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Tips Stage 32 Blogs

Collaboration vs. Exploitation: A Filmmaker’s Decade of Lessons

I’ve been a filmmaker for nearly a decade, a journey filled with highs, lows, and everything in between. Along the way, I’ve experienced the thrill of true collaboration and the sting of exploitation. A recent incident brought these dynamics back into sharp focus, reminding me how my perspective on them has evolved over time. If you’ve worked in a creative field like filmmaking, you’ve likely brushed up against both: the rare magic of a creative partnership and the all too common reality of some...

Vital Butinar
Vital Butinar
18 hours ago
Collaboration vs. Exploitation: A Filmmaker’s Decade of Lessons

Confessions of a Script Doctor

Good day to you, Stage 32! Many of you know me as a regular blogger here, but I’m also a development executive with more than twenty years of experience and a screenwriter with more than 70 screenplays under my tires. More than half of these screenplays were written under other writers’ names, working under the most explicit conditions of secrecy and anonymity. Yes, dear reader, I am a script doctor. Presumably because of the secrecy and compromise involved, I get the impression from fellow...

Tennyson Stead
Tennyson Stead
2 days ago
Confessions of a Script Doctor

Coffee & Content: The Power of Persistence & Facing Rejection Head-On

Happy Sunday, Creative Army! Have you had a creative weekend so far? I have some content here for you that is sure to get the creative juices flowing, so grab your coffee, and let's dive in. First up, we are exploring The Brutalist, the latest ambitious project from filmmaker Brady Corbet. This deep dive from Frame Voyager dissects the film’s creative journey, from production delays and budget challenges to its groundbreaking use of VistaVision, a format rarely used in modern cinema. It also...

Coffee & Content: The Power of Persistence & Facing Rejection Head-On

Follow The Yellow Brick Road To Your Goals!

It was a sunny Sunday morning, May 9th, 1970. I just sat down for breakfast at a quaint little restaurant in Hollywood. I was going to the MGM auction for a second day. The day before I had snagged a cool prize and it only cost me $20.00. I loved looking for movie props and memorabilia from the golden age of film. My budget was $100.00, so as you may have guessed, you can’t buy much with that. Still, you must remember it was 1970 and one hundred bucks was like a thousand back then. As I sat down...

Lee Shargel
Lee Shargel
4 days ago
Follow The Yellow Brick Road To Your Goals!

Red Carpet Roll-Out: March 2025's New Executives & Education at Stage 32!

Happy Friday, Stage 32 Community! At Stage 32, we are dedicated to helping creatives like you take your career to the next level. Whether you’re looking to sharpen your skills, connect with industry professionals, or develop your next project, we’ve got exciting new education and executive mentorship opportunities designed just for you! This month, we’re rolling out cutting-edge courses and interactive labs led by Emmy-winning producers, top literary managers, and working executives from stu...

Red Carpet Roll-Out: March 2025's New Executives & Education at Stage 32!

Redefine Love in Your Creative Process: 5 Key Tips

February often highlights love, although it is not always a simple story. Love can be a grand adventure or a lesson in letting go. It is not just something given or received; it is something created. Whether through the connections we build, the stories we tell, or the art we bring to life, love takes many forms. This month I am sharing five ways to see love through a different lens. Love Beyond the Obvious "The greatest thing you will ever learn is just to love and be loved in return." — M...

Maria Baltazzi
Maria Baltazzi
6 days ago
Redefine Love in Your Creative Process: 5 Key Tips

Ditch “The Cat” and Double the Stakes: How “Clone Characters” Can Elevate Your Screenwriting

“That’s me in ten years if something doesn’t change.” These words aren’t spoken aloud, but written into John’s features when he finally meets his idol, Chazz, a robe-wearing, Hefner-like man-child still living with his mom (“Ma! The meatloaf!”). In Wedding Crashers, Chazz (Will Ferrell) serves as a clone character: a cautionary example of who John (Owen Wilson) could become if he stays on his current trajectory. According to writer/director Brian McDonald, a “clone character” is a storytell...

Erin Leigh
Erin Leigh
8 days ago
Ditch “The Cat” and Double the Stakes:  How “Clone Characters” Can Elevate Your Screenwriting

Stage 32 Certification: Ladders Are Meant To Be Climbed

Hi, Everybody! I’m the Head of Certification here at Stage 32. Stage 32’s Certification program is the brainchild of our CEO, Rich “RB” Botto, and I’ve had the privilege of working with RB, our Managing Director Amanda Toney, and the truly amazing Stage 32 Education team to help bring this program to life. Like so many endeavors, creative and otherwise, what started as an idea led to meetings and then designs and then execution and then to launch. Now, Stage 32 Certification is working...

Sam Sokolow
Sam Sokolow
9 days ago
Stage 32 Certification: Ladders Are Meant To Be Climbed

Coffee & Content: Reinvention & Relationships - The Keys to Longevity in Hollywood

Happy Sunday, Creative Army! Have you had a creative weekend so far? I have some content here for you that is sure to get the creative juices flowing, so grab your coffee, and let's dive in. For years, Matthew McConaughey was the ultimate rom-com star. If you needed a leading man with charm, a mischievous grin, and an easygoing Southern drawl, he was your guy. But then, something changed. In this video essay from FilmStack, they’re exploring McConaughey’s professional reinvention, also known...

Coffee & Content: Reinvention & Relationships - The Keys to Longevity in Hollywood

Watch Who You Call Ugly: The Power of Building in Public

Too many creators spend years perfecting their work in silence, only to release it and wonder why no one is paying attention. The problem isn’t the quality of the work, it’s that people weren’t invited into the process. They never had a reason to care before it existed. That’s why I created the motto, “Watch Who You Call Ugly” or "WWYCU". It’s more than just a phrase; it’s a philosophy about transformation, perspective, and growth. The things we overlook, dismiss, or label as “not ready” often...

Samuel Chambers
Samuel Chambers
12 days ago
Watch Who You Call Ugly: The Power of Building in Public
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