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Favorite Cartoons and Images on Writing: The Funny and The Inspiring

Posted on July 6, 2013 Written by Pinar Tarhan

How’s your Saturday going so far? Since its the weekend, I wanted to cheer you up  by sharing some of the writing-related images that made me smile or just laugh out loud. Some of them also fueled me to move my butt and get to work. I’m sure you can guess which one(s).

Enjoy! And please don’t neglect to share your thoughts and stuff you like.

P.S. You can check out my Plain Old Writing Fun: My Favorite Cartoons on Writing post for my funny writing cartoons.

 

seo writer joke
I think I first found this through the Facebook page of PAGE International Screenwriting Awards.
inspirational words on writing
Image via WOW’s Facebook page.

 OK, this also goes for re-reading your previous stories. Getting hung up on old stories keeps us from writing new ones. And while I love creating a new story (it’s a great rush!), I also find it hard to say goodbye to the ones I spent so much time with.

 

novels adapted into movies
Image via PAGE International Screenwriting Awards.

 

how to become a better writer

 

 

query letter, writing query letters
Image via boscafelife.wordpress.com.

 I used this cartoon in  my  Why I Like Querying: 7 Reasons Querying Is Good for Writers post, but it is just too fun not to fun here. Wayne E. Pollard is terrific with writing cartoons, so you might just head to his site for more.

Image via elissabassist.com.
Image via elissabassist.com.
Image via mymthos.tumblr.com
Image via mymthos.tumblr.com

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: funny cartoons about writers, funny images on writing, funny writing cartoons, motivation for writers, wayne e. pollard, writing, writing inspiration

10 Reasons Writers Should Watch TNT’s Perception starring Eric McCormack

Posted on January 29, 2013 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Perception- Eric McCormack

Perception’s Daniel Pierce (Eric McCormack) is a brilliant neuropsychiatrist:

  • He has published 7 books on neuroscience.
  • He is teaching at a prestigious university while helping the FBI solve their most complicated cases.
  • He has finished med school at the top of his class.
  • He can see things and make connections others can’t.
  • Only the most complicated and exciting puzzles can keep his interest.
  • Oh, and, he is managing all this (depending on your perception), despite/with/because of his condition: schizophrenic paranoia.

He mostly manages his condition with carefully set routines, the help of his TA and living aid Max, and through the cases his FBI agent friend/ex-student Kate (Rachael Leigh Cook) brings.

Perception (aff.link) is a wonderfully inspiring show, especially if you are a writer and/or you’re suffering from a health condition, mental or otherwise.

It has great acting, intriguing storylines, a well-written main character and scientific accuracy, being assisted by the leading neuroscientist David Eagleman who’s also a writer (of fiction and non-fiction, his non-fiction having been published on Wired, The New Yorker and others.)

I like breaking the don’t-watch-tv productivity tip. I don’t watch everything, trust me. I try, evaluate and become a regular watcher of shows that are smart, highly entertaining, inspiring and intriguing. It helps if there are characters you can empathize with on one level or the other, or characters whose jobs you wouldn’t mind doing (e.g. Cal Lightman’s job, Lie to Me.)

Perception is such a show, and I recommend writers to at least check it out because:

1)      Perception combines drama/mystery & comic relief really well. As writers, we want to be able to pull this off well, especially in fiction.

2)      The leading character’s self-depreciating sense of humor as a defense mechanism works on a writing level, but it also gives us ideas on how to manage our own conditions and issues.

3)      He writes to keep sane, and well, he is full of ideas all the time so he needs different media to convey them. He lectures, aids FBI and writes books.

4)      He is a writing success despite his condition.

5)      The show presents the very exciting field of neuroscience. I’ve been reading about it since I started watching the show.

6)      There is a fictional role model, as well as a real one (the consulting neuroscientist/writer David Eagleman who was born in 1971!)

perception-eric-mccormack
Eric McCormack as Daniel Pierce. Image via ew.com.

7)      It gives you nice little flashback into university years. I only had a couple of inspiring lecturers, so I wouldn’t have minded one like Pierce: always engaging, always relevant.

If you are collecting reasons to go back to college, this might warm you up further to the idea. Just remember, not all campuses are that nice and a lot of the lecturers tend to be boring.

8)      It’s possible to be a writing expert and expert writer at the same time. Writers might lack the professional knowledge and need to interview experts. Experts might lack the writing skills.

Pierce (and Eagleman) possess both. Oh, I should add that Eagleman brainstorms with Perception writers about the possible scenarios too.

9)      It provides therapeutic entertainment. Just listen to the lectures where he covers lying, fears, reality…

10)    And the series has an overall appreciation of individuality and life.

 

 

Have you watched it?

 

P.S. To read more about perception, you can check out its review here.

Filed Under: Fictional Writers: Writer Characters in Movies, TV Series and Books Tagged With: david eagleman, eric mccormack, inspiration for writers, neuropsychiatry, perception, tv shows with writing characters, writer characters, writers, writing, writing inspiration

Finding Article Ideas & Writing About Them: 30 Inspiration Tips for Writers

Posted on January 21, 2013 Written by Pinar Tarhan

 

Image via 123rf.com.
Image via 123rf.com.

