Events!

LISTEN: Beyond Words 2023 Adapted and Original Screenplay Panels

On February 9, we hosted Beyond Words 2023, our annual event highlighting the year’s Writers Guild Awards screenplay nominees, in person at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills.

Held in partnership with The Black List, Final Draft, and Variety, we welcomed Adapted Screenplay nominees Joe Robert Cole (Black Panther: Wakanda Forever), Rian Johnson (Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery), and Sarah Polley (Women Talking) and Original Screenplay nominees Todd Field (Tár), Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert (Everything Everywhere All at Once), and Seth Reiss (The Menu) for back-to-back panels moderated by Sian Heder (CODA) and The Black List SVP Kate Hagen.

Listen to the full panel recording above.

Special thanks to our partners, The Black List, Final Draft, and Variety, and our sponsors Late Night with Seth Meyers and Saturday Night Live.

WGFestival 2022: An Evening with Netflix

On Day 2 of WGFestival 2022, we spent the early evening at Tudum Theater in Hollywood with Netflix Original Series creators and showrunners, including Wednesday's Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, From Scratch's Attica Locke and Tembi Locke, Grace and Frankie's Marta Kauffman, Dead to Me's Liz Feldman, and Stranger Things's The Duffer Brothers. Watch the video above to learn how they each crafted their series and their advice for tackling the challenges of writing and producing television.

Photos from the EVENT AND Reception

Photo Credit: Michael Lynn Jones

Drew Goddard on how to make yourself useful in a writers room

We've had some fantastic events featuring phenomenal writers, but last night's Writers on Writing with Drew Goddard, moderated by John August, felt truly special. Perhaps it was the easy rapport between the two writers, who we found out had first met during the 2007-2008 writer's strike. Or it was that the night struck the gentle balance of humor and heartbreak which Goddard revealed to be a touchstone of his writing style. But really, it was both those elements, plus the sage writerly advice that our audience has come to expect from such established names. August started the night by leading Goddard through his early years in Los Alamos, New Mexico and his pop culture influences. We found out that he was a voracious reader of everything from Douglas Adams and Stephen King to Sweet Valley High ("I would read whatever I could get my hands on," Goddard said), and that his first film memories were of watching THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK and BLADE RUNNER with his father.

Convinced he wanted to become a writer, Goddard moved to Los Angeles and took on a production assistant job on David E. Kelley's show SNOOPS.

"This business was so foreign to me. I was so naive, but I was so excited," Goddard mused. "I didn't know anyone...I would stay and ask every writer, 'What do you need?' And that was the most important part because all of them needed to know how to print, and I was good with computers. That is the secret to my career: Just know how to print."

Eventually, Goddard's helpfulness, work ethic and affable nature drew the attention of BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER showrunner Marti Noxon, who read one of his specs and hired him for the show. Goddard continued his career writing on Joss Whedon's other show ANGEL as well as J.J. Abrams's LOST and ALIAS. He later would go on to collaborate with both Whedon and Abrams in his transition to writing the feature films THE CABIN IN THE WOODS and CLOVERFIELD. WORLD WAR Z was next, followed by the Netflix series DAREDEVIL and his current credit THE MARTIAN, which has grossed close to $400 million since its October 2 release.

While he was clearly drawn to stories tackling themes of isolation and potential doom, Goddard's writing style is marked by the ability to deftly inject humor, heart and optimism amid the zombies, monsters and the sheer loneliness of being trapped on a planet millions of miles from Earth. According to Goddard, his gut--and the need to protect what he loved about THE MARTIAN author Andy Weir's story--informed most of his approach to adapting the e-book into film.

"Joss [Whedon] would always say, Nothing matters other than the emotional truth. Plot doesn't matter," said Goddard. "When I look at THE MARTIAN, this is a movie about optimism and loneliness and people constantly looking out for another without worrying about themselves. I put that on the board and said everything needs to be about this. If it's not, it can go."

Stay tuned for the full recording of the event. Check out more awesome writers at our upcoming events!

