Hey Austin! I found the surprise. I dont have a library card but i will be sure to get one! Right now i have to get back to class at 2. Thanks for the adventure, love your videos.
For a screenwriting exercise my favorite one that I’ve heard of is taking a movie you enjoyed and then rewriting it with the antagonist as the protagonist. Kind of similar to what you said (taking your favorite movie and writing a screenplay for it w/ changes you want to make) and this one really gets the creative gears turning
@boomboo - TBH, about halfway through the movie I had this moment of "You know, I think that character should maybe win. He's totally right." Mostly because I wasn't sure that the protagonist was gonna implement the reforms once the antagonist was defeated.
My favourite character building exercise (courtesy of my screenwriting class) is this: 1) Pick a historical figure, portrait subject, acquaintance, character you've made up, etc. 2) Ask yourself who this person is. What do they want? Maybe write a monologue in this vein. 3) Now ask yourself how they are the antagonist in someone else's story. Maybe write a monologue from this perspective. How does this change? How does this affect how you will approach writing this character in the future?
Not even really interested in anything like this but I love to learn about stuff and I just love whatever you post, keep it up man. Always checking back to your channel to see if you posted
austinmcconnell wasn't expecting a reply at all, you could hold like a contest where you post a few parts of the story or even the whole thing and get people to edit it to make it a better book, whilst still staying loyal to the original material, thanks for replying too
I took a Screenwriting class around 2 years ago for my major, so this is a nice refresher. Seeing the old Screenwriter's Bible was also a real memory trip. Great video as always!
6:38 “What if a relatively young person suffered a stroke and had to battle his or her way back?” Man, going back and watching this years later, that’s crazy. You are literally living this. You *have* battled your way back. I’d love to see a video about how Sprouting-Orchids-Austin’s expectations of this concept compare to post-stroke-Austin’s experiences. Love your videos!
My English teacher used to always quite an author she really like you said, “ I hate writing, but I love to rewrite” and I feel like your advice to write your first draft as fast as you can and to not wait for perfection reiterates that. From my experience it’s always easier to just write something down without over complicating it at first alleviates a lot of the stress you feel about starting something as writing a screenplay. As always I truly enjoyed your videos Austin. Thanks!
During the outlining process, writing scenes you come up with on index cards and then putting them in what order you want is a great way of avoiding writer’s block! You don’t have to write beginning->middle->end but instead just write whatever scenes you’ve come up with so far.
I don’t write screenplays, but I just thought I’d throw in something that helps me write rough drafts: I make the text invisible. On Google Docs it’s as easy as just making the font the same color as the background, can’t say anything for other programs because I don’t use them. The invisible text stops me from being a perfectionist, and lets me just get the story out first. I didn’t come up with the idea, but I still figure it might be useful to somebody. :)
Hey, Austin. Thank you for making these videos. I'm not a screenwriter, but I am working on a few short stories to eventually gear up for a full novel. People like you who are legitimately passionate about their craft give me inspiration to try and fail and try and fail and try and fail and hopefully one day succeed.
I never had any plans of writing films and i probably won't have, but i still watched the whole video because i love watching you Austin, whatever you're talking about, you're amazing austin
I love watching your videos because you always end up teaching me something or you give me a new perspective on a subject, I’m always happy to see a new video from you.
Austin this all great advice, but what stood out the most was the idea to write a screenplay for an already finished movie. That’s genius and I will definitely try it! Thank you!
I'm working on my own comic book and got stuck with some plot wholes and being too cought up in details which led me to having almost no way to write the whole thing down properly. I looked through a lot of books and essays on writing. It helped a lot but your kick to write down the whole story without stopping ''just as if you were asked to make it on spot'' actually made me finally write down the first draft. And i actually solved a lot of plot problems i had while writing it! Thank you very much, you served as a great accidental inspiration and a good ol' kick-in-the-butt I really like your videos and how true you seem even in the scripted parts. Refreshing, really :D
I only discovered your channel recently and I feel like I could literally listen to you talk about anything. You make things that I have no interest in very enticing to listen to. I love your videos (:
I wouldn’t consider myself an artist or a creator, but find your videos so interesting. Even though I can’t personally relate to most of these videos, I love listening to you talk about your experience in creating and find all your observations extremely fascinating! Keep up the great work!
