“To Live…and Die... in L.A.”
Geno Scala
Exec. Director of Academy Awards; "The Script Mentor"; "Ghostwriter to the Stars"; Creator of "The 20 Day Screenplay";
MYTH: You have to LIVE in CA or NY to be successful in the industry.
As an avid networker, I can tell you that there are many charlatans posing as script consultants or “former agents” or some other non-descript title, and many of them share their advice- for a price- on some of the more active social media networking sites such as LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, etc.
Personally, I find much of this advice to be common misconceptions, deceit, and even arrogant, self-serving mistruths, all in the effort to make money off of unsuspecting screenwriters.
Among one of the more common myths is the NECESSITY for a screenwriter to live in Los Angeles to have a successful career. Many of these people make no bones about it; they flat out tell you that you HAVE to move there in order to BE a working screenwriter.
Well, yes…and no. I have a theory as to why they tell you this, which I’ll share a little bit later.
However, one needs to define “working screenwriter”.
If your goal is to work on a current or new, upcoming series that pumps out scripts weekly, then YES- I can see where, in most situations, living in Los Angeles would be a requirement.
However, this is not always the case.
I was (recently) considered for the “writer’s room” for an upcoming police procedural weekly drama series adapted from the stories of the foremost police novelist of our time.
The first question I asked was “Will I need to relocate to Los Angeles?”
Their answer was not only “No”, but they would fly me out for weekly sit-downs.
Now, this may be the “new” Hollywood, due to Covid, or simply the sign of the times, technologically-speaking. Are there situations where you may be required in a writer’s daily? Well, of course. I would say emphatically in MOST cases this is the situation.
Is there ANOTHER kind of screenwriting that doesn’t require you to move lock, stock and barrel to California- "the Land of High Taxes, undocumented voters and the “For Thee, Not for Me” practice of mask and vaccine mandates"?
Yes. It’s called spec screenwriting, which most of us reading this are doing currently, or will start doing.
Basically, you’re writing screenplays based on your own concepts, and hoping to sell that screenplay to the highest bidder. Now, the competition is fierce and it’s a lottery shot at best, but there are other ways in which you can succeed.
I managed to parley a series of successful screenplays into paid writing assignments, which led to having movies produced based on those assignments. I was then contacted by a certain celebrity, with whom I ghosted a number of projects for over a year. Eventually, other A-listers began calling, and soon I quickly became known as the “Ghostwriter to the Stars”.
I also started my mentoring business to share the secrets to MY successes (however limited), and since then, over five hundred other writers have enjoyed their own successes as well. It cost them far less than a thousand dollars to do it, too.
But let’s not kid ourselves, either. There is a huge advantage to being where the work is; you get to meet people in person, socialize with them at bars and restaurants, attend in-person meetings and seminars, etc. I did that- for twenty-four years in Los Angeles. I worked and lived in Beverly Hills and lived Sherman Oaks. I knew Hollywood folks through my private investigation firms and, later, as an executive with the award shows, including the Academy Awards. When you’re on a first-name personal basis with the likes of Warren Beatty, Billy Crystal, and the late Michael Clarke Duncan, and hundreds more, you’re pretty entrenched in their world.
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It wasn’t MY world, though. I just lived in it. I didn’t even start screenwriting on my own until I left California, actually, and to this day, I have not called a single A-lister for work or help getting a script read; didn’t have to, and I wouldn’t if I did.
I said earlier I would share my theory as to WHY many tell you that you have to move to L.A.
One reason is, they know MOST of you can’t. You have families, property, a steady job, relatives and you’re not about to risk it all on a pipedream when you don’t even REALLY know how to write or even get started. So, they simply reduced the competition by one - repeated over and over again.
The other reason is because THEY are miserable- and misery loves company.
Most are these consultants and self-professed “gurus” were successful once- in the 70’s or 80’s- and have seen the dramatic decline of what used to be considered the "Golden State" and working in the best industry IN the Golden State.
They are miserable because they enthusiastically voted for those politicians who then destroyed their state.
They are miserable because once they were the “go-writer”, and now, five hundred 20 and 30-somethings have replaced them.
They are miserable because they’re now making their money doing screenplay reviews at $300 a pop, and the competition is far too heavy to even make a meager living doing this.
They are miserable because their connections to the industry have aged out, or worse; died off.
There are no happy people in California; despite what Seth Rogan claims (he was high, no doubt). Yes, it’s beautiful there, but seriously- are you just going to “accept” the fact that, occasionally your car will get stolen and your home broken into? That’s what he tells you are the trade-offs. Easy for him; he can replace that car the next day. Lunacy.
It all depends on what YOU are looking for in YOUR career.
Some write to sell spec scripts.
Others want writing assignments.
Others still want to be hired as staff writers or work on a production staff.
As a spec script writer, there is nothing prohibiting one from doing well and selling scripts whether you reside in Alaska, Maine or Florida or in any other country on any other continent.
Don’t be fooled by some of these “professional consultants”. Most are not interested in helping you in YOUR career but are only interested in taking YOUR money to subsidize their own failed writing careers.
WRITER'S BIO: Mr. Scala spent 24-plus years in the Hollywood community and was the Executive Director for the?72nd Annual Academy Awards,?as well as The Soul Train Awards,?The Grammys,?The Blockbuster Video Awards Show?and?The Saturn Award Show.?
He is writing the biopics of early rock pioneer Jimmie F. Rodgers,?Motown star Tammi Terrell and iconic folk singer and philanthropist Harry Chapin- all while continuing to mentor new writers and self-published authors.
Currently, he is working on a project scheduled to be filmed in the spring,?starring?Liam Hemsworth and Samuel L. Jackson.?
Geno has three produced feature films: "Assassin 33 A.D.",?"Black Easter"?and?"The Tombs". All are currently available on Amazon Prime and Tubi.
Customer Services Officer
7 个月Interesting
Gate Gourmet - Author - Screenwriter
10 个月It seems you have to live in LA if you want to write/work-on screenplays in LA?
Corporate communications expert with backgrounds in AI/ML, journalism, academia, and media analysis
11 个月Fantastic analysis!
Co-Founder and COO at DiningTek
11 个月I've discovered that shifting assumptions in every area, of life, or business, is difficult. Many people get into the habit of the "claim" or "blame" game. Make assumptions, base your life on them and then Blame someone else if your career doesn't work out. Or, since everyone and their brother is now guru /consultant ... follow them without fore thought. Thanks for being candid. Truth always has a ring to it.