak to one of the greatest drawbacks of NOT being in L.A. The lack of peers to bounce ideas off of. I am laboring to build a circle of friends/colleagues to discuss movies/scripts/ideas with but due to the different industry base in my city those discussions can be hard to have.

Yes, in L.A. everyone may be an aspiring screen writer, actor, or producer. However this does create a great pool of passionate opinions and views to foster some great discussions. I would appreciate more thoughtful dialog about this industry I love in my everyday life. Otherwise one can feel like an island. But maybe that will, as mentioned before by Livin, spark a more individual and unique viewpoint untainted from swimming in the big pool. I sure hope so but it has it's drawbacks.

Hence you have the reason I sought out this site. It's nice to be able to chat about these things virtually at least. I still prefer a face to face discussion over a glass of wine or a nice meal.

I believe anyone can accomplish anything if they work hard enough and have a passion for it. That doesn't mean some locations aren't going to have some advantages and disadvantages.

Good luck!

BenPanced
06-23-2008, 04:23 AM
If you don't have a source of income already lined up and Hollywood isn't just down the street from where you currently live, stay put. Harsh, I know, but having once moved to a different city with no prospects of anything, I had to admit defeat and go back home after a month and a half.

gophergrrrl
06-23-2008, 05:04 AM
I read an artical on (one of) wga's website about why agencies (and more than likely prodco's as well) WANT query letters. It's always emphasized that they want snail mail query letters, NOT emails, not phone calls, and definitely not people barging in and asking to see them in person. I don't think you've done enough research to know how to go about approaching people inside the industry about your work. Moving to Hollywood won't help you much if you haven't even researched enough to know that query (snail mail) letters are a MUST. Just don't move out there, you don't have any guarantees once you get there.

odocoileus
06-23-2008, 05:53 AM
Getting your foot in the door in Hollywood (http://filmdiva.blogspot.com/2006/06/inserting-foot-in-door.html).


http://filmdiva.blogspot.com/2006/07/big-submission.html (http://filmdiva.blogspot.com/2006/07/big-submission.html)

MrJayVee
06-23-2008, 06:25 AM
I don't agree with "Icerose." The query letter route is a far more difficult avenue. You have a better chance of "making it" if you're actually in L.A. and actually meeting people face to face. No, I'm not saying drop everything and move to L.A. Being here ain't gonna help if you haven't got the talent or determination...

Heck, I've been over this a million times on my website and blog (see links below). If you're interested, give 'em both a read. In the meantime, read this pertinent entry from my blog:

http://theworkingscreenwriter.blogspot.com/2007/11/reader-question.html

icerose
06-23-2008, 06:45 AM
I don't agree with "Icerose." The query letter route is a far more difficult avenue. You have a better chance of "making it" if you're actually in L.A. and actually meeting people face to face. No, I'm not saying drop everything and move to L.A. Being here ain't gonna help if you haven't got the talent or determination...

Heck, I've been over this a million times on my website and blog (see links below). If you're interested, give 'em both a read. In the meantime, read this pertinent entry from my blog:

http://theworkingscreenwriter.blogspot.com/2007/11/reader-question.html

Then I'm wrong on that point, since I've never had any experience outside of queries and such, then I'll bow to your knowledge.

DrRita
06-23-2008, 11:10 AM
Well, I moved here last November. I've been writing and working with other writers, networking and have made a lot of contacts in the industry. I don't have to work at an outside job so guess that's a plus and I share an apartment with my sister (big plus, rents are very expensive). People here generally want to work with people here . . . I've heard this from the locals many times. They consider the poeple in the the area part of their "tribe" and do want to keep the locals busy.

My 2 cents is to move here but make sure you're really prepared for some disappointments, waiting, waiting, and then lost of promises with no follow-up. I had contacts before I moved and was plugged in, so to speak, before I left AZ. I don't think I could have made it otherwise.

