Powered by Google
Home
Listings
Editors' Picks
News
Music
Movies
Food
Life
Arts + Books
Rec Room
Moonsigns
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Personals
Adult Personals
Classifieds
Adult Classifieds
- - - - - - - - - - - -
stuff@night
FNX Radio
Band Guide
MassWeb Printing
- - - - - - - - - - - -
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise With Us
Work For Us
Newsletter
RSS Feeds
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Webmaster
Archives



sponsored links
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
PassionShop.com
Sex Toys - Adult  DVDs - Sexy  Lingerie


   
  E-Mail This Article to a Friend

Channeling profits
The whole not-for-profit literary gig got you down? Don’t bother pitching your manuscript. Pitch TV shows!
BY STEVE ALMOND

A few weeks ago, a writer friend of mine (I’ll call him John Updike) called to do what we writers do best: complain about his latest royalty statement.

"I can’t understand a thing," he told me. "It’s just this blizzard of numbers."

"Did it include a check?" I asked.

"I’m not sure I’m getting you, Steve."

"You know — a check. If your book has earned enough to pay back your advance, they send you money. Royalties."

"Very funny," he said, after a longish, literary pause. "You really are a joker, Almondini. Royalty checks! You almost had me there! I’ll have to remember that one!"

You can sort of see where the conversation was headed.

And it occurred to me, as I was yakking away with old Johnny U., trading bons mots and joie de vivre and so forth, that we were — in terms of financial and cultural relevance — pretty much entirely in the wrong racket.

I realized right then that I was tired of the constant rejection, tired of bad reviews, tired of living from all-you-can-eat lunch buffet to lunch buffet, tired of having to explain to people that I wear the same clothes for weeks on end because, as an artist, the material world just isn’t that important to me.

So I did what any self-respecting artist would do: I bought a ticket to Los Angeles and began pitching television shows.

To the superficial observer, this change in career direction will look a lot like "selling out." In fact — until one of the following shows gets the green light from the money people — nothing could be further from the truth.

•CSI: When Writers Perish: A group of intensely attractive forensic investigators uncovers a different dead writer each week. They then use the latest technology to piece together whether the writer died of starvation, drug overdose, or shame, while also having hot sex in their state-of-the-art lab.

•Literary Tricks: Meet Layla and Jacqui, a couple of gorgeous MFA students who write by day ... and hook by night! Eager to "pay the bills" and "develop some decent material," they answer a local help-wanted ad for live models and decide to give the world’s oldest profession a whirl. But, uh oh! Turns out the director of their program just happens to be a regular john. Will Layla risk blowing her cover by blowing him? The only way to know is to tune in to the series that brings new meaning to the term "bang a draft into shape."

•Desperate Housewriters: A devastating portrait of suburban literary malaise, this hour-long drama follows the travails of a quartet of young, attractive writers (don’t worry, we’ll cast them) as they attempt to find meaning in their lives as housebound, economically dependent artists living in a world of plumbers and ad copywriters, while also having hot sex in their state-of-the-art cabanas.

•Stith Undercover: FBI Agent Lilly Stith has a terrible secret: in her spare time, she’s a writer of gay erotica. Can her high-powered law-enforcement career survive the shame of this horrible double life? Follow Lilly as she tracks down mysterious serial killers and evil terrorists, while also attempting to find a respectable publisher for her new novella, The Vulva Conundrum.

•The Protégé: The inaugural entry into the burgeoning world of literary reality-TV programming, The Protégé gathers a dozen of today’s hottest young writers into a small, enclosed space and offers them the ultimate prize: a big fat book contract. But there’s a catch: they have to be handpicked by literary lion Norman Mailer! Watch as the young writers attempt to kiss Mailer’s ass without actually leaving lip prints on his anus, and listen in each week as the boss tells a different contestant, "You’re rejected!"

•Written ... in Blood!: Someone is murdering all the obscure, unpublished writers of the greater Santa Barbara area. Special Agent Biff Hemingway — great-grandson of you-know-who — is determined to squelch the killing spree. How? By channeling the renowned crime-fighting instincts of his forebear! Call this thrill-a-minute drama For Whom the Siren Tolls!

•Agent of Mercy: Literary agent Mercy Urban is considered the top gun in the biz. Follow her exploits as each week she finds and seduces a new literary phenom, signs them to a financially exploitative contract, pledges to remain true to their art, then drops them like a hot potato when a new literary phenom comes along!

•Fear Factor: When Writers Vomit: What you see is pretty much what you get.

•House of Sand and Schmaltz: Tom and Shane are a couple of writers barely making ends meet writing bad symbolist poetry. So imagine the hilarity that ensues when Shane’s brother and sister-in-law die in a horrific car crash and our inky duo takes custody of their adorable one-year-old triplets, Shannon, Shania, and Shemp. Laugh as you watch Shane struggle to change a diaper and make formula, and weep (just a little) as Tom attempts to bond with his new charges while also keeping baby poop off his manuscript.

•Queer Eye for the Writer Guy: Carson and the gang are back to face their biggest challenge yet! Each week they’ll find a new, allegedly heterosexual writer guy and attempt to overhaul his life by buying him new teak furniture and empowering hair products. The big test will come at the end of each episode, when the writer guy throws a fancy dinner party for his non-writer friends during which he is not allowed to discuss his unfinished novel or any of his recent rejection letters.

•24 Hours (in the Life of a Writer): This innovative drama follows one aspiring writer, Stan Kaplansky, through a single day, minute by minute, in 24 tension-filled episodes. Stan is hard at work on his great American novel, a postmodern roman à clef called The Cheese Syllogism. Watch as Stan labors over his masterpiece for minutes at a time before drifting into a haze of enraged self-pity. Watch as he prepares ramen noodles for breakfast and waits for the mail to arrive. But the heart-stopping drama doesn’t stop there. An online interactive supplement will allow fans to copyedit Stan’s work!

Major studio representatives can contact Steve Almond at www.candyfreak.com


Issue Date: December 10 - 16, 2004
Click here for the Out There archives
Back to the News & Features table of contents
  E-Mail This Article to a Friend
 









about the phoenix |  advertising info |  Webmaster |  work for us
Copyright © 2005 Phoenix Media/Communications Group