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  • Probably the top three things an emerging television

  • writer should do if they want to write a pilot

  • and they want it to be good--

  • get your hands on some pilot scripts.

  • Find the shows that you loved their pilot,

  • and you thought, man, if only I could have written something

  • like this.

  • Get your hands on those pilot scripts.

  • They're easy to find now.

  • Read them, and then watch the pilots again, and then

  • read the scripts again, and then really just

  • start to dissect the pilots.

  • What was the structure?

  • How did they work?

  • How many acts did they use?

  • What were the pages counts of each act?

  • Why?

  • If it's a comedy, how many jokes do they have?

  • Every last aspect of those things is important.

  • How do they introduce the characters?

  • So dissect the scripts, dissect the pilots, one.

  • Two-- then go watch some pilots that really didn't work,

  • that you thought--

  • I mean for you they didn't work.

  • You thought they were terrible.

  • If you go watch some pilots that you really, really hated,

  • you will see very different things.

  • And you will learn a bunch of stuff about what does not work.

  • I think it's absolutely essential, actually,

  • to pick a show, a show that you love, a show that you think

  • is good, and dissect the crap out of it, frankly.

  • Take a show you love.

  • For me, I did "The West Wing."

  • I am obsessed with Aaron Sorkin.

  • I think Aaron Sorkin is a genius, truly.

  • And I took "The West Wing," and from the pilot

  • through, I think, season three.

  • And I dissected the heck out of that

  • show for myself to really understand,

  • A, what good storytelling was, B what good structure was,

  • and just understanding how he used language

  • and how he used structure and how he built characters.

  • It was really an education for me to the point

  • where I could pretty much do an entire episode.

  • I could say all the words of an entire episode

  • because I liked it so much.

  • And while I'm bummed now because I can't watch that show

  • and just watch it anymore, I can say

  • that it was an excellent way for me

  • to learn so much about television

  • at a time in which I was trying to figure it out for myself.

  • Probably one of the things I learned by watching "The West

  • Wing" was the need to be original in my use of dialogue,

  • the need to not copy anybody, the need to not be

  • simple in my use of dialogue.

  • And I also got the freedom to let my characters

  • be intelligent, which I really thought was great.

  • It was one of those things where you watch something

  • and you think, oh, in everything else I've ever seen,

  • there seems to be a slight dumbing down.

  • And Aaron felt like he was making everyone a little bit

  • smarter than the audience.

  • And that was a very freeing thing to see.

  • Because letting your characters be

  • the smartest people in the room is a relief in a lot of ways.

  • There are things that you can learn just

  • by watching that are not about copying how something is done,

  • but just by understanding how something is done,

  • or discovering that sometimes it's really effective to have

  • an episode where things are really quiet.

  • It's just about watching and seeing

  • what makes something good, and then understanding that those--

  • maybe they're breaking a rule, or maybe those

  • are some rules to think about, and then

  • understanding what makes something not good.

  • It's helpful.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

Probably the top three things an emerging television

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