
Comedy Writing Self-Taught Workbook
More than 100 Practical Writing Exercises to Develop Your Comedy Writing Skills
Linden Publishing
Published on 15. January 2015
134 pages
978-1-61035-261-1 (ISBN)
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Description
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"Can you tell me how to get to Carnegie Hall?" "Practice, practice, practice." That's more than a joke; it's solid advice. Consider world-class performers in any field -- golf, figure skating, music, whatever. One thing you can safely say about each is that they achieved their level of skill through practice. To excel in any endeavor, you must work on and perfect your technique. Comedy writing is no exception. In this book, Emmy-winning TV writer and producer Gene Perret and professional writer Linda Perret have compiled a collection of over 100 comedy writing workouts that will challenge your joke writing skills and develop your sketch and sitcom writing abilities. This book suggests that talent is earned through observation, study, analysis, and repetition. The authors also encourage you to analyze your writing, discover where improvement is required, and create your own skill-creating exercises. The work can be demanding, but that's what it takes to become a success in any field, including comedy writing. If you study "Comedy Writing Self-Taught Workbook" -- with or without the companion volume, "Comedy Writing Self-Taught" -- when your break comes, you'll be ready.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
La Vergne
United States
Edition type
Digital original
ISBN-13
978-1-61035-261-1 (9781610352611)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Comedy Writing Self-Taught Workbook
More Than 100 Practical Writing Exercises to Develop Your Comedy Writing Skills
Other
01/2015
Quill Driver Books
€36.44
Article exhausted; check different version

Gene Perret
Comedy Writing Self-Taught Workbook
More Than 100 Practical Writing Exercises to Develop Your Comedy Writing Skills
Book
07/2012
Linden Publishing Co Inc
€15.50
Shipment within 3-4 weeks
Content
- Intro
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- How to Use This Book
- Part One: General Joke Writing
- Exercise 1: Collect Fifty Great One-Liners
- Exercise 2: Captioning
- Exercise 3: A Little Tougher Captioning
- Exercise 4: Captioning Words
- Exercise 5: Gathering References
- Exercise 6: In the News
- Exercise 7: Turn Ideas into Jokes
- Exercise 8: The Almost Right Word
- Exercise 9: It's All Around Us
- Exercise 10: Inspired by Legends
- Exercise 11: That Makes Perfect Nonsense
- Exercise 12: Tag That Line
- Exercise 13: Say It by Not Saying It
- Exercise 14: Outside the Box
- Exercise 15: Same Word, Different Meaning
- Exercise 16: It Means What You Mean It to Mean
- Exercise 17: Same Old Words, Brand-New Meaning
- Exercise 18: Don't Quit Too Soon
- Exercise 19: Merely Fill in the Blanks
- Exercise 20: On the Shoulders of Giants
- Exercise 21: Relationships That Aren't Really Related
- Exercise 22: One Joke Begets Many
- Exercise 23: Ready, Set, Write
- Exercise 24: Assignment Unknown
- Part Two: General Stand-Up Writing
- Exercise 25: Take Good Notes
- Exercise 26: Compact the Act
- Exercise 27: What Are They Talking About?
- Exercise 28: Writing a Chunk
- Exercise 29: Writing for a Specific Person
- Exercise 30: Writing in Bite-Size Chunks-Part A
- Exercise 31: Writing in Bite-Size Chunks-Part B
- Exercise 32: Writing in Bite-Size Chunks-Part C
- Exercise 33: Now Cut Your Precious Jokes
- Exercise 34: Smooth Transitions
- Exercise 35: Baking a Monologue
- Exercise 36: Working toward the Finish Line
- Exercise 37: Now Write
- Exercise 38: Roast a Friend
- Exercise 39: Write Whatever So-and-So Wants
- Exercise 40: That's Handy
- Exercise 41: There Are Two Sides to Every Topic
- Exercise 42: Late-Night TV
- Exercise 43: Be Prepared
- Exercise 44: Learn to Overwrite
- Exercise 45: Pick Your Best
- Exercise 46: Not Done Yet
- Exercise 47: Killing Dead Time
- Part Three: Writing for Your Mentor
- Exercise 48: Pick Your Mentor
- Exercise 49: The Best of Your Mentor
- Exercise 50: Let Your Mentor Mentor
- Exercise 51: You've Been Hired
- Exercise 52: Waste Not, Want Not
- Exercise 53: Find the Right Formula
- Exercise 54: Hello, Good-bye
- Exercise 55: Tailor-Made
- Exercise 56: Dedicated Chunk
- Exercise 57: Where Did That Come From?
- Exercise 58: Strengthen the Weaknesses
- Exercise 59: Strengthen the Strengths
- Exercise 60: Let It Sit
- Exercise 61: Special Appearances
- Exercise 62: On the Couch
- Exercise 63: Talk Spot
- Exercise 64: Become Your Mentor
- Exercise 65: Make It Tighter
- Exercise 66: Make It Tighter Still
- Part Four: Sketch Writing
- Exercise 67: Where Did It Come From?
- Exercise 68: That's Where It Came From
- Exercise 69: My Life Is Made Up of Sketches
- Exercise 70: At the Movies
- Exercise 71: And the Story Goes
- Exercise 72: Classic Jokes
- Exercise 73: Words of Wisdom
- Exercise 74: That Really Bugs Me
- Exercise 75: Develop One
- Exercise 76: Hog-Tied Guests
- Exercise 77: Book Your Guests
- Exercise 78: Bigger Than Life
- Exercise 79: Boob Tube
- Exercise 80: Commercial Writing
- Exercise 81: There's More to It Than That
- Exercise 82: Oh That's Good
- Exercise 83: The Road Runner Sketch
- Exercise 84: The Silent Sketch
- Exercise 85: Words, Words, Words
- Exercise 86: All Good Things Must Come to an End
- Exercise 87: Curtain and Applause
- Part Five: Sitcom Writing
- Exercise 88: Pop Quiz
- Exercise 89: Open-Book Test
- Exercise 90: Who Says What?
- Exercise 91: What Could Possibly Happen?
- Exercise 92: Same with Sitcoms
- Exercise 93: Get Your Story Straight
- Exercise 94: Get Your Story Changed
- Exercise 95: Get Your Story Straight-Again
- Exercise 96: Another Questionnaire
- Exercise 97: Add Some Funny
- Exercise 98: Keep That Story Moving
- Exercise 99: Put Another Bump in the Road
- Exercise 100: On the Set
- Exercise 101: Make It Shorter
- Exercise 102: Write the "Bible"
- Exercise 103: Write Your Own "Bible"
- Exercise 104: Turn the Tables on Your Characters
- Exercise 105: It Can't Get Any Worse
- Exercise 106: What'd You Say?
- Exercise 107: Switch
- Exercise 108: A Good Old Story
- Exercise 109: A Good Joke
- Exercise 110: A Good Old Cliché
- Exercise 111: That Really Irks Me
- Exercise 112: Finished Project
- Exercise 113: "A Martian Wouldn't Say That"
- Exercise 114: "A Different Martian Wouldn't Say That, Either"
- Exercise 115: Just Do It
- About the Authors
- Previous or Forthcoming Works
- About the Book
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