Franklin Leonard

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Re: Franklin Leonard

    Originally posted by Bono View Post
    3 or 10 -- it's still $5 bucks! Paypal me.
    fair 'nough.
    "Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy b/c you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say." -- Edward Snowden

    Comment


    • Re: Franklin Leonard

      Originally posted by sc111 View Post
      Oy freaking vey, Joe.
      Wait a minute, do we have a Bat Mitzvah girl in the house???? 10 out of 10!

      Comment


      • Re: Franklin Leonard

        Originally posted by Bono View Post
        Wait a minute, do we have a Bat Mitzvah girl in the house???? 10 out of 10!
        No. Not Jewish but love the subtext of Oy Vey.
        Advice from writer, Kelly Sue DeConnick. "Try this: if you can replace your female character with a sexy lamp and the story still basically works, maybe you need another draft.-

        Comment


        • Re: Franklin Leonard

          Originally posted by sc111 View Post
          No. Not Jewish but love the subtext of Oy Vey.
          me too, always have.
          "Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy b/c you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say." -- Edward Snowden

          Comment


          • Re: Franklin Leonard

            Originally posted by sc111 View Post
            I don't know if you're including me in your "two of the people" point. I just reread my comments and my initial point was questioning how much objectivity one could reasonably expect when (as Lowell said) evaluating art is a completely subjective process.

            By the same token, I discussed how much professionalism one could reasonably expect from a reader being paid $30 per script.

            That's not telling people "just stop using BL" but rather talking about managing expectations if one decides to continue using it.
            I reread your statements, and now I see that I indeed mischaracterized your words. My mistake.
            "I love being a writer. What I can't stand is the paperwork.-- Peter De Vries

            Comment


            • Re: Franklin Leonard

              Originally posted by Bono View Post
              Well you're looking at this wrong. You think because I never used it, I can't possibly offer my opinion on if you should continue to use it. But I never fired a gun either and I'm for gun control. Yes, extreme example, but you get it... Maybe I can see something that people in the group can't see themselves because they keep getting the little bit of cheese, but can't tell that they are being kept in a cage in a lab. Sometimes it takes an outsider to show you the way...

              It's only costing you money, but I do not get why you and others would continue to use a service (even if it helped you at some point) again and again and again if you're unhappy with it.

              You got something out of it. Great. Move on is my suggestion.

              Because you won't admit to yourself that you're counting on the BL being your gateway in... otherwise you wouldn't keep using it...

              Simple as that. As long as you know what you're doing, that's fine. I'm just worried that you guys and gals don't even realize it.
              It's not that I think you can't offer your opinion. It's that I think that you are less likely to understand what BL customers perceive as its benefits unless you have.

              I still think you don't understand my position. I like many aspects of the service. I like that it only takes 2-3 weeks to get feedback. I like that if you manage to get a high enough score, it gets sent out to a membership of thousands. I like that besides the cost, there is a low barrier to entry.

              Just because I am unhappy with certain aspects of the service, does not mean I am unhappy with the service as a whole. It's possible to criticize a service and still consider it worth a try overall.

              Originally posted by Bono View Post
              I can name only 2 success stories and one of them was this week... Done Deal has done much more for writers!
              This only makes it more clear to me that you are not very familiar with the BL's outcomes. There have been at least a dozen articles published in the trades about people who have received options, studio deals, or representation through the site. That doesn't include comments on forums by writers mentioning their personal successes with the site.
              "I love being a writer. What I can't stand is the paperwork.-- Peter De Vries

              Comment


              • Re: Franklin Leonard

                Originally posted by finalact4 View Post

                so i'm here to retract previous glowing reviews of TBL website. not afraid to admit when i'm wrong.
                What I said... was in reaction to your strong statement in the highlighted quote.

                You say the "3" score was just an example. Okay, nevertheless, my post is still valid if you are only able to get past thinking that this is all about YOU and think of the other writers who had a hard time in the past about a low score, where they support their right to being upset by saying my peers reviewed it, said it was great, it advanced in big screenplay competitions, etc.

