Thanks for visiting swg.c!

Why not subscribe?

My Watch List

Appointment Television
30 Rock
Better Off Ted
Big Love
Big Bang Theory
Californication
The Daily Show
Dexter
Entourage
Friday Night Lights
Lost
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Mad Men
The Middle
Modern Family
Rescue Me
Robot Chicken
The Office
South Park
True Blood
The Tudors

Homework TV
House
How I Met Your Mother
Saturday Night Live
     
(w/DVR fast-forward)
Two and a Half Men

Guilty Pleasures
Batman: Brave & The Bold
Clone Wars
Glee?
Legend of the Seeker

On the Bubble
Community
Cougar Town
Grey's Anatomy
The Riches
The United States of Tara
Weeds
Currently Catching Up
NewsRadio (finished s4)
Curb (on s5)

To-Do List
Malcolm in the Middle
Nip/Tuck
Sons of Anarchy

Have Definitely Seen Every Single Episode
Action
Angel
Battlestar Galactica
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Carnivale
Coupling (BBC)
Dead Like Me
Deadwood
Dollhouse
Firefly
Freaks & Geeks
The Mighty Boosh (BBC)
The Loop
My Name Is Earl
Rome
Scrubs
Sex and the City
The Shield
Slings & Arrows
The Sopranos
Anything with “Star” in the title (...unless there's dancing)
Spaced (BBC)
West Wing
Wonder Falls
Veronica Mars



SUBSCRIBE!

Add to My Yahoo! Google Reader or Homepage Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe in NewsGator Online Add to netvibes Add to My AOL

Most Read Posts

Top Commenters

Archives

Search


My Regular Reads:

Does your screenplay have a silver lining?

March 26th, 2007 by screenwriterguy

cloudI try not to be a bandwagon blogger. However, a few screenwriting blogs have mentioned scriptclouds, and I couldn’t help myself.

The concept is that you can enter a .txt file of a script you have written, and you will get out an analysis of what words are most frequently used. It does an oddly accurate job of conveying the feel of a story, actually. Plus, you can see if you’re overusing words you don’t mean to, or if your verbs are too common.

I decided to test it out with my TV pilot, the last script I’ve written that I consider polished. I also ran my current, half-written feature screenplay through for kicks. Here are the results:

This was my TV pilot, Fat Guy, Hot Wife.

Fat Guy cloud

Yes, I’m comfortable with the fact that “avocado” seems to be the biggest word. Quite comfortable, in fact. I would be disappointed if it weren’t.

My road trip screenplay came up like so:

geekcloud

A friend has pushed that this screenplay should be called Nerds in a Van. It would seem that the cloud gives him some support.

I am a little disappointed that “walks” is so big in both clouds. A thesaurus will be necessary. But overall, I like to believe my writing is about innocent sexiness and awkward people trying hard but failing (at least for 90 pages.) I can sorta see that in the clouds, so hurray.

The site that generates these clouds for you also has examples from famous movie scripts. Check it out for yourself at http://scriptcloud.screenplayanalytics.com/.

Similar Posts:

Posted in Writing | 1 Comment »

One Response to “Does your screenplay have a silver lining?”

  1. Stewart McKie commented:

    Thanks for blogging my site. I like to think of the cloud as a kind of fingerprint of your script. “Walks” was actually the biggest word in one of my scripts so I think there is something to think about there, as you say, in terms of using more varied verbs in scripts. I hope to be adding new stuff to the site over the next few weeks so check back in a couple of weeks. Thanks.

Leave a Reply