Austin, you are brilliant. I cannot stress that enough. A lot of why I hadn't bothered going into film making in a serious way was because I didn't think there would be a way to make my film without compromising it due to issues like money and the way the industry seems to inevitably take a swipe at one's integrity and original vision for fear of losing profit from wider audiences. You've let me know over the course of your videos, from the perspective of someone with a somewhat similar background who is currently in the process of being living proof, that it is viable. I thank you for that dearly. Now, to actually watch this one...
Wow! I thought I had no interest in the topic of this video but you have such a great way of making your videos not only interesting but entertaining! I really hope you win that shorty award!
THANK YOU SO MUCH AUSTIN!!! I’ve been wanting to make short films....but I just didn’t know HOW to write scripts. This gave me a clear path!! Thanks again!!
The tip about leaving a ________ in places where you can't come up with the right word is a great tip for anyone writing anything and I highly recommend everyone integrating that into their writing process. You can always strengthen your wording later. Just keep writing and go back later when you think of the word that wouldn't come to you in the moment.
I love that this works just as good for novel writing as it does for screenplays! Also I have a friend who really wants to get into screen writing and doesn't know where to start so this video is a really big help :)
I love your videos man, and this one couldn't have came at a better time for me. I'm just starting to write my first film, and this has really helped me. Thanks, man.
I have no idea why I am watching this video, I am not planning to be a movie director or writer or anything but you know, Austin uploaded and I had to watch it
This is actually helpful even when you're not writing for a screenplay! I'm making a narrative-driven game, and I this actually extremely helpful for that. Thanks, Austin!
I think the best advice I ever got on writing is that every character should always have a want and a need. They have something they want to obtain and something they need to learn. If you’re aware of this for each character while you write, it should be much easier to imagine what a character would do in a given situation.
I use Trelby, it's a great free, open writing processor. I wrote a treatment first, then moved from there. I wrote two drafts and tightened it up. And remember always, always register your work!
I actually don't write screenplays often, but this video really helped me write play scripts! I write play scripts very similarly to screenplay scripts and this was really helpful
I'm glad you made this, because it has always annoyed me when a writer is asked "how do I write [such and such]?" by an aspiring writer, and they say something like "just write!" Learning the format and the trade is pretty vital.
Hey Austin McConnell, I just finished watching today's video about writing a screenplay. You talked about your inspiration for Sprouting Orchids was from an elderly man who suffered a stroke and asked yourself "What if a younger man who hasn't lived his entire life had a stroke". I suffered a stroke at 13. It broke me. It changed me. Imma 15-year-old UA-camr and Award Winning Filmmaker. If you still want to explore a film like so, I would love to chat or even collaborate. It's my dream to see a feature about a kid suffering a stroke 🙏😃
I’d love to see this also a short film on what its REALLY like living with REAL ADHD the anxiety the constant voices screaming in your head. No one knows how much we truly struggle and how hard we have to fight to be normal.
Remember this as well: forget plot, plot isn't going to be as big a focus as character development. You're going to write character bios, which will equal 5-10 pages a piece. Don't worry about spelling, this is why you have script editors who help format and cut out any of the unnecessary pieces. Once you have the complexities of the character bios worked out (personality, connections to other characters, professions, whatever else you could imagine would motivate a character) then you can work on plot. CHARACTER is going to drive plot, not the other way around. You cannot have a plot unless there is a reason for the characters to pursue something. You ask yourself "Why would they do this? What are the reasons they are motivated to do this? When and where are they going, and how are their personalities, and their past going to effect the outcome of their pursuit?" It doesn't have to be a grand pursuit, and it doesn't have to be anything of any note. It just has to drive interesting characters to do interesting things, which in turn provides and interesting plot because there's a motive behind why they're doing this. So: character development, and motive are going to be key to being successful in screenwriting; otherwise you're going to lose any focus trying to plot out a script, and you won't have any characters who are going to provide an complexity to your writing. Premise is good, characters are better.