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Scribble to Screen Hits the Savannah Film Festival

It's our first time at the Savannah Film Festival, and we really couldn't be more excited about bringing our Scribble to Screen panel and exhibit to such a fantastic celebration of film. We showcased some gems from the Library and Archive--including two scripts from our Billy Wilder personal collection, William Cameron Menzies' 1933 illustrated screenplay of ALICE IN WONDERLAND and our copy of Lawrence Kasdan's handwritten draft of THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK--for a fun exhibit at the lobby of the Lucas Theatre. IMG_7958

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Savannah College of Art and Design students pored over THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK notes as well as our collection of animation and video games scripts. Film fans in town from both coasts marveled over the SUNSET BOULEVARD and DOUBLE INDEMNITY scripts and ALICE IN WONDERLAND book ("Can we really touch it?" was the most overheard phrase all weekend).

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[THE WOLFPACK director Crystal Moselle (right) and producer Megan Delaney soak in some screenwriting tips from our archive]

Alongside the exhibit, we also hosted a fun Scribble to Screen panel with BOB'S BURGERS writers/producers Holly Schlesinger and Nora Smith at the SCAD Museum of Art Theatre. The two spoke to a sold-out crowd about the process of writing episodes from the show's sixth season, from the structure of joke pods to hilarious Standards and Practices notes. The audience was treated to a glimpse into scenes from the upcoming episode "The Horse Rider-er" and learned the staff's internal name for the town where the Belcher's live: Seymour's Bay. Two lucky SCAD students also went home with a copy of Final Draft 9 after answering BOB'S BURGERS trivia questions.

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A huge thank you to the team at the Savannah Film Festival and Final Draft for making this Scribble to Screen series a memorable one!

Our Five Favorite Moments from Sublime Primetime

What do you get when you put eight Emmy-nominated writers on the same panel? At Thursday night's Sublime Primetime, our annual event co-hosted by the Writers Guild of America, West and Variety, we got a mix of fun anecdotes from the writers' rooms of some of our favorite shows as well as some insightful perspective on the changing landscape of the television industry. Variety editor Cynthia Littleton assumed moderator duties and welcomed panelists Jane Anderson (OLIVE KITTERIDGE), Alec Berg (SILICON VALLEY), Joshua Brand (THE AMERICANS), Semi Chellas (MAD MEN), Stephanie Gillis (THE SIMPSONS), Elliott Kalan (THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART), Christine Nangle (INSIDE AMY SCHUMER), and Matthew Weiner (MAD MEN).

For some fab summaries of the night, check out these pieces on Variety and Deadline. Here are our five favorite moments from Sublime Primetime:

  • The Beginnings of the End: Weiner shared the ending of MAD MEN with Chellas right after she joined the show on Season 5. He had always envisioned the end with Don Draper meditating on a cliff at Esalen followed by a clip of Coke's 1971"Hilltop" commercial. Kalan, on the other hand, did not get as advanced notice that Jon Stewart was leaving THE DAILY SHOW. He found out a few months before the last episode aired.
  • Damn you, Internets!: Comedy writers Nangle and Kalan opined on how online media and communities would overanalyze sketches or even scoop their jokes. Nangle was particularly funny in describing how her "You Can't Go In There" sketch inspired a tome about gender relations in America. Kalan had us laughing as he described the competition to break jokes between THE DAILY SHOW and THE COLBERT REPORT, which occasionally got scooped by someone on YouTube. "It's like getting hit by a bus as you're running from a mob," Kalan said.
  • What's In a Name?: The writers shared stories of naming characters after relatives, friends and real people in their lives. Most were meant as compliments, except for Gillis, who named a villainous character on THE SIMPSONS after her mother's not-so-nice former boss. Also fun fact: Gillis has a cameo on one of the season finales of MAD MEN.
  • Actors as Muses: Anderson credited actress Frances McDormand with giving the push she needed to write the screenplay for OLIVE KITTERIDGE. Berg also revealed that he leaves areas open in each episode's script for the SILICON VALLEY actors to improv and admitted to writing in order to impress them.
  • A Writer's Motto: Lastly, we loved (and plan to adopt) Weiner's motto for upholding the value of his work: "You cannot let them use the love of your work against you, because all of us would do it for free."

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[From left, Variety's Cynthia Littleton, Alec Berg, Jane Anderson, Joshua Brand, Christine Nangle, Semi Chellas, Matthew Weiner, Stephanie Gillis and Elliott Kalan. Photo Credit: Michael Jones]