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Conflicted about an amazing potential opportunity.

Siro

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2018 Award Winner
I have a close friend who lives in L.A. and works in showbiz (directing commercials). Let's call him David. He was having lunch with a fairly well-known TV director (let's call him Mike), who also makes the occasional movie, when Mike told David that he was approached by Universal Studios who were looking for sci-fi ideas for next year's fall lineup. David, who knows that I'm a science geek with over a thousand sci-fi novels read, instantly gave me a call.

I am very excited to help, and I spend a few hours writing down some thoughts on a sci-fi idea that I've had for a long time. David loves it, and he passes it on to Mike, who then calls me personally, and tells me that the idea "blows his mind", and that he wants to work with me and David to develop an outline for a pitch, hopefully in August. He says that if the studio is interested, then he'd like to bring me on as a writer for the pilot, initially, and the rest of the series if it's picked.

Which leaves me in a dilemma. I obviously want to do this. For one, it is an amazing idea. Not to toot my horn, but it is far better than any of the sci-fi drivel they usually put on TV. So if it's picked up, I don't want it butchered by TV writers who will dumb it down out of disdain for their audience. Secondly, the money is INCREDIBLE. I'd be making ~$250k for a few months of work every year.

But here's the problem; I would have to leave a great job and uproot my life knowing that there is a chance none of this will work. The studio can simply drop the show if they don't like the pilot. Or they can cancel it a couple of episodes in for a million different reasons. Also, it will be a number of months before this unfolds, so it is several months without work. (which would be fine if it eventually works out, but makes things worse if it doesn't).

Currently, I am leaning toward taking the risk. If it doesn't work out, I can always look for another job elsewhere. But that would suck, really. I have a good and comfortable situation here.

Of course, this is all based on the hope that the studio executives give the pitch the green light. They may just say "oh, we have no interest in this garbage", making this whole discussion moot.

But assuming it does work out, what do you people think I should do?
 
Can you take unpaid leave from your current job until you have a contract drawn up and signed with the new gig?
 
Sounds like a no-brainer decision, just do it. You would regret it your whole life if you didn't, assuming this is something you have interest in outside of just the $$$. If you are doing it just for the money, then dont do it.
 
That seems like a too good of an opportunity to pass.

Delay as much as possible till things get clearer? And hopefully it all works out for the better, good luck.
 
Do you really come to Jazzfanz for this kind of advice?

Where am I supposed to go? I already talked about this to friends and family, and this is the only larger community that I'm currently a part of.
 
Can you take unpaid leave from your current job until you have a contract drawn up and signed with the new gig?

I don't know if they'll give me that much unpaid leave. I was thinking along the same lines. Delay as much as possible, take all of my paid leave, and try to squeeze in a couple of weeks of unpaid leave. But there is a limit to what I can get away with.
 
Where am I supposed to go? I already talked about this to friends and family, and this is the only larger community that I'm currently a part of.

Well I gave you the best advice possible. I will accept 10% of your income for all future scripts as payment.
 
I don't know if they'll give me that much unpaid leave. I was thinking along the same lines. Delay as much as possible, take all of my paid leave, and try to squeeze in a couple of weeks of unpaid leave. But there is a limit to what I can get away with.
How about just explaining to them what is going on.. just be up front with them. If they value you enough they will want to have a chance at holding onto you and let you have that leave until you know for sure.


Obviously you know them better but it's just a thought...
 
My only concern for you would be how you said "You dont want any tv writers dumbing your stuff down". Sounds like you are going to be writing for TV sci-fi, your **** is going to get dumbed down. I doubt your stuff is so undeniably amazing that it will pass through the filters of making it more commercial.
 
My only concern for you would be how you said "You dont want any tv writers dumbing your stuff down". Sounds like you are going to be writing for TV sci-fi, your **** is going to get dumbed down. I doubt your stuff is so undeniably amazing that it will pass through the filters of making it more commercial.

Actually it is amazing, but you're right. It will be dumbed down. I can accept SOME dumbing down, but I would still very much like a degree of creative control over the idea. Also, I want the money. If I don't do this, I won't get a penny. It's not like I copyrighted the idea.
 
Actually it is amazing, but you're right. It will be dumbed down. I can accept SOME dumbing down, but I would still very much like a degree of creative control over the idea. Also, I want the money. If I don't do this, I won't get a penny. It's not like I copyrighted the idea.

SO you are doing it?
 
Life is a journey. Only a collection of memories.
What would you do at 65yrs old with more money that might be more exciting, than this, at this age?

Bro... Vet the info and if it passes muster JUMP!
 
I don't know if they'll give me that much unpaid leave. I was thinking along the same lines. Delay as much as possible, take all of my paid leave, and try to squeeze in a couple of weeks of unpaid leave. But there is a limit to what I can get away with.
Yeah, asking for a leave of absence is what came to my mind. Point out to your current employer that if things do work out, the publicity could be good for them. Maybe they'll cut you more slack than you're expecting.

And congrats on the opportunity!
 
Just curious, you said you wrote "thoughts". How much did you actually write? Or are you just like a muse to the writers?

Are you a writer? Does your current job relate to writing?
 
The key is the director. If he is someone whose work you respect and believe will do justice to your story, better go for it. Otherwise you could still be here in ten years, posting under an alt, another embittered hack or some crusty old dude pretending to be Russian.
 
Just curious, you said you wrote "thoughts". How much did you actually write?

Are you a writer? Does your current job relate to writing?

I'm an engineer. And I wrote down about 1200 words summarizing the idea. I've been helping my friend with his ideas and scripts for the past 15 years, which is why he came to me with this. I also worked with Icon Health and Fitness here in Utah as a freelancer to write the scripts for their exercise equipment commercials. I also wrote articles for a free local newspaper about religion and politics for a couple of years. So I do have experience writing, but no, I am not a writer.
 
I'm an engineer. And I wrote down about 1200 words summarizing the idea. I've been helping my friend with his ideas and scripts for the past 15 years, which is why he came to me with this. I also worked with Icon Health and Fitness here in Utah as a freelancer to write the scripts for their exercise equipment commercials. I also wrote articles for a free local newspaper about religion and politics for a couple of years. So I do have experience writing, but no, I am not a writer.

Wrong. You are whatever you decide to be. What's the difference between entrepreneurs and employees, writers and engineers.... seize the moment.

(After vetting).
 
Wrong. You are whatever you decide to be. What's the difference between entrepreneurs and employees, writers and engineers.... seize the moment.

(After vetting). ��

Are you practicing for a corny motivational speech seminar?
 
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