Rainy Night
06-23-2008, 09:17 PM
I left AZ last July to move here... the reality is that rent is twice as much and pay is half as much as the rest of the world. I did get a job with a major music label and work in the media district in Burbank, but like I said the pay is really low. Because I spend so much time working to pay the bills the time I have to write has been cut way back. I came here with what I thought was enough money to get me through 6 months, it lasted 3 months. Hollywood is not kid friendly, so if you have a family be aware of that.

The upside is that I have had opportunities here that I would not have had anywhere else. I got a writer-for-hire job wrote two drafts of a script that is *suppose* to be going into production at the end of July (the date changes every two weeks) I was on a reality TV show, I've had one short produced and seen it on the big screen, I have another short in production. I've made some good friends here, Zagoraz shows up at my house everyonce in a while or we see each other in a restaurant when I'm out picking up food for the family. He even shot a short at my house.

It's not a bad idea to move to Hollywood, but you need to be aware of what you are getting into.

DrRita
06-23-2008, 09:26 PM
Hey Rainy Night? Where in AZ did you move from??? You left in July, I left in Nov. Hmmmmm. Did you belong to any of the local stuff? IFP-Phoenix, writer's groups, meet-ups? Just curious.

donroc
06-23-2008, 09:27 PM
Having lived there 1960-1991, I would advise going there with backup $$$ and a plan. Hopefully with contacts as well. Or have skills in some other area to carry you through financially. Proximity is valuable.

On the other hand, there is much bs there, and you may meet a "name" who impresses you but is out of the loop. Yet that person may convince you to write a spec script for him on hope and dreams. See the film Mistress.

Also, you may be sidetracked as some are by sucking up to the dentist, accountant for a firm, or a picture framer who works for a big name -- and if only they would be nice and get your script to him/her.

LIVIN
06-23-2008, 09:42 PM
Like some others... one aspiring screenwriter I know moved to L.A. with a job lined up as a very low level person with a small film company and ended up finding it hard to find the time to write. Of course, wherever you are, if you're not paying the bills by writing scripts, then you need to find some kind of balance.

Another person I knew was a PA for a long time, hoping something would come of it and got fed up with having to do all kinds of bs and not getting anywhere for it and, eventually, switched careers.

Rainy Night
06-23-2008, 10:33 PM
Hey Rainy Night? Where in AZ did you move from??? You left in July, I left in Nov. Hmmmmm. Did you belong to any of the local stuff? IFP-Phoenix, writer's groups, meet-ups? Just curious.

I lived North Scottsdale area, I've was a member of the AZSA for sometime, I think it's now IFP-Phoenix... I attended meetings sporadically as my work had me back and forth to Seattle for a couple years until that company got sold and I lost my job there. After that I had a contract job in Tempe... when that ended my family and I made the move to LA.

You?

jennifer75
06-23-2008, 10:37 PM
If you do decide to come out here, have enough money to last you at least six months. You're going to pay $1000+ a month for a crappy ROOM ANYWHERE IN LA.

My 2 cents.

zeprosnepsid
06-24-2008, 12:07 AM
People who pay over $1000 in rent in LA for a crap place are just lazy. Right now I split $865 to rent an entire house. Living with roommates I have never paid more than $500 a month personally and I have never lived in a craphole. I've lived in a Downtown LA high rise, in hip Los Feliz apartments and now my own house in Glendale. It's really really easy to find cheap rent in LA if you do the work. I think it's one of the cheapest big cities I've been in if you do the work. There's so many poor people here that you can find great cheap stores for anything you want. Really great cheap restaurants, especially if you like Mexican food. The biggest cost is car insurance, but the farther you live out of LA proper, the less you'll pay. As far as big cities go, LA is definitely cheaper than comparable east coast cities. Boston, NYC, DC are all way way more expensive.

The mistake people make is they move here and want to live in Hollywood, even though there are no major studios in Hollywood (Paramount is vaguely nearby). And there are some production companies and stuff, but there are very many that aren't in Hollywood. If you can, get a job first and then get a place near it. Living in the Valley doesn't make sense if you're working at Sony and living in Hollywood doesn't make sense if you are working at Disney. (Neither of those are actually very good examples depending on where in the Valley and where in Hollywood you live, but whatever....)

