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Stop Wasting Your Sex Drive On Sex!

February 7th, 2010 · Comments Off on Stop Wasting Your Sex Drive On Sex!


A paragraph from Napoleon Hill’s famous book “Think and Grow Rich.

“Sex desire is the most powerful of human desires. When driven by this desire, men develop keenness of imagination, courage, will-power, persistence, and creative ability unknown to them at other times. So strong and impelling is the desire for sexual contact that men freely run the risk of life and reputation to indulge it. When harnessed, and redirected along other lines, this motivating force maintains all of its attributes of keenness of imagination, courage, etc., which may be used as powerful creative forces in literature, art, or in any other profession or calling, including, of course, the accumulation of riches.”

Exercise will-power and “transmute” your sex energy into untapped creative genius!

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Screenwriting Tips for a ‘Quick Read’

May 22nd, 2009 · Comments Off on Screenwriting Tips for a ‘Quick Read’


By Raisy Roo

A “quick read” simply means painting your scenes with a minimum of words, and the trick is to not lose anything in the process.

Just as the director and film editors’ job is to cut scenes that aren’t necessary to convey the story, your job screenwriting is to remove words that aren’t necessary to convey the story. If you’re good, you can do this along the way. If you’re like me, you’ll have to go back (repeatedly) and find the areas that can be “quickened.”

The action in the paragraph below is an example of a slow read, if you will.

“Jack sits down in the chair and removes his wedding ring from his finger. A waiter is passing by and Jack decides to drop the ring into a bowl of milky white soup on the waiter’s tray. “

From the scene heading in your script, the reader should already know we’re in a restaurant. Chairs are pretty common in a restaurant, so when Jack sits he is most likely sitting in a chair. The reader is also probably aware that most people wear wedding rings on their finger. The last line relating to the waiter is simply better served abbreviated.

A more effective way to describe the scene may be like this…

“Jack sits. Tugs at his wedding ring. Drops it in a passing waiter’s clam chowder.”

Or, if you’re more traditional…

“Jack sits. He tugs at his wedding ring and drops it in a passing waiter’s clam chowder.”

Turn your script into a lean, mean, money making machine by making it a quick read.

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Industry Standard Screenplay Software

May 11th, 2009 · Comments Off on Industry Standard Screenplay Software

final-draft

Is it time to bite the bullet for the industry standard?

Final Draft is the number-one selling application specifically designed for writing movie scripts, television episodics and stage plays.

It combines powerful word processing with professional script formatting in one self-contained, easy-to-use package. There is no need to learn about script formatting rules - Final Draft automatically paginates and formats your script to industry standards as you write.

Its ease-of-use and time-saving features have attracted writers for almost two decades positioning Final Draft as the Professional Screenwriters Choice®. Final Draft power users include Academy®, Emmy® and BAFTA® award winning writers like Oliver Stone, Tom Hanks, Alan Ball, J.J. Abrams, James Cameron and more.

Download a free trial of Final Draft…

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