I just wanna add that I'm pretty sure everyone has a different process for initial writing and drafting and then finishing the full story before revising. But, in whatever process you go through every author or writer who wants to get anything published is gonna wind up editing their "full" or "final" story *many, many* times. Whenever I sit down to write stuff I tend to write it with pen and pencil first. It takes longer, but it's easier for me to get my thoughts out. Then after some revisions on the paper I'll type it up and do edits as I'm typing it before maybe doing a similar thing of taking a step back from it and then doing tonnes of edits. My point is, feel free to find your own style. Austin's is a good guide. But, I think that two or three things necessary to writing anything are: 1) Taking a step back from it after a certain point and coming back to it with a fresh eye. 2) Edit, Edit, Edit, and when you think you're done editing edit some more. 3) If you love what you're working on and have gotten far on it, but are feeling a little burned out*, power through and finish it out. And, as an ending note. Adam Savage (The Co-Host and a Producer of Mythbusters) has talked a bunch of working on stuff. You can find a lot of his speeches on youtube, and, trust me, it's applicable to so much more than just model-making and practical effects.
Very comprehensive - although I don't want to write a screen play I sometimes write short stories and the advise "Don't get stuck on specific scenes - leave it and improve it at a later time." is propably the most important one - to me anyway :) Thanks
"Don't stop for perfection, just write" was the really hard learned lesson I had to nail into my consciousness in order to get through college. T_T Not doing this kept me in school for more years than I'm proud of...
I like to rewrite good scenes from existing movies or shows from memory. It lets you know what it’s like to write a scene where you know motivations and stuff.
Austin! , try Celtx for screenwriting it’s free and it syncs over internet, there’s a mobile app and a web page, it’s got all the bells and whistles and even allows you to collaborate with others (for a price). I can’t really list all the features here because there are so many but it does do all the indents automatically and even the character names.
Also Celtx is a really good screenplay software tool that saves your progress on the website so you can access it anywhere you have interent, it also had shortcuts too, which is really helpful
I love how one of the facts that just happens to show up, when you Google yourself is that you own Missing Mozart Publishing. Probably the most unneeded things to know
Hey Austin! (I think this is like the third time I've watched this video) and I always forget to point out that there's a great open-source application called Trelby, it's simplistic and quite "to the point". Anyway, great video and you're a great video Host.
i do all my writing, formatting, character outlines and detail work in the notepad on my phone before eventually just sitting down and trying to crunch all of it into a script in one go. then hone that and add and remove scenes as need be.
I thought up a story I was writing with where I wanted the middle to go to. It’s a kinda short story (aiming for 30 ish collage rules spiral notebook pages) but my longest before this one was like 4 pages in a smaller notebook, but now I am on page 18 moving forward
Thanks for suggesting a screenwriting software. I've just been using Google docs, and it's pretty hard. Going to get WriterDuet next time I can use my mom's laptop (I'm 14).
Awesome video explaining about scripting. It's interesting how filming works for someone who isn't in or being in one! As for the title of the series, how about "Explainin' Flimin' Austin"
An idea I have found helpful for coming up with ideas for stories, not screenplays is one I came up with for NaNoWriMo, I drew 6 boxes and had to come up with 6 completely different ideas with 3 minutes for each one to come up with as many details as possible. Then I picked three and spent a bit longer to roughly plan out each story then picked my favorite and the one that I thought would do the best with further development, from that I was able to partially combine my favorite parts into the story that would work best for the 50,000 words I needed. Hope this helps for anyone needing to create some ideas and develop them into different writing projects. Btw my story ended up not having enough material to get to 50,000 words and I ended up repeating storylines and relying upon flashbacks to hit that goal but that was probably my fault for not outlining enough beforehand then during the month, not having enough time to come up with more story aspects.
My current script is not going as smoothly as you advised. My first pages are multiple revisions in while my latter pages are still in brainstorming. At least, I already plotted down my story beats but they keep changing since every time I write a new scene, I keep going back to give it proper setup and then I redo a bunch of other stuff until I'm finally happy enough with the twenty pages I had to edit to go back to writing for the script.
If it makes you feel better, it’s an ancient laptop that was considered cheap even when I was purchasing it. I write on it partly because it can’t really distract me with much else.
Hey Austin! I found the surprise. I dont have a library card but i will be sure to get one! Right now i have to get back to class at 2. Thanks for the adventure, love your videos.
Hey! Sweet. Tweet me a picture or something. :)
What was the surprise?
Oooooh! What's the surprise.
You beat me to it :(
Jay Reed Yo i want to know what it is
For a screenwriting exercise my favorite one that I’ve heard of is taking a movie you enjoyed and then rewriting it with the antagonist as the protagonist. Kind of similar to what you said (taking your favorite movie and writing a screenplay for it w/ changes you want to make) and this one really gets the creative gears turning
I love this.