That being said, I hate LA and I wouldn't move here because it's the most awful place ever. It's ungodly hot. The people are all fake and awful. Everyone wants something from you (you often want something from other people). The traffic. Oh everything. I've been trying to move out of here since I graduated film school but oooo it keeps pulling me back in.

But to further your career or whatever, you can move here if you want -- if you are the type to network. A lot of writers are introverted so moving here won't really help you. But like z's story, if you can make friends and influence people then it might be helpful. But like other said, just be realistic. It can take a very very long time. If you think you're going to move out here and be pitching to studios tomorrow, you are incorrect!

LA, being a city, is more expensive than if you live in podunk and in the end it may be cheaper for you to do things long distance and fly out if you happen to get a meeting.

Also, don't show up at people's offices. They do not like that.

This post came off grumpier than I meant it to. Sorry about that. I just spent all weekend banging my head against my out of sync footage on my editing machine just to realize it was set to composite instead of component. I swear I looked at it.... I swear I did... grumpy now.

DrRita
06-24-2008, 04:31 AM
I lived North Scottsdale area, I've was a member of the AZSA for sometime, I think it's now IFP-Phoenix... I attended meetings sporadically as my work had me back and forth to Seattle for a couple years until that company got sold and I lost my job there. After that I had a contract job in Tempe... when that ended my family and I made the move to LA.

You?

Also belonged to AZSA and still belong to IFP-Phoenix. AZSA merged with IFP and is now IFP screenwriters. Andy stepped down, Jon Bonnell is president. I went to the table reads for a couple of years from 2006 until I left in November. Still connected with some of the people there. Small world.

DrRita
06-24-2008, 04:35 AM
Yeah, LA isn't THAT expensive. My sis and I have been looking for houses. Right now we live in Toluca Lake, nice little village in the middle of chaos. We probably pay more than we should but it's a nice area and a nice building. I like it here myself. It's certainly not as hot as Phoenix!

Rainy Night
06-24-2008, 05:27 AM
Also belonged to AZSA and still belong to IFP-Phoenix. AZSA merged with IFP and is now IFP screenwriters. Andy stepped down, Jon Bonnell is president. I went to the table reads for a couple of years from 2006 until I left in November. Still connected with some of the people there. Small world.

I know Andy and Jon, very nice guys.

Going way off topic here...

Toluca Lake? You're right in my neighborhood, at least for work. I looked for a house there, cheapest I could find was $2800. The house I rent now is in Sherman Oaks and it's $1800 which is a bargain for a house, but then again it's a pillbox and my landlord rents out the garage to a musician. I have to have a house for my kids, at their age an apartment wouldn't be good. The best I could do for an apartment here was $1450 for a 2 bed 1 bath around 900 sq ft. The Phoenix market has dropped substantially, I see numerous homes w/ pools etc., that are well over 2000 sqft for about $1000 a month, cheaper if you go into the outlying areas.

MelancholyMan
06-24-2008, 06:04 AM
I am a writer also and live in the East. I went to a script writing seminar a few years ago hoping to get noticed. Call me a baby. I got the hell out of there as fast as I could. Moving there is probably the only way to get noticed. But keep in mind that you will be an ant among millions of identical ants. And if you think getting a book published is difficult, multiply that by a factor of 10. And the movie business makes the publishing business look like Toy's R Us. Cut throat like you wouldn't believe. If this appeals to you, and you don't have kids you'd be worried about tossing into this mix, go for it. But study and know what you're getting in to. Even then your odds are not good. But hey, people get discovered every day.

-MM

bobdole
06-24-2008, 10:02 PM
Thanks a lot for the help with all of your messages. I have read them all and thought a lot about it. I'm not gonna leave everything tomorrow morning but I'm thinking about it.

The bad news is my father refused to sell the car. I was suppose to use that money to go to L.A. Apparently, I'm just gonna have to suck-dick my way to the city. I would sell my soul for an option deal.

thanks again
bobdole

icerose
06-24-2008, 11:43 PM
Thanks a lot for the help with all of your messages. I have read them all and thought a lot about it. I'm not gonna leave everything tomorrow morning but I'm thinking about it.

