Get a closer look at Dreamworks' "The Boss Baby."
The post New Trailer for ‘The Boss Baby’ Reveals A Lot appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
Add a Comment
Get a closer look at Dreamworks' "The Boss Baby."
The post New Trailer for ‘The Boss Baby’ Reveals A Lot appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
Add a Comment
Alec Baldwin is a businessman-baby in "The Boss Baby."
The post Watch: Dreamworks Unveils ‘The Boss Baby’ Teaser Trailer appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
Add a Comment
Actor Alec Baldwin has landed a deal for his memoir.
Baldwin plans to write this book himself. Harper, an imprint at HarperCollins, plans to publish it in the Fall of 2016.
The Associated Press reports that “the book will cover everything from Baldwin’s childhood in Long Island to his acclaimed work on 30 Rock to the various run-ins and fallings-out he has experienced along the way, a story of ‘hits and flops, marriage, divorce,’ and some ‘opinions on the media and politics.'”
Add a Comment
A new trailer has been unleashed for the Still Alice movie. The story for this film adaptation is based on Lisa Genova’s 2007 debut novel.
The video embedded above offers glimpses of Julianne Moore as Dr. Alice Howland, Alec Baldwin as Dr. John Howland, and Kristen Stewart as Lydia Howland. The theatrical release date has been set for January 16, 2015. (via Deadline)
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Add a Comment
The University of Southern California has received a $40,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to produce a video game based on the work of Henry David Thoreau.
Here’s more about the project: “To support production costs for a video game based on the writings of Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond. The player will inhabit an open, three-dimensional game world which will simulate the geography and environment of Walden Woods. Once developed, the game will be available online.”
You can download free eBook edition of Thoreau’s Walden at this link. At the same time, a number of PBS shows saw significant reductions or cuts in their NEA grants this year.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Add a Comment
The University of Southern California has received a $40,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to produce a video game based on the work of Henry David Thoreau.
Here’s more about the project: “To support production costs for a video game based on the writings of Henry David Thoreau at Walden Pond. The player will inhabit an open, three-dimensional game world which will simulate the geography and environment of Walden Woods. Once developed, the game will be available online.”
You can download free eBook edition of Thoreau’s Walden at this link. At the same time, a number of PBS shows saw significant reductions or cuts in their NEA grants this year.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Add a Comment
First the good news, about my lovely weekend, which began with my traditional Friday night dinner with friends, which one calls our Shicker Shabbat (shicker being Yiddish for drunkard). We were joined by two interlopers, I mean non-regulars, and it was very fun. I am lucky to have great friends.
Saturday, another friend and I embarked on a quest for beautiful yarns for knitting, which led us to the world's greatest uber-yarn store, Webs, in Northampton, Mass, which was hosting its annual tent sale. The place was a madhouse, but I came home with yarn for three new projects, and the idea to knit an entire room - a rug, curtain, and pillows. At some point. After I finish with the damned rewrite, for the very last time.
And of course last night, I watched my man, the star of the movie version of my novel, host SNL for his 15th time. For more information on this topic, see my posts of October 31st and March 27th.
And then, today. After reading the paper and taking my 16-year-old son driving, I settled into my backyard hammock to read the entire revised manuscript, checking for flow, but also for what Amy, my book daughter, asked me to look closely at, especially her caution that ""There shouldn't be anything in the book - absolutely nothing - that doesn't relate to [heroine's} overarching goal..." I have SO MUCH trouble with this, and I'm frankly totally confused. I have scenes that I think illuminate character, or complicate lives, but that absolutely do not relate to her overarching goal. Removing those scenes just doesn't feel right.
I have done most of what Amy suggested, and the book is truly richer for it. It moves more quickly, has more dramatic tension. But here's the bottom line. I have lost all perspective on this work. I simply can't judge it any more.
I've decided to wait and see if Amy is able to read it again in June. If not, I'm definitely planning to make a small foray into the marketplace, i.e. send it out to just a couple of agents and see if I get any nibbles. If not, it'll be a sign it needs more work. I just don't know....
I am feeling tortured. Guess it goes with the territory.
Amy emailed me a couple of days ago with her second critique. She did not say, "Andi, you followed all my suggestions! A little change here, a few edits there, and you're good to go. Let's talk agents."
Instead, she said this: Every scene needs to in some way cause a later scene, and every scene needs to be caused by an earlier scene. This is how fiction differs from real life...we need to feel pressure building, things becoming more complicated for the main character and for her primary goal..."
After a couple more pages, she wrote "I know I'm being very prescriptive here. Take these recommendations with a grain of salt."
I say, prescribe away, because I am feeling disheartened and lost. Well, slightly less so after meeting with her this afternoon. We went over her critique, point by point, and analyzed each scene, one by one, getting rid of a few, and adding new ones. She also had some great plot ideas that add both tension and fun to the novel. I feel as if, with Amy, I am getting an individual tutorial in how to structure a novel (Amy teaches creative writing at a university).
I have a lot to do, but I know I can do it. I asked Amy to tell me if she felt that the book was publishable, or was I wasting my time. Her response: "You have a great voice, and it can work if you make these fixes." I'll take that as a yes.
It's all doable, but I almost cried when Amy suggested it needed about year's worth of work. I reminded her how quickly I did my last revision, although of course we now know it wasn't that good. Plus, she may not be available to re-read it until the FALL. Aaargh. We discussed the option of my switching to a different reader if she can't get to it for a while. After our meeting, I tossed that idea around with a friend, and I became persuaded that it's best to stick with Amy, however long it takes. I am so goddamn impatient, I can't stand it. I started this five or six years ago, it's undergone numerous revisions, and I want it done so it can be an Alec Baldwin movie and he can be my boyfriend.
Just back from BEA in California. It was a weekend of book signings, walking the showroom floor and grabbing the galleys. I will be posting pictures soon of the authors I met and hot news from the show.
Here are a few of the highlights:
Jackie Collins has a new book coming out MARRIED LOVERS.
James Patterson was walking the floor and signing copies of DANIEL X.
Mario Lopez signed copies of KNOCKOUT FITNESS
Alec Baldwin signed sample copies of his book on divorce and raising children. Very funny, nice and charming, not at all intimidating.
Brooke Shields signed her children’s book.
Julie Buxbaum was a delight! Signed copies of The Opposite of Love.
Happy Holidays to all. Now get off the computer and go spend time with your family!
Clocks that put our season of excess into perspective.
Major moves online at the LATimes.
Some great reasons to love NYC. (more…)
I'm sure Amy is very good, but remember, hers is just one opinion. It's hard to tell without seeing your work, but don't you just have to trust your own feelings at some point?
Also I've read that if you give your novel to lots of people and they all say the same thing is wrong with it, then you should look at that thing, but if they all say different things are wrong, then don't worry and send it out.
The Clean White Page
Amy sounds like a very capable resource. At least she's telling you the truth and not stringing you along for the money. I let people at work read my pages as I write them. They're not professionals like Amy, but I learn what a reader expects from a story as they give me feedback. Two of them told me almost the same thing Amy told you.
It's instinctive to what a reader wants and expects from a story. This feedback was immensely helpful to me. Hang in there with Amy. She's leading you in the right direction. You can do it.
Looking forward to further developments!