Someone should do this for Black Panther
Once I ran into a Lord of the rings in the perspective of the orcs, it was awesome!
@boomboo - TBH, about halfway through the movie I had this moment of "You know, I think that character should maybe win. He's totally right." Mostly because I wasn't sure that the protagonist was gonna implement the reforms once the antagonist was defeated.
Max Moseley that’s an awesome idea, thanks for that 👍🏾
You should call this show Austin McCronicles
This comment made me laugh way more than it should have.
austinmcconnell please call it that
Professor McChronicles
Chase Warman
this is too amazing why isn't this pinned
My favourite character building exercise (courtesy of my screenwriting class) is this:
1) Pick a historical figure, portrait subject, acquaintance, character you've made up, etc.
2) Ask yourself who this person is. What do they want? Maybe write a monologue in this vein.
3) Now ask yourself how they are the antagonist in someone else's story. Maybe write a monologue from this perspective. How does this change? How does this affect how you will approach writing this character in the future?
You said it, right there at 0:09! “What it takes to make stuff” that the name of the show!!!
ImTHATGuy 500 ya!!! something like “what it takes to make”
Not even really interested in anything like this but I love to learn about stuff and I just love whatever you post, keep it up man. Always checking back to your channel to see if you posted
Same, I'm not interested in screenwriting but his videos are always too interesting to miss.
zack snack lk a kkkl k
For your 1 million special you need to make a video about you reading that book that you spent so much time hiding
At 500K, I'll read it live on stream.
austinmcconnell wasn't expecting a reply at all, you could hold like a contest where you post a few parts of the story or even the whole thing and get people to edit it to make it a better book, whilst still staying loyal to the original material, thanks for replying too
I took a Screenwriting class around 2 years ago for my major, so this is a nice refresher. Seeing the old Screenwriter's Bible was also a real memory trip. Great video as always!
6:38 “What if a relatively young person suffered a stroke and had to battle his or her way back?”
Man, going back and watching this years later, that’s crazy. You are literally living this. You *have* battled your way back. I’d love to see a video about how Sprouting-Orchids-Austin’s expectations of this concept compare to post-stroke-Austin’s experiences.
Love your videos!
My English teacher used to always quite an author she really like you said, “ I hate writing, but I love to rewrite” and I feel like your advice to write your first draft as fast as you can and to not wait for perfection reiterates that. From my experience it’s always easier to just write something down without over complicating it at first alleviates a lot of the stress you feel about starting something as writing a screenplay. As always I truly enjoyed your videos Austin. Thanks!
During the outlining process, writing scenes you come up with on index cards and then putting them in what order you want is a great way of avoiding writer’s block! You don’t have to write beginning->middle->end but instead just write whatever scenes you’ve come up with so far.
"Austin's Untitled Show"is such a compelling title. Hey, at least it's better than "Sprouting Orchids"!
Steller Oof
I made a video title. It stunk.
Haha, yeah, Sprouting Orchids is a dumb title. Almost sounds like some bad movie you'd make in your twenties
@@ianbyrne465 oh wait it is
I don’t write screenplays, but I just thought I’d throw in something that helps me write rough drafts: I make the text invisible. On Google Docs it’s as easy as just making the font the same color as the background, can’t say anything for other programs because I don’t use them.
The invisible text stops me from being a perfectionist, and lets me just get the story out first.
I didn’t come up with the idea, but I still figure it might be useful to somebody. :)
i don't really write and i still watched this. not because i was bored but because honestly you're just an entertaining person to watch.
Hey, Austin. Thank you for making these videos. I'm not a screenwriter, but I am working on a few short stories to eventually gear up for a full novel. People like you who are legitimately passionate about their craft give me inspiration to try and fail and try and fail and try and fail and hopefully one day succeed.
I never had any plans of writing films and i probably won't have, but i still watched the whole video because i love watching you Austin, whatever you're talking about, you're amazing austin
This video came out almost exactly a year ago and I found it just as I am writing my first screenplay. This is perfect, thanks Austin
A show where Austin do his best to explain things that people ask, show
I dare you to write all of this in that ribbon thingy next time
I love watching your videos because you always end up teaching me something or you give me a new perspective on a subject, I’m always happy to see a new video from you.
Austin this all great advice, but what stood out the most was the idea to write a screenplay for an already finished movie. That’s genius and I will definitely try it! Thank you!