The bad news is my father refused to sell the car. I was suppose to use that money to go to L.A. Apparently, I'm just gonna have to suck-dick my way to the city. I would sell my soul for an option deal.

thanks again
bobdole

Most option deals are not that exciting that it'd be worth the price of your soul.

Just get a job, save save save, in the mean time write, improve, and refine your craft. The better you are before you head out there, the faster and smoother things will go. But it will still take time and a lot of it. Over night successes are almost always years in the making.

Good luck.

DrRita
06-25-2008, 04:32 AM
I know Andy and Jon, very nice guys.

Going way off topic here...

Toluca Lake? You're right in my neighborhood, at least for work. I looked for a house there, cheapest I could find was $2800. The house I rent now is in Sherman Oaks and it's $1800 which is a bargain for a house, but then again it's a pillbox and my landlord rents out the garage to a musician. I have to have a house for my kids, at their age an apartment wouldn't be good. The best I could do for an apartment here was $1450 for a 2 bed 1 bath around 900 sq ft. The Phoenix market has dropped substantially, I see numerous homes w/ pools etc., that are well over 2000 sqft for about $1000 a month, cheaper if you go into the outlying areas.

Yeah, we're looking for a house in Glendale and vicinity. Found one or two for about $2200. I think Sherman Oaks is great, thought about looking there too. $1800 is a good deal!

Yeah, sold my house out in AJ. Half acre, pool, huge garage, apartment, lots of amenities. The mortgage there was almost what we pay here. *sigh* But I do like it here wayyy better.

jessegrillofilm
06-25-2008, 04:59 AM
Wow. I think I am getting ripped off. I have a studio in valley village and pay $850, and it is ghetto. Do either of you two work in the film industry? I am a teamster myself.
Bobdole. Have you ever been to LA? Do you know anyone here that you would be able to come visit with and check out the scene?

Rainy Night
06-25-2008, 05:30 AM
Yeah, we're looking for a house in Glendale and vicinity. Found one or two for about $2200. I think Sherman Oaks is great, thought about looking there too. $1800 is a good deal!

Yeah, sold my house out in AJ. Half acre, pool, huge garage, apartment, lots of amenities. The mortgage there was almost what we pay here. *sigh* But I do like it here wayyy better.

Rita...

I looked in AJ a little over year ago, I could have had a 4000 sqft house w/ pool for $1400 / mo. Prices are even cheaper now, with gas so high nobody wants the hour or so drive into Phoenix.

I think I got a deal in Sherman Oaks, when I first go here I was paying $2450 for a duplex. After I was able to look around I was lucky and found this place.

By comparison my last mortgage payment (not rent) when I lived in Seattle was $1800 all incl and that was for a house twice the size of what I'm in now.

Jesse... I work for Warners in Burbank.

jessegrillofilm
06-25-2008, 07:15 AM
Cool. I work at warners a lot. I am working on a universal film right now called Little Big Men. Are you a working writer? Are you part of a group? I am looking around right now for a good one.

bobdole
06-25-2008, 09:51 PM
Jesse,

I don't know anyone in L.A. and I've never been here.

jessegrillofilm
06-25-2008, 10:03 PM
Oh no way then. For sure come visit before you move out here. This town will eat you alive if you don't know anyone and the area. When I first moved here I was working as a PA and hated it. Got lost all the time and found most people in hollywood to be very cold. Why don't you look into some seminars or other film events that are going on in LA and visit during that time? Might make some connections and who knows, you might like it. :)

icerose
06-25-2008, 10:20 PM
Oh no way then. For sure come visit before you move out here. This town will eat you alive if you don't know anyone and the area. When I first moved here I was working as a PA and hated it. Got lost all the time and found most people in hollywood to be very cold. Why don't you look into some seminars or other film events that are going on in LA and visit during that time? Might make some connections and who knows, you might like it. :)

Good advice, I was always told that if I ever want to move to an unknown area, go and stay for two weeks and interact with the locals and everything. You'll know after two weeks if it's for you.

zeprosnepsid
06-25-2008, 11:02 PM
Yeah, we're looking for a house in Glendale and vicinity. Found one or two for about $2200. I think Sherman Oaks is great, thought about looking there too. $1800 is a good deal!