Writers really need to be a jack of all trades these days since we are expected to be writers, editors, bloggers, platform builders, marketers and so on. We also have to have a million “sellable” ideas and we can’t afford to run out of them. Because all our other skills won’t add up to much if we don’t have any sellable ideas to begin with.

We need them for all types of fiction and non-fiction. We need them for our blogs and other publications. But there are times even the most prolific creators can feel stuck and uninspired or they can get lost  in their search for an angle that hasn’t been done way too often.

The list I gathered offers what I do, and should do more of, to find ideas. While I get quite a few intriguing ideas without even trying (when the magical “what if……? “questions seem to come out of nowhere), most of them come through a lot of effort.

1)      Go through your old posts on your blog.

What have you covered? What else should you cover? Should you update existing posts? Or are there posts that you need to turn into a series to make your advice more thorough and helpful?

*If you don’t have a blog, you might want to read 6 Reasons Why Every Writer Should Blog.

2)      Go through your pitches. Maybe they landed you assignments. Maybe they didn’t. The ones that didn’t might be lying down somewhere forgotten because of the depression mode you got into due to rejection.

Is it possible that you targeted the wrong markets, you just got better at querying in time or you’ve just discovered other markets that could be interested in those ideas?

Recycle, improve upon and use those ideas.

3)      Go through your published articles. You probably know more now than you did then. Do you think there could be another slant hidden there somewhere? Can you use the same research to write other articles around the same topic?

4)      Study the markets you are interested in, focusing on titles, reading the articles, focusing on the slants/angles. There’s a chance you’ll disagree with some points, and develop an article idea on that. For instance, I came up with my Freelance Switch article How Coffee Shops Can Make the Best Substitute Offices after reading a few articles on the site that covered libraries and co-working spaces. Since I have a couple of favorite coffee shops I switch back and forth (in addition to my home office) where I worked productively, I decided to make a post of it.

5)      Study the markets you find interesting, even the ones you think you may not write for. They might inspire you for fiction and slants. You might even think of an idea for them. You never know.

6)      Recycling/revamping your ideas lists. You need to check your list of ideas regularly for updates and editing. You may have written about some of them, you might find inspiration while looking at the others. If you have used all of it, go ahead and delete it. Now you’ve updated yourself about some of the things you’ve already covered.

7)      Watch TV shows and movies without switching off the writer in you. I’m a sucker for an engaging story, and I am running an entertainment blog, so I am tuning off the productivity tips about watching less TV. Of course keep in mind that I hate reality TV, and I quit or fast-forward a show the moment it stops being interesting.

How do they make good posts, you ask? Below are some articles that were inspired by them:

On story analysis:

–          Crying for a Good Story, by PJ Reece  (on Good Will Hunting)

–          Two New Movies That Demonstrate Story Physics by Larry Brooks (on Lincoln and The Sessions.)

On delicious conflicts:

–          Most Enthralling Story Conflicts & Dilemmas: The Ledge – Kill Yourself or Your Loved One Will Be Killed

–          Your Daughter’s a Liar or Your Best Friend’s a Pervert: Most Enthralling Story Conflicts 2 – The Hunt

On inspiration:

–          The CSI Guide to Finding Your Next Killer Idea – A Guide for Bloggers by Pippa

Having fun analyzing fictional writers:

–          Writer Character from 27 Dresses – Getting Involved with Your Source

I have so much fun doing this, I have an entire category dedicated to it.

8)      Talk to professionals in different areas that you are interesting in writing about.

9)      Make a list of your failures. Some of the most popular posts were born through author mistakes.

10)   Make a list of your accomplishments. See what topics you can dig up from there.

11)   Go through the “finding ideas” posts on sites you love, bookmark /print out the ones you find useful (that include tips you don’t already put to use or haven’t tried yet.)

Two good examples would be Where Oh Where Are All the Good Article Ideas? from Writing World and 50 Ways for Writers to Find Article Ideas from Susan Jonhston.

12)   Find a great “writing headlines” source and think in terms of titles, getting  article ideas from them. Try Jon Morrow’s 52 Headline Hacks.

13)   Analyze characters from novels you love. Think about them. Maybe they can tell you something. Lots of fun dating article ideas can be born from them, such as:

How Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Matthew Macfadyen’s Darcy Ruined Women Forever

14)   Think about the jobs you hated/you loved.

15)   Think about your career progress. I realized that for me, a combination of a part-time teaching job and writing worked wonders. You bet I wrote a story about it: One Freelance Writer’s Surprising Strategy for a Revved-Up Career. It was published on Carol Tice’s Make a Living Writing blog.

16)   Write about songs. Especially if you’re writing about music, the ideas are endless.

17)   Rant.

18)   Find things in common between Blockbusters/best-sellers and your writing topic.

19)   Never turn off your creativity switch. Even if you are just watching a celebrity interview on YouTube.