I'm working on my own comic book and got stuck with some plot wholes and being too cought up in details which led me to having almost no way to write the whole thing down properly. I looked through a lot of books and essays on writing. It helped a lot but your kick to write down the whole story without stopping ''just as if you were asked to make it on spot'' actually made me finally write down the first draft. And i actually solved a lot of plot problems i had while writing it! Thank you very much, you served as a great accidental inspiration and a good ol' kick-in-the-butt
I really like your videos and how true you seem even in the scripted parts. Refreshing, really :D
How's the comic book going?
"BlahblahBlah" is my favorite show on the internet.
I only discovered your channel recently and I feel like I could literally listen to you talk about anything. You make things that I have no interest in very enticing to listen to. I love your videos (:
Congratulations on the silver play button!
I wouldn’t consider myself an artist or a creator, but find your videos so interesting. Even though I can’t personally relate to most of these videos, I love listening to you talk about your experience in creating and find all your observations extremely fascinating! Keep up the great work!
Austin, you are brilliant. I cannot stress that enough. A lot of why I hadn't bothered going into film making in a serious way was because I didn't think there would be a way to make my film without compromising it due to issues like money and the way the industry seems to inevitably take a swipe at one's integrity and original vision for fear of losing profit from wider audiences. You've let me know over the course of your videos, from the perspective of someone with a somewhat similar background who is currently in the process of being living proof, that it is viable. I thank you for that dearly. Now, to actually watch this one...
I always refer back to this video when in the writing process. Very well spoken and explained! Love your videos Austin :D
Congratulations, Austin, your content is amazing and I hope you get even more viewers!
I'm too young (and too broke) to make an actual movie, but this video made me want to write one immediately
maybe call it “What It Takes”?
That's a great title. woah
I like it! +1
+
I LITERALLY JUST THOUGHT OF THAT!
+
Wow! I thought I had no interest in the topic of this video but you have such a great way of making your videos not only interesting but entertaining! I really hope you win that shorty award!
I don't even write. I just watched this because I find your videos interesting!
THANK YOU SO MUCH AUSTIN!!! I’ve been wanting to make short films....but I just didn’t know HOW to write scripts. This gave me a clear path!! Thanks again!!
We need more teachers/people like you.
Great video! I'm a film student so I already know most of this but I haven't written a screenplay in a while and this gave me a great refresher.
Definitely saving this video for later. Surely this guidance will hopefully get me to finally pen that Idea i've been cooking up for about 2 years.
Austin saying “blebla bla ble blebleble” in the place of a title is such a mood
This video will forever help me. Thank you Austin. Love your content.
The tip about leaving a ________ in places where you can't come up with the right word is a great tip for anyone writing anything and I highly recommend everyone integrating that into their writing process. You can always strengthen your wording later. Just keep writing and go back later when you think of the word that wouldn't come to you in the moment.
I love that this works just as good for novel writing as it does for screenplays! Also I have a friend who really wants to get into screen writing and doesn't know where to start so this video is a really big help :)
I love your videos man, and this one couldn't have came at a better time for me. I'm just starting to write my first film, and this has really helped me. Thanks, man.
As fate would have it, tomorrow I am participating in a 54 hour film contest, and im writing it with a friend. This was a big help!
I have no idea why I am watching this video, I am not planning to be a movie director or writer or anything but you know, Austin uploaded and I had to watch it
Really enjoying the more frequent uploads
This is actually helpful even when you're not writing for a screenplay! I'm making a narrative-driven game, and I this actually extremely helpful for that. Thanks, Austin!
Austin's right--"The Screenwriter's Bible" is an excellent resource. I have a copy and I refer back to it all the time.
I think the best advice I ever got on writing is that every character should always have a want and a need. They have something they want to obtain and something they need to learn. If you’re aware of this for each character while you write, it should be much easier to imagine what a character would do in a given situation.
Good old Austin returns with another great video.
I use Trelby, it's a great free, open writing processor. I wrote a treatment first, then moved from there. I wrote two drafts and tightened it up. And remember always, always register your work!
I actually don't write screenplays often, but this video really helped me write play scripts! I write play scripts very similarly to screenplay scripts and this was really helpful
Great video man, I will have to show this to my scriptwriting teacher. I think she will really enjoy it. Keep up the stellar work man.
Well, now I want to find out what was left in the book...