Yeah, sold my house out in AJ. Half acre, pool, huge garage, apartment, lots of amenities. The mortgage there was almost what we pay here. *sigh* But I do like it here wayyy better.

I really like Glendale, but it's a different town now with the Americana. It gets 400k-500k visitors a week in a town of 200k people. It's not as hot as the Valley though. Every time I go to Burbank, next town over, the temp is 5-8 degrees higher.

Jesse, I work mostly as an editor and I have my own system, so for the last several months I've worked at home on a feature doc. But I'll be done in 2 weeks and I have to get another gig. I hate looking for jobs. Boo.

Rainy Night
06-26-2008, 05:29 AM
Cool. I work at warners a lot. I am working on a universal film right now called Little Big Men. Are you a working writer? Are you part of a group? I am looking around right now for a good one.

I've done some writer-for-hire work, but not enough to call myself a working writer. I work for Warner Music so I'm not involved with the studio much.

I am part of a group of filmmakers, we just finished a short for the 48 hour film project and are starting on another short (not to be done in 48 hours) that I wrote (the one Dpat said had a crap ending if anyone remembers that episode in my life). We have a producer and director and are working on seting other roles /casting etc. It's no pay as we're doing it on no budget but if you or anyone else here would like to be involved please let me know...

DrRita
06-26-2008, 06:05 AM
Rita...

I looked in AJ a little over year ago, I could have had a 4000 sqft house w/ pool for $1400 / mo. Prices are even cheaper now, with gas so high nobody wants the hour or so drive into Phoenix.

I think I got a deal in Sherman Oaks, when I first go here I was paying $2450 for a duplex. After I was able to look around I was lucky and found this place.

By comparison my last mortgage payment (not rent) when I lived in Seattle was $1800 all incl and that was for a house twice the size of what I'm in now.

Jesse... I work for Warners in Burbank.

Yeah, the Junction is a "cheap" place to live . . . my son still lives there, he's a painting contractor with his own biz. I'm helping him get started with another "branch" over here.

We're going to take our time. I want a house or duplex WITH A YARD or at least a balcony/patio that doesn't look out over the parking lot and away from the freeway. I do like this apartment, just need a bit more room.

Hey, do you know Sean Gaffney? He works at WB. Myself, I have the luxury of staying home and being a writer . . . I'm still new to the biz, have contacts but no deals yet. I'm also a novelist and working on a novel too. So I work at home and write about 6 hours a day. That's why I'd love a house/duplex with a yard!

We're going to start looking in earnest next month.

jessegrillofilm
06-26-2008, 10:10 AM
Hey rainy night. I am not sure if you would ever need it but I am a teamster, mainly cast driver, but I can drive anything so if you have a big truck or anything I would be happy to help out. I also used to work in locations. Some of my jobs are on imdb. Jesse Grillo

Blondchen
06-28-2008, 05:59 AM
Hello,

I would like to know if it could be an interesting idea for me to move to L.A. (Hollywood)? I'm an aspiring screenwriter looking for a buyer. I have 2 features specs completed, 1 short completed, 1 feature unfinished and I'm working on my fifth.

It seems really difficult to find relationships when you live on the other side of America. It looks like e-mails are an improbable way to get noticed. Maybe if I knock on the doors of some production companies in Hollywood, ask to talk to the assistant of the producers, give away a few USB keys of my writing samples, resumes, synopsis, loglines, etc... It does look like a good idea, don't you think?

Please answer me back I would really need to know your opinion.

Jean-Michel

I have about 1 or 2 LA newbies showing up at my office offering unsolicited materials and asking for advice every 2-3 months. While I am very patient and actually give them the time of day, the materials go straight into the trash.

For our production company, looking at unsolicited material without the author signing a release is just BEGGING to get us sued. Besides, we have enough people we know trying to get us to work on their projects. We literally don't have the time or the resources for the rest.