20)   Collect the best list posts on your chosen subject. Bookmark them, study them. Focus more on the information you haven’t internalized.

21)   Gather your ideas in one place and look through them occasionally. Add, subtract, improve. It’s hard to keep track of them all when they are scattered on post-its, notebooks, word files and so on.

22)   Cover your favorite resources. I do it often here. It helps me restudy the material, gives me something relevant to write about and helps me share valuable information with readers.

Some of my review posts are:

Resources for Writers & Bloggers:Travel Blogger Academy Review

E-book Review: Crafting Unforgettable Characters by K.M. Weiland

Write Great Fiction Dialogue with Gloria Kempton

23)   Cover stuff that inspired you.

Paul Arden’s Whatever You Think, Think The Opposite -The Bedside Book for Creativity, Motivation and Life Management

24)    Write case studies.

25)   Brainstorm niches, and then brainstorm further from those niches. Here’s a great list from All Freelance Writing to get you started: 101 Niches to Write About.

26)   Think in “how (to) ” terms.

It works wonders especially if you back it up with a real life success story.

You might try How I Made 6 Figures as a Freelance Writer in 2011 from Carol Tice of Make a Living Writing.

27) Think about  how not to do something.  Think about what not to do. Or the reasons why you shouldn’t be doing that. And start taking notes.

28)   Gather your favorite resources in a list.

You might want to check out 60 Resources for Freelance Writers by Jennifer Mattern on All Freelance Writing.

29)   Share success stories, and it doesn’t have to about writers.

Like I did with How Mads Mikkelsen and Gerard Butler Can Motivate Writers Like Hell: The Ultimate Gerard Butler and Mads Mikkelsen Guide to Freelance Success.

30)   Find inspiring, fun and useful templates/how-to (e) books and work your way through them. I really like Steph Auteri’s Freelance Awesome: A Starter Kit and Thursday Bram’s New Ideas on Old Topics. They can be acquired through their sites, and they are free.

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation Tagged With: good story ideas, how to find article ideas, how to find ideas, inspiration, inspiration for writers, inspiration for writing, story ideas, writing inspiration, writing inspiration tips

Inspiration Caught This Freelance Writer Big Time

Posted on June 7, 2012 Written by Pinar Tarhan

inspiration-moment, writing inspiration, inspiration for writers
Image via copyblogger.com

I can’t believe my last post was a month ago.  I’m so sorry about that. But I have a valid excuse: I was listening to my own advice (I’m a big fan of practicing what I preach.) Inspiration and motivation were chasing me at record speed so I willingly surrendered. I’m not saying that I didn’t get any valuable ideas to share here. I did. But I wanted to keep a really good record of every idea and goal so I jotted down a lot, changed my mind a couple of times about which contests to enter, wrote my drafts and I’m back. And I promise not to stay away for so long again.

Inspiration-struck Me:

–          I have had these two fun screenplay ideas (actually I’d written the first drafts a long time ago) for ages but there was no way I’d be able to format them in time for the Big Break Contest organized by *Final Draft (a screenwriting software I’ve been happily using whose review I’ll post soon).

 

But Big Break’s *extended deadline is 15th June, they want the full script and the awards are nothing short of amazing. But my two scripts need adjustments in many areas, and there is no way they will be fit for a contest until the deadline.

 

Then I realized that I could enter the Script Pipeline’s Great Idea contest, where you are allowed to write anything from a logline to a treatment of 3-5 pages.

 

So guess what? Currently I’m writing 2 treatments and editing them. I’ll then submit & keep my fingers crossed. And even though I don’t get to be a finalist, I’ll have two very clear ideas on how I want to outline the story, and relive the events and my characters. Of course I won’t be sitting on these screenplays afterwards.

 

–          I have some upcoming fun and useful writing posts.

 

–          I have some wonderful movie post (for my entertainment blog) ideas, based on the romantic in me. It’s all Forget Me Not’s fault really. I can no longer delay those posts, such as the most romantic & original marriage proposal in a movie.

 

 

–          My favorite TV shows are either over or on a seasonal break- which incidentally is on its way to be another post here. Oh yes, it is perfectly writing-relevant, trust me.

 

–          I’m planning a two week trip to Norway and Sweden which motivated me further to pitch and research more efficiently.

 

Not only is it a specific deadline challenge, but also its blows to the budget will provide more incentive to increase my freelance income. Not just because I will spend a lot, but I’ll want to go on a travelling spree again very soon.

Yes, I confess, I am addicted to traveling, nearly as much as I’m addicted to writing and entertainment.

 

There’s more, but let that be another post.

 

How has your writing been going?

 

  • Please note that extended deadlines typically mean increased entrance fees.
  • The links in these posts aren’t affiliate links, just the direct links to the contest information pages.
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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: blogging, final draft, final draft big break contest, inspiration, inspiration for writers, motivation, movie idea contest, screenplay competitions, screenwriting competitions, screenwriting contests, script pipeline, script pipeline great movie idea contest, writing, writing contests, writing inspiration

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