Does our success as writers have more to do with luck than talent? Or do you think talent prevails over luck every time?
Well, speaking on behalf of my own experiences, I know it has a little to do with both; talent cannot function without luck and vice versa.
Recently, I co-wrote a Supernatural TV pilot, called ‘The Legend’. I had never written a script before, knew nothing about layout and formatting, but dug in, worked hard, and voila, a pilot was born.
At the end of February, my co-writer friend and I were attending the DFW Writer’s Conference in Texas. Now, I class myself as a thrill seeker, but my co-writer went a step further and thought it would be an excellent opportunity to stop by L.A. and ‘pitch’ the TV idea to some Hollywood bodies. Laughingly, and if not just to humour her, I agreed.
We queried everyone we could think of and arranged some meetings. One meeting in particular surprised me. It was with an entertainment lawyer. I asked my friend why she had contacted an entertainment lawyer, to which she simply replied, “why not?”
That entertainment lawyer read our script and loved it. At around the same time a manager contacted this lawyer, and at the end of their telephone conversation asked if he knew of any ‘new’ writers. He looked at our script and emailed it over to her. She read it, loved it, and promptly contacted us.
Two new script-writers left her office a week later with several projects and ideas to write; she wanted to see anything and everything we wrote.
In essence – we had a manager.
All that came from querying a lawyer. Now I’m not telling you email every lawyer you can think of; we also met with an actor and a producer – both of which have attached to the project. But with each person we met, we were recommended to someone else, and each contact is now a person we have met with personally and can email ideas and projects without the need of a query letter. Hence we have a VIP backdoor where only solicited work is allowed to enter.
So yes, I believe your career is made with a mixture of luck and talent:
Luck – Maybe we didn’t go about querying in the correct manner, but we did it politely and professionally…..and we got the face to face meetings we wanted.
Luck – We happened to be liked, and first impressions seem to be everything in this business.
Talent – That all important synopsis were our hook, and led our readers into wanting the script.
Talent – The script is why wanted people to meet us.
Without these key ingredients, I would not be sitting here now, blogging about my experiences. I walked away from L.A. a very busy girl, but having my writing described as very well written and with strong voice was a boost to an area of writing I am very new at, and being praised as audacious was fun – I mean, me, audacious? Honestly 😀
So, tell me if a mixture of luck and talent has led to any of your successes.
Wow! Congratulations. I think talent and luck must coexist. In addition, you’ve got to possess a certain amount of guts, balls, moxy, whatever you want to call it. But being able to leap and trusting that the net will appear is crucial.
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It wasn’t luck that got you liked. It’s the fact that you and Natalie are damn likeable people. Put that with your talent, and who wouldn’t want to see you succeed? But there is something to luck, for sure. Or fate, if you will.
Twenty-one years ago, I was going to take a class through Lifelong Learning called How to Write and Sell Children’s Books. I called from my desk when I was going to lunch. Yes! One opening left. I went straight to my car and drive the 20 minutes to their office to register. During that brief window, the class filled up. I took my second choice, aikido. I met my husband and some lifelong friends in that class. Luck or fate? It certainly wasn’t talent.
Thanks for your post, and best of luck with your projects. I’m so glad I can say I knew you when.
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Well done. Never reject an idea out of turn; it is always worth stepping onto the least trodden and unusual path – even if you don’t get to your destination you’ll have learnt something even if it’s that that particular path leads nowhere.
You were lucky you had the time and it was a good idea to set aside those days to do nothing but talk to people and ‘network’.
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I think luck is better defined by the old saying that wheres there’s a will there a way. If you want to win the lottery – buy a ticket (of course, in your case you bought an ticket on an airplane). But if you REALLY want to win the lottery – buy lots of tickets, every week. And that’s what you did – “Queried everyone we could think of.” But will isn’t just effort, it’s attitude. I guess that’s why phrases such as
Good things happen to good people, and
Practice make perfect
have persisted for so long.
And besides, nobody could every accuse you of not have an attitude!
Good luck with red riding hood.
Cheers
Nige
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I believe in what Goldwyn said: “The harder I work, the luckier I get.” The more we put in sweat equity, the more doors of opportunity present themselves.
Great blog.
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