It sounds cruel, unfeeling, jaded I suppose. But most production companies on our scale (small to medium) function this way.

I'm actually not trying to discourage you from moving here. One of the reasons Los Angeles is so exciting is because its in constant flux - people coming in, people coming out. It's the last frontier of the American dream and I totally get off on it. So if you are prepared to struggle, get rejected, wait, try every networking tactic available, get rejected some more, wait even longer, start at the bottom as a PA or in a mailroom and literally pull yourself up the ladder, then by all means...

WELCOME TO HOLLYWOOD!

bobdole
06-28-2008, 08:31 AM
"I have about 1 or 2 LA newbies showing up at my office offering unsolicited materials and asking for advice every 2-3 months. While I am very patient and actually give them the time of day, the materials go straight into the trash."
Then why the hell don't you just get them to sign a release form instead of making them lose their time. New writers could always surprise you with their stuff. Instead of always having the same people submitting the same kind of material over and over again.

Blondchen
06-28-2008, 09:35 AM
"I have about 1 or 2 LA newbies showing up at my office offering unsolicited materials and asking for advice every 2-3 months. While I am very patient and actually give them the time of day, the materials go straight into the trash."
Then why the hell don't you just get them to sign a release form instead of making them lose their time. New writers could always surprise you with their stuff. Instead of always having the same people submitting the same kind of material over and over again.

Hmm. Maybe you're not ready for this town.

FYI, I give them time. I let the ask questions and try my best to give them straight answers. That's the "time of day." We're a production company, not an agency. And the honst to God truth is that if we want new blood, we'll call an agent and see what they have.

zeprosnepsid
06-28-2008, 12:24 PM
Then why the hell don't you just get them to sign a release form instead of making them lose their time. New writers could always surprise you with their stuff. Instead of always having the same people submitting the same kind of material over and over again.

Lol, I agree, you're not ready.

Medievalist
06-29-2008, 01:00 AM
"I have about 1 or 2 LA newbies showing up at my office offering unsolicited materials and asking for advice every 2-3 months. While I am very patient and actually give them the time of day, the materials go straight into the trash."
Then why the hell don't you just get them to sign a release form instead of making them lose their time. New writers could always surprise you with their stuff. Instead of always having the same people submitting the same kind of material over and over again.

Dude -- you just provided a reason why they don't.

If you do come out here, and some kind charitable soul is willing to talk to you, you say thank you and use their advice to the best of your ability, wit, and situation.

Then maybe you'll be different enough that when you have an agent, they'll remember you, and give your script a look.

Lillyth
06-29-2008, 02:28 AM
That being said, I hate LA and I wouldn't move here because it's the most awful place ever.
I laughed sooooooooooooooo loud at that!:roll:

Reminds me of Russell Crowe's quote:

"I'd move to Los Angeles if Australia and New Zealand were swallowed up by a huge tidal wave, if there was a bubonic plague in Europe, and if the continent of Africa disappeared from some Martian attack."

Blondchen
06-29-2008, 07:10 AM
I laughed sooooooooooooooo loud at that!:roll:

Reminds me of Russell Crowe's quote:

"I'd move to Los Angeles if Australia and New Zealand were swallowed up by a huge tidal wave, if there was a bubonic plague in Europe, and if the continent of Africa disappeared from some Martian attack."

As a native born San Franciscan I am predisposed to hate Los Angeles. Which I did, the first time I moved here. But after three years in the great state of Maryland, I learned to appreciate LA more.

And yeah, a lot of people suck here, but there are so many wonderful people, so much diversity, and unlike my home time, there is a sense of humor here about all the bullshit.

Lillyth
06-29-2008, 01:52 PM
As a native born San Franciscan I am predisposed to hate Los Angeles. Which I did, the first time I moved here. But after three years in the great state of Maryland, I learned to appreciate LA more.

And yeah, a lot of people suck here, but there are so many wonderful people, so much diversity, and unlike my home time, there is a sense of humor here about all the bullshit.
Yeah, we all just loathe LA and anyone in it up here don't we (I live in SF)...

