The advance plotting on the series has made the show neither more nor less difficult. It's mainly just...*different*. In addition to threading the arc through many episodes (sometimes in a big way, sometimes in very small, subtle ways), you've often got an A and a B story, plus we've got 14 regular and recurring characters (though not all 14 appear in every episode), all of whom have their *own* individual character arcs...and that's a LOT of balls to keep up in the air at any given moment. What it HAS done is to enrich the texture of all of our individual episodes. You get a) a genuine sense that there are PEOPLE in your story, each with his or her own life, agenda, problems, and b) that these people are GOING somewhere, that there's a submerged thread that ties them together that is slowly, gradually coming into view. This is a trick that I've learned to do on earlier shows, in different ways. On Captain Power, we had an arc for that series, though less complex than this one...and we learned how to drop in just a reference here or there, continuing the feeling of a spider at the center of the story that, when it moved, caused the whole web to vibrate slightly. Also, on the animated series The Real Ghostbusters, I had to write/story edit on two levels...making sure the show was understandable to non-adults, while at the same time slipping things in that only adults could appreciate. The younger audience wouldn't get the references, but they'd go by so fast that they wouldn't notice, and that wouldn't get in the way of enjoying the story. (And we got REAL obscure...an episode story requiring the presence of a specific small group of eskimos in order to conduct a ritual was explained to someone as "sort of an Inuit minyan." Probably only five people on the planet caught that one, but hey, why not?) jms |
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