jscott

jscott

jscott's picture
User offline. Last seen 12 hours 50 min ago. Offline
Joined: 02/01/2011

Personal Information

First Name
Jeffrey
Last Name
Scott
Display Name
Jeffrey Scott
Your Age
36-45
Your Gender
Male

Location

Country
US
State
CA

My Articles / Blog Posts / Comments

TypeTitleRepliesLast Post
Blog PostSCREENWRITER’S MUST-READ BOOK LIST 16 hours 54 min ago
Blog PostHow to Turn Microsoft Word into a Terrific Screenwriting Program 148 weeks 1 hour ago
Blog PostHOW TO BREAK INTO THE SCREENWRITING BUSINESS 28 weeks 13 hours ago
Blog PostHow to Get a “God’s-Eye View” of Your Story in Microsoft Excel 79 weeks 2 days ago
Blog Post10 MAXIMS TO MAXIMIZE YOUR SCREENPLAY 114 weeks 1 day ago
Blog PostWISH IT WASN’T SO DAMNED HARD TO WRITE A GREAT SCREENPLAY? WISH NO MORE! 317 weeks 4 days ago
Blog PostA Writer’s #1 Most Important Creative Tool is... 019 weeks 7 hours ago
Blog PostVIEWING A STORY THROUGH THE PARADIGM OF BE-DO-HAVE 225 weeks 3 days ago
Biographyjscott 226 weeks 4 days ago
Blog Post250,000 READS SINCE FEBRUARY 2011 129 weeks 4 days ago

Buddylist Gallery

Comment wall

Jeff,

Re your very helpful post called 'How to Turn Word into a Terrific Screenwriting Program (from early 2011); I get it except I wondered why not save as a template (.dot)instead of a document?

Thank-you for your work in putting this together – I have had a couple of books published but am about to attempt a screenplay; delighted to find I can use Word with Styles, which I'm comfortable with.

Michael

Michael Faulkner (not verified) | Sat, 11/17/2012 - 04:13 | Permalink

Mr. Scott,

I recently purchased your book, How to Write for Animation" and I have found it tremendously helpful.

My friend and I are just about done developing our own animated series. We just need to write our pilot, but there are some scenarios I am unable to find examples for in your book or online.

First off, is it proper to use INTERCUT in TV animation? I found an example of it for feature film, but nothing for animation.

Secondly, how would I note something written on frame, but that is not a subtitle, i.e. words on a crate, or on a banner?

Since we have no formal training in script writing, is there a book or Web site you may recommend which we could use to help us answer further questions as we proceed? I've found information about how to develop ideas, but other than example scripts, I am unable to find a resource for formatting.

Thank you for your time,

Matt Johansson

Matt Johansson (not verified) | Wed, 02/23/2011 - 20:07 | Permalink

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