Tips
Tips Stage 32 Blogs
'The Last OG' Actor Talks About The Growth of Short Films & Actor Networking Advice
Allen Maldonado is an actor who stars with Tracy Morgan in The Last OG created by Tracy Morgan and Jordan Peele. Stage 32 caught up with him at Film Con Hollywood where he offered advice for actors on how to network as an actor, why short films need more attention, and what it takes to persevere in the industry. Click Here For Allen's Advice! Remember, if you haven't subscribed to our YouTube page, make sure you do so you don't miss any of our announcements. Like this b...


How Working for Free Changed The Trajectory of My Career
Delayed Gratification: A lesson in show biz. If I was able to teach a seminar in show business to my 22-year-old self it would all come down to two words: Patience and Persistence. Well that and be lucky, don’t be scared to ask for help, and be willing to work for free. A lot. Kindling The year is 2012. For the sake of context, I feel like I need to paint a picture of where I was in my career and mindset when things started to change for me. I spent the better part of a decade trying to...


7 Steps for Writing Knights & Dragons Fantasy
Prologue: Venturing Forth The PROTAGONIST. Often a simple, unassuming person at least somewhat content in their everyday life, is given a quest. A journey must be made—both physical and psychological. Leaving the familiar, they cross the threshold into a new and dangerous world, where they will be tested time and again. Allies and enemies abound. The stakes are high. Will they prevail?All fantasy is based on some form of this opening paragraph. Not coincidentally, it is also the “formula” for o...


How Do you Vet a Manager for Representation in Entertainment? (with Richard Botto & Jason Mirch)
It's the age-old question that writers, entertainers, and filmmakers ask again and again in one form or another: How do you vet a manager for representation in entertainment? In this special edition of AMA (Ask Me Anything), RB and Jason Mirch, Stage 32's new Director of Script Services, breaks down the how, the why, and the what to finding the right kind of representation. Also, learn what to do if you get a manager and it's not a good fit. Click Here For RB and Jason's Advice! ...


How an Amateur Screenwriter Can Improve With These Simple Tips
When Hollywood first started making movies, everyone worked for the studios. Eventually, independent producers started making their own movies and it seems everyone with a typewriter started writing screenplays. Hollywood had to build a wall to keep all those people out they didn’t think belonged, which was just about everyone. That's when literary agents appeared on the scene. Hollywood would rely on agents to filter through all those screenplays to find one they could use. Things haven’t cha...


Coffee & Content - Quentin Tarantino's Screenwriting Process & Cuts and Transitions 101
Good morning, everyone. Greetings again from Chicago, where we have just finished work on Week 2 of filming RAIN BEAUS END. The cast and crew (including over a dozen Stage 32 members) continues to bring their A-game. I'll be posting some pictures and a summary of the filming here in the near future, but for now if you'd like to see some set photos and stories, you can check them out and follow me for Week 3 on Instagram here. Now let's roll with another edition of Coffee & Content. First...


What One Writer Has to Say About "Greed" Packaging in the Writing Industry
The blog post that I'm about to share is from Homicide and The Wire creator, David Simon. Simon penned an incredibly eye-opening post that included his own story of how he was taken advantage of financially by an agent from the Creative Artists Agency's literary division with a product he was never even aware existed called "Packaging." It's a big, bad, buzz word right now for writers. If you know anything about David Simon, you know he was a newspaper writer and author first. And after spen...


From the Writer of Jigsaw: 8 Rules For Creating Online Content
I've had the pleasure of working with Pete Goldfinger, one of the talented scribes behind the film JIGSAW of the SAW franchise (and many, many more studio and indie feature films and TV shows)! I was talking with him recently and he's embarking on an exciting journey as the writer/creator for a CW Seed show, which is a new frontier for him as a screenwriter/creator. The best part? He wanted to share his experience with the Stage 32 community. For those who may not know, the CW has expanded int...


7 Screenwriting Misconceptions [& Other “Back to the Drawing Board” Homework Assignments]
Getting into the movie business can plunge you down an endless drain of self-doubt and feelings of worthlessness. At some point, you begin to wonder whether you’re behind the learning curve, missing something, or just plain dumb. Then there comes the complex, then another failure, and then the invisible curse that now seems to follow you around no matter what you do. They don’t call it the Midas touch in reverse for nothing. But enough of the pity party. The one thing I have always prided myself...

![7 Screenwriting Misconceptions [& Other “Back to the Drawing Board” Homework Assignments]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.stage32.com%2Fsites%2Fstage32.com%2Ffiles%2Fcake%2F5c86bcef3d16b-fixed.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Coffee and Content - 15 Screenwriting Lessons People Learn Too Late & The Brilliant Editing of Whiplash
Greetings from Chicago where we are now a third of the way through shooting Rain Beau's End, a feature film which has well over a dozen Stage 32 cast and crew in the mix. Been a killer first week. Hoping to share more with you soon. But for now, let's roll with another edition of Coffee & Content. Our first video today comes from our friends at Film Courage and focuses on lessons that screenwriters should learn sooner than later. Next up, Whiplash has been lauded in indie filmmaking ci...