                My post was not directed just at finalact4. It was directed at all the members of Done Deal who have entered this thread to get my point across, which is the following:

                Just because a writer's script was scored a "3," when there was evidence to the contrary that it should not have been, doesn't necessarily mean the reviewer was not component, or that there are flaws and weaknesses in the criteria of scoring with the Black List system.

                The writer must take the matter of "subjectivity" into account.

                Franklin says The Black List readers are professional industry readers and that they were vetted. Is it possible for a few clunkers to sneak through? Yes. If you feel you're score wasn't valid, point it out to the Black List so they could investigate, but don't automatically assume it was because the reviewer was not component, or the reviewing criteria is at fault.
                Last edited by JoeNYC; 09-13-2019, 02:56 AM.

                Comment


                • Re: Franklin Leonard

                  Originally posted by barh View Post
                  Why doesn't Franklin Leonard post here anymore?
                  Well we answered this question from the first post, didn't we?

                  Comment


                  • Re: Franklin Leonard

                    Originally posted by UpandComing View Post
                    It's not that I think you can't offer your opinion. It's that I think that you are less likely to understand what BL customers perceive as its benefits unless you have.

                    I still think you don't understand my position. I like many aspects of the service. I like that it only takes 2-3 weeks to get feedback. I like that if you manage to get a high enough score, it gets sent out to a membership of thousands. I like that besides the cost, there is a low barrier to entry.

                    Just because I am unhappy with certain aspects of the service, does not mean I am unhappy with the service as a whole. It's possible to criticize a service and still consider it worth a try overall.



                    This only makes it more clear to me that you are not very familiar with the BL's outcomes. There have been at least a dozen articles published in the trades about people who have received options, studio deals, or representation through the site. That doesn't include comments on forums by writers mentioning their personal successes with the site.
                    I almost want to use the service now, so I can do well in it, then come back here and still say you should leave it! Ha.

                    Dude, if this makes you happy, please keep doing it. I understand your points.

                    I'm simply trying to say, from what I read on this thread, you should know that you don't need the BL to break in. Simple as that.

                    What success have you personally had from it? I assumed this whole time from your past posts you were repped and doing great? You seemed tuned into the industry. But now I read these as you're afraid to let go out of fear...

                    I'm simply saying -- why don't you try not to use the service for 6 months -- it cost monthly to host a script right? I just went to the site and that's what I saw. Save the money, keep writing, doing everything else, and seeing if anything changes for the better or worse.

                    Because I keep reading your posts and others here -- and I read them as "I like this service, but but but but but..." and I'm like PLEASE STOP USING IT. But you and others won't stop. And I swear I'm thinking it's like any addiction. If I stop using this service, then I might miss an opportunity. I don't see this -- because isn't the same script up there? Wouldn't the success happen right away not 2 years of hosting the same script?

                    I don't get it. You're right. I'm just listening to what you're saying and I think you're taking both sides of this. I'm just trying to help you and others not be afraid to walk away...

                    I'm not here trying to get everyone not to use this service -- I'm just trying to understand why the hell you still are, man. That's it.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Franklin Leonard

                      Originally posted by JoeNYC View Post
                      What I said... was in reaction to your strong statement in the highlighted quote.

                      You say the "3" score was just an example. Okay, nevertheless, my post is still valid if you are only able to get past thinking that this is all about YOU and think of the other writers who had a hard time in the past about a low score, where they support their right to being upset by saying my peers reviewed it, said it was great, it advanced in big screenplay competitions, etc.

                      My post was not directed just at finalact4. It was directed at all the members of Done Deal who have entered this thread to get my point across, which is the following:

                      Just because a writer's script was scored a "3," when there was evidence to the contrary that it should not have been, doesn't necessarily mean the reviewer was not component, or that there are flaws and weaknesses in the criteria of scoring with the Black List system.

                      The writer must take the matter of "subjectivity" into account.

                      Franklin says The Black List readers are professional industry readers and that they were vetted. Is it possible for a few clunkers to sneak through? Yes. If you feel you're score wasn't valid, point it out to the Black List so they could investigate, but don't automatically assume it was because the reviewer was not component, or the reviewing criteria is at fault.
                      To sum up -- sometimes your script sucks and you don't want to pay to hear it. So maybe that low score is more in line with the truth than the high score. Either way it's subjective.

