nicolle c jones.com

That's okay, Max. I've come to realize that one of the perks of a free society is the inalienable right to debase ourselves in a wide variety of ways...
Sam

Archive for the 'screenwriting blogs' Category

Because I love James Garner and Steve McQueen and wouldn’t hesitate to chop off a toe, foot or leg to have a drink with either. Godspeed to recovery, JG.
Unk had another installment on screenwriting structure last week, focusing on the Protagonist’s entrance into the NEW WORLD which would, as it turns out, mark the […]

Read the rest of this entry »

Somehow the conflux of JK Rowling’s Harvard graduation speech and John August’s advice regarding “wanting to write something else” has me feeling a blog post. With regards to JA, it’s always nice to have something like…
“The time to move on is when reaching the “best version” of your script ceases to be interesting to you.”
…externalized […]

Read the rest of this entry »

propaganda part 2

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

I should qualify that I want to tell a damn story well. I left the ‘well’ out in last post, but it’s important to acknowledge that it’s an on-going process that must include an audience.
Some declarations before I continue: The increased amount of scripts, screenwriters and films was a natural consequence of Modernization. One major […]

Read the rest of this entry »

propaganda part 1

Monday, January 28th, 2008

The flavor of the blog has always been a little more personal and irrelevant than a lot of what I read and feed from. Don’t ever call it objective as I take pride in the finely honed bias I’ve managed to cultivate. I should probably kill the mess, but I like having it around as […]

Read the rest of this entry »

Script Frenzy update and others

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Busy again with many things, least of all work which has me on the road quite a bit. It’s nice, even though the sun burns us precious. There are a lot of things I like about just being in a car on the road jamming to music… Sidenote: I actually heard Will Smith’s ‘Men In […]

Read the rest of this entry »