I have a feeling it is not nearly as bad as we San Franciscans think it is, and, at the same time, far worse...

But it is good to know that folks there can laugh at themselves. That is the mark of a good place to live - if people can laugh at the quirks that make them them.

I heard someone the other day say "But this is San Francisco, on your 18th Birthday you automatically get three gay friends and a hybrid!":ROFL:

donroc
06-29-2008, 05:02 PM
As a born and raised native of The City, who lived in the L.A. area for 30 years, I have always enjoyed late columnist Herb Caen's comment:

“Isn’t it nice that people who prefer Los Angeles to San Francisco live there?”

Blondchen
06-29-2008, 10:13 PM
\I heard someone the other day say "But this is San Francisco, on your 18th Birthday you automatically get three gay friends and a hybrid!":ROFL:

You gotta wait til your 18 for that? I musta been an early bloomer. ;)

mario_c
06-30-2008, 08:42 AM
I have about 1 or 2 LA newbies showing up at my office offering unsolicited materials and asking for advice every 2-3 months. While I am very patient and actually give them the time of day, the materials go straight into the trash.

For our production company, looking at unsolicited material without the author signing a release is just BEGGING to get us sued. Besides, we have enough people we know trying to get us to work on their projects. We literally don't have the time or the resources for the rest.

It sounds cruel, unfeeling, jaded I suppose. But most production companies on our scale (small to medium) function this way.

I'm actually not trying to discourage you from moving here. One of the reasons Los Angeles is so exciting is because its in constant flux - people coming in, people coming out. It's the last frontier of the American dream and I totally get off on it. So if you are prepared to struggle, get rejected, wait, try every networking tactic available, get rejected some more, wait even longer, start at the bottom as a PA or in a mailroom and literally pull yourself up the ladder, then by all means...

WELCOME TO HOLLYWOOD!I was always interested in how the release works: as a young dumb writer I thought it was a threat to my hold over my own material, i.e. forbidding me to sue if they take my name off my script and put their friend's name on. But I guess that works both ways. Some studios say include the release up front (I've only had one studio, a medium level one, say just send it in no release necessary). So do we get a generic one from a lawyer or something? Sorry if these questions sound ignorant, but it's important I know. And I can't afford a lawyer.

Blondchen
06-30-2008, 09:47 AM
I'm sure there are a million examples of artist releases on the Internet. The problem, of course, is that this is a litigious business in a litigious society. Even with releases and copyrights, lawsuits over intellectual property happen everyday. My husband had an idea stolen from him when he as just starting out as a comedy writer...twice, actually. (Luckily, both were poorly executed).

Perhaps I'm not explaining this as well as I should. There are different types of production companies, and by that I just don't mean the difference between film and television, or scripted and reality. What I mean is that there are production companies that are run by writers/show creators (who will hire writers, but don't need to solicit ideas from writers, makes sense?) and there are companies run by producers/designers/show runners who are not necessarily idea people and need to look for outside material.

I happen to produce for the first type of company.

Of course, realistically, even companies that need to by their materials do so 99% of the time from known sources - referrals from agencies, friends, colleagues, etc. It's safer that way. This is a big money business and the people who make the crucial money decisions don't always like to take risks.

I'm not saying it's impossible to break in. Far from it! Read some bios on imdb or Wiki and you'll see all the stories. But it definitely ain't easy. Not for actors, not for writers, not for producers, not for composers, not for directors, not for aspiring agents. It's a tough business, so be prepared.

jessegrillofilm
06-30-2008, 10:48 AM
I'm not saying it's impossible to break in. Far from it! Read some bios on imdb or Wiki and you'll see all the stories. But it definitely ain't easy. Not for actors, not for writers, not for producers, not for composers, not for directors, not for aspiring agents. It's a tough business, so be prepared.

It's so hard for anyone. It took me over a year to become a teamster. It took me over a year to get into a union where all you have to do it drive a car! I know people that have been trying to get in for 4 years and still haven't! Insane business this is. It sucks but its the truth. If you didn't grow up in this business or don't know someone thats in it your going to be walking a very hard long road.