                      However, I think great scripts won't get low scores. I think they will get reaction of all great scripts. People are so excited, they can't wait to tell the world.

                      Most of the scripts people write are bad. Some are okay. Some are good. Few are great. So the reviews for bad, okay and good can be all over the place. Great rises to the top....

                      Comment


                      • Re: Franklin Leonard

                        I need a job. Maybe I should become a BL reader to make this all go full circle into hell...

                        Comment


                        • Re: Franklin Leonard

                          Originally posted by Bono View Post
                          To sum up -- sometimes your script sucks and you don't want to pay to hear it. So maybe that low score is more in line with the truth than the high score. Either way it's subjective.

                          However, I think great scripts won't get low scores. I think they will get reaction of all great scripts. People are so excited, they can't wait to tell the world.

                          Most of the scripts people write are bad. Some are okay. Some are good. Few are great. So the reviews for bad, okay and good can be all over the place. Great rises to the top....
                          There's much truth to this. A reader simply reads scripts, the way any of us read a book or blog post - if it's engaging us on all levels, the script will get good coverage. It's when a script isn't working for whatever reason that the notes become divergent.

                          Comment


                          • Re: Franklin Leonard

                            Originally posted by JoeNYC View Post
                            What I said... was in reaction to your strong statement in the highlighted quote.

                            You say the "3" score was just an example. Okay, nevertheless, my post is still valid if you are only able to get past thinking that this is all about YOU and think of the other writers who had a hard time in the past about a low score, where they support their right to being upset by saying my peers reviewed it, said it was great, it advanced in big screenplay competitions, etc.
                            no, joe, that is not what i said. you missed the point, again. the point was the disparity between the 9 and the 3 not the 3 in and of itself. if i get all 3s that's fine. that's not what i'm disputing.

                            My post was not directed just at finalact4. It was directed at all the members of Done Deal who have entered this thread to get my point across, which is the following:

                            Just because a writer's script was scored a "3," when there was evidence to the contrary that it should not have been, doesn't necessarily mean the reviewer was not component, or that there are flaws and weaknesses in the criteria of scoring with the Black List system.

                            The writer must take the matter of "subjectivity" into account.

                            Franklin says The Black List readers are professional industry readers and that they were vetted. Is it possible for a few clunkers to sneak through? Yes. If you feel you're score wasn't valid, point it out to the Black List so they could investigate, but don't automatically assume it was because the reviewer was not component, or the reviewing criteria is at fault.
                            and i would say, joe, don't automatically assume you know what a writer has and has not done to point out concerns to the black list, because i do. i have. and the reason i'm speaking about it is because i want tbl to provide the best services possible, and so do they.

                            i don't want an 8 if it's undeserved. because that doesn't help me or help any industry pros. i want the 8 because someone believes i deserve it.

                            perhaps my post was too nuanced, but if there are people giving out 3s and 8s, one of those numbers is either over inflated or deflated. i'm talking about the huge gap between high and low scores. because for the most part, diverging scores are 2 steps, not 5.

                            when a reader tells the writer to start the story in a PLACE, and the story does start in that PLACE, there is a problem with that reader. if a reader tells a writer in one paragraph that the writer needs to develop a specific character more, that's one thing, it's a completely different situation when the SAME reader then tells the writer in the next paragraph that they need to get rid of the secondary character-- i had a reader directly contradict themselves four times in one review. so yeah, i had a problem with that review.

                            or when a reader blatantly mischaracterizes a script altogether citing it's too similar to XXXX movie when there are literally no similarities. or citing that the title could be a problem because another script that isn't even in production might have the same title? seriously? in the weaknesses section which means they took points away because of the title. a writer cannot allow statements that are factually untrue or irrelevant to remain attached to their script because someone's going to read it and say, wtf? this isn't anything like that.

                            another writer had an 8 and a 3 and the comment was about the time travel in the first 10 pages, when the time travel element wasn't introduced until the third act. that's confusing for a writer, and errors like that invalidate the review altogether.