I’m late, but it was a $20 bill with a note that told whoever find it to use the money for a library card or coffee
This is so funny. I just put my foot down recently and was trying to find a YT vid on this. AND THERE YOU ARE.
Thank you this really helped. I have been reading Screen writing for dummies and need some more things to read.
As many should have said to you. If one day I make a movie you are going to be in the" special thanks!" credits section.
Brilliant video, excellent advice. Keep it up Austin, love your work.
Austin's Nonstop Awesome? Creative's Handbook? Conceiving Craft? Method Submersion?
(I'm bad at coming up with names)
I'm glad you made this, because it has always annoyed me when a writer is asked "how do I write [such and such]?" by an aspiring writer, and they say something like "just write!" Learning the format and the trade is pretty vital.
Hey Austin McConnell, I just finished watching today's video about writing a screenplay. You talked about your inspiration for Sprouting Orchids was from an elderly man who suffered a stroke and asked yourself "What if a younger man who hasn't lived his entire life had a stroke". I suffered a stroke at 13. It broke me. It changed me. Imma 15-year-old UA-camr and Award Winning Filmmaker. If you still want to explore a film like so, I would love to chat or even collaborate. It's my dream to see a feature about a kid suffering a stroke 🙏😃
Checked you out and subscribed, good luck for the future
Thanks, man, means a ton 😄
You are the 6th cool channel under 1000 subscribers! Subbed & I hope you reach that milestone soon!
Word Of The Week thanks so much!!
I’d love to see this also a short film on what its REALLY like living with REAL ADHD the anxiety the constant voices screaming in your head. No one knows how much we truly struggle and how hard we have to fight to be normal.
Remember this as well: forget plot, plot isn't going to be as big a focus as character development. You're going to write character bios, which will equal 5-10 pages a piece. Don't worry about spelling, this is why you have script editors who help format and cut out any of the unnecessary pieces. Once you have the complexities of the character bios worked out (personality, connections to other characters, professions, whatever else you could imagine would motivate a character) then you can work on plot. CHARACTER is going to drive plot, not the other way around. You cannot have a plot unless there is a reason for the characters to pursue something. You ask yourself "Why would they do this? What are the reasons they are motivated to do this? When and where are they going, and how are their personalities, and their past going to effect the outcome of their pursuit?" It doesn't have to be a grand pursuit, and it doesn't have to be anything of any note. It just has to drive interesting characters to do interesting things, which in turn provides and interesting plot because there's a motive behind why they're doing this. So: character development, and motive are going to be key to being successful in screenwriting; otherwise you're going to lose any focus trying to plot out a script, and you won't have any characters who are going to provide an complexity to your writing. Premise is good, characters are better.
I just wanna add that I'm pretty sure everyone has a different process for initial writing and drafting and then finishing the full story before revising. But, in whatever process you go through every author or writer who wants to get anything published is gonna wind up editing their "full" or "final" story *many, many* times.
Whenever I sit down to write stuff I tend to write it with pen and pencil first. It takes longer, but it's easier for me to get my thoughts out. Then after some revisions on the paper I'll type it up and do edits as I'm typing it before maybe doing a similar thing of taking a step back from it and then doing tonnes of edits.
My point is, feel free to find your own style. Austin's is a good guide. But, I think that two or three things necessary to writing anything are:
1) Taking a step back from it after a certain point and coming back to it with a fresh eye.
2) Edit, Edit, Edit, and when you think you're done editing edit some more.
3) If you love what you're working on and have gotten far on it, but are feeling a little burned out*, power through and finish it out.
And, as an ending note. Adam Savage (The Co-Host and a Producer of Mythbusters) has talked a bunch of working on stuff. You can find a lot of his speeches on youtube, and, trust me, it's applicable to so much more than just model-making and practical effects.
good job on the silver play button love your videos and keep up the good video
Very comprehensive - although I don't want to write a screen play I sometimes write short stories and the advise "Don't get stuck on specific scenes - leave it and improve it at a later time." is propably the most important one - to me anyway :)
Thanks
"Don't stop for perfection, just write" was the really hard learned lesson I had to nail into my consciousness in order to get through college. T_T Not doing this kept me in school for more years than I'm proud of...
Thank you so much! I haven't been able to write a screenplay that I truly enjoy and this video really helps!
Austin, you are an amazing cinematographer.