                            they get characters wrong, the get page counts wrong, they can't compose a sensical logline, they can have issues forming coherent sentences or thoughts, showing they've rushed... or they mention that something happened in the screenplay that never happened. they can condescend the writing in a childish or petty manner which is hardly considered "professional."

                            and with all that said, there are still great readers that are really good at what they do. they compose clear thoughts and identify the strengths and weaknesses well. they show that they understand the writer's intent, understand the characters and give strong advice as how to further develop the script with the writer's intent in mind. for me, i'd rather wait a month or two to get that reader to read my script. seriously i would. on some sites you can request a specific person, they provide bios and experience history.

                            if a writer's work receives four 3s and one 8, there's a good chance the 8 is the review that needs to be reconsidered. it works both ways. some scripts are polarizing, for sure. but there should, in general, be a clustering of assessments, which does happen a lot on tbl. you can see that on a previous post.

                            what works well on the black list is consensus... four 7s, three 8s, one 9. but not everyone can afford to pay for 8 reviews at $75 a pop and the two to three months of hosting while you wait for reviews.

                            but that the reality. that's what works. so if you receive your 8s out of the gate you're golden because you'll receive offers of FREE reviews... and then you'll need to consider, do i take them up on it and risk some weird aberration?

                            if you have an 8 and a 3, guess what? you can't make the top lists. if you have two 8s and a 3 you still can't get on the top lists where your script is visible. and that'll cost you north of $250. at that point you have two choices, market your scripts around the 8s or pay for more reviews and hope you get more 8s or 7s.

                            i share that with you, so that when you put skunkman up and pay for 4 - 8 reviews. it might help you consider your next steps. it could go well, but it could go wonky, too.

                            wishing you all good fortune.
                            FA4

                            Last edited by finalact4; 09-13-2019, 07:36 AM.
                            "Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy b/c you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say." -- Edward Snowden

                            Comment


                            • Re: Franklin Leonard

                              Originally posted by nguyensquared View Post
                              There's much truth to this. A reader simply reads scripts, the way any of us read a book or blog post - if it's engaging us on all levels, the script will get good coverage. It's when a script isn't working for whatever reason that the notes become divergent.
                              Also readers are different of course. A 40 year old doing it for 20 years will have seen more writing than the high school kid. So the person who has done the job longer will give a script a 5 and the newbie might give it an 8. Because to them this is an amazing script based on what they've read.

                              I know for sure I wouldn't give the same scores I gave (I've read in past) to old scripts. I've learned a lot more what a great script looks like.

                              I remember when my first scripts got trashed -- and I'm like but how can they think that when I it was so hard and it looks like the CLERKS script to me -- takes you years to realize how right they were....

                              So consider that too. The person on the other side might be reading their 10000th script or their 10.... and that can play a huge part.

                              Also genre, etc. I'm a comedy guy so I would prefer to read that genre, but also I'm more critical because it's my genre... you know? Other read and it laugh at jokes I think are stupid that I wrote...

                              Comment


                              • Re: Franklin Leonard

                                Originally posted by nguyensquared View Post
                                There's much truth to this. A reader simply reads scripts, the way any of us read a book or blog post - if it's engaging us on all levels, the script will get good coverage. It's when a script isn't working for whatever reason that the notes become divergent.
                                let me restate, yes subjectivity is a reality. i disagree about the "simply reads scripts," as that is not what the paid reader is hired to do, to just read the script like they do a novel on vacation. they are paid to give their expert, experienced, professional, and as objective as possible evaluation of the work in question. the are supposed to attempt to remove personal biases and prejudices.

                                agreed, a script can have many diverging scores. most do to some degree.

                                and we all know that contests have similar problems with reader inconsistency, that's why Nicholl, i believe it is, has a back up, if there's a high and low consideration it gets read by a third. i'm pretty sure that's how it goes, though i've not entered it.
                                Last edited by finalact4; 09-13-2019, 07:44 AM.
                                "Arguing that you don't care about the right to privacy b/c you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don't care about free speech because you have nothing to say." -- Edward Snowden

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X