The most useful video on the entire Internet
I'm from Springfield MO. Had no idea when I started watching this and now have to clean coffee off my wall...
I like to rewrite good scenes from existing movies or shows from memory. It lets you know what it’s like to write a scene where you know motivations and stuff.
TITLE IDEA:
Austins Weekly Variety Hour: Nonweekly Edition
Wahey notification-dont-work-but-i-checked-my-subscriptions squad!!
This is one of the most interesting channels on UA-cam
Soooo many good nuggets in this one, thanks for your wisdom and knowledge, God bless
You should name it "Austin's Titled Show".
Clever.
I just realised you'd be a spectacular teacher, Austin.
Why do people love Austin?
Because he talks in Human.
It's surprising how rare that really is.
Austin! , try Celtx for screenwriting it’s free and it syncs over internet, there’s a mobile app and a web page, it’s got all the bells and whistles and even allows you to collaborate with others (for a price). I can’t really list all the features here because there are so many but it does do all the indents automatically and even the character names.
this process is almost the same as I use on music composition! Awesome!
Also Celtx is a really good screenplay software tool that saves your progress on the website so you can access it anywhere you have interent, it also had shortcuts too, which is really helpful
This is amazing. We went from this to "cat-man the movie" i love it.
Wow, I wasn't even interested in writing a screenplay but this video sure did hook me in
I love how one of the facts that just happens to show up, when you Google yourself is that you own Missing Mozart Publishing. Probably the most unneeded things to know
Thanks, I needed some of this advice (albeit for a novel, not a screenplay, at least for now anyway).
Good name could be McConnell’s McChronicles, however that sorta sounds like a McDonald’s toilken-like book but whatever
Great info. Thanks Austin.
good job austin! I've been here for about a year. Very proud of you mate.
I talk to myself in character and I say lines from my favorite Movies & shows and it helps me get the creative gears turning
even tho im nowhere near being interested in screenplay, this was really informative!!! thank you!!
Hey Austin! (I think this is like the third time I've watched this video) and I always forget to point out that there's a great open-source application called Trelby, it's simplistic and quite "to the point". Anyway, great video and you're a great video Host.
i do all my writing, formatting, character outlines and detail work in the notepad on my phone before eventually just sitting down and trying to crunch all of it into a script in one go. then hone that and add and remove scenes as need be.
I find a lot of this information useful for me when writing books and songs too
I thought up a story I was writing with where I wanted the middle to go to. It’s a kinda short story (aiming for 30 ish collage rules spiral notebook pages) but my longest before this one was like 4 pages in a smaller notebook, but now I am on page 18 moving forward
New name: The Square Space. Because everything is sponsored by it.
Thanks for suggesting a screenwriting software. I've just been using Google docs, and it's pretty hard. Going to get WriterDuet next time I can use my mom's laptop (I'm 14).
@Reality Crack Studios Films Thanks!
That surprise was in the book for all of 3 hours. Damn.
Awesome video explaining about scripting. It's interesting how filming works for someone who isn't in or being in one!
As for the title of the series, how about "Explainin' Flimin' Austin"
An idea I have found helpful for coming up with ideas for stories, not screenplays is one I came up with for NaNoWriMo, I drew 6 boxes and had to come up with 6 completely different ideas with 3 minutes for each one to come up with as many details as possible. Then I picked three and spent a bit longer to roughly plan out each story then picked my favorite and the one that I thought would do the best with further development, from that I was able to partially combine my favorite parts into the story that would work best for the 50,000 words I needed.
Hope this helps for anyone needing to create some ideas and develop them into different writing projects.
Btw my story ended up not having enough material to get to 50,000 words and I ended up repeating storylines and relying upon flashbacks to hit that goal but that was probably my fault for not outlining enough beforehand then during the month, not having enough time to come up with more story aspects.
My current script is not going as smoothly as you advised.
My first pages are multiple revisions in while my latter pages are still in brainstorming.
At least, I already plotted down my story beats but they keep changing since every time I write a new scene, I keep going back to give it proper setup and then I redo a bunch of other stuff until I'm finally happy enough with the twenty pages I had to edit to go back to writing for the script.
'What it takes to make stuff' is a really good name, tbh
That drink on the laptop was rubbing me up the wrong way lol!
If it makes you feel better, it’s an ancient laptop that was considered cheap even when I was purchasing it. I write on it partly because it can’t really distract me with much else.