TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- OCTOBER 2021

2022 CAPE NEW WRITERS FELLOWSHIP

Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment

DEADLINE: N/A

INFO: The CAPE New Writers Fellowship (CNWF) discovers and nurtures emerging writers launching their careers in television and film. Founded and co-chaired by Emmy Award-winning Writer, Creator and Showrunner Leo Chu and veteran film and TV executive Steve Tao, the CAPE New Writers Fellowship is one of few writing programs in Hollywood created by a creative and an executive. This immersive Fellowship arms each writer with the practical and business knowledge they need to succeed as a professional writer in the entertainment industry.

Over several weeks, CAPE brings in top television and film writers, producers, agents, managers, and executives for a series of intimate panels, workshops, and discussions. The Fellowship also features a Writing Lab where each Fellow is matched with a high-level industry mentor to help them revise their original script into professional level writing samples to get them noticed and land that all-important first staff job.

The Fellowship typically runs each year in early spring. Each Fellowship session and Writing Lab meeting takes place on weekday evenings - Pacific Time - for approximately 3 hours, twice a week.

www.capeusa.org/cnwf

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NYC WOMEN’S FUND FOR MEDIA, MUSIC AND THEATRE

NYFA

DEADLINE: November 1, 2021

INFO: The NYC Women’s Fund for Media, Music and Theatre provides grants to encourage and support the creation of digital, film, music, television, and live or online theatre content that reflects the voices and perspectives of all who identify as women.

Now in its third cycle, the NYC Women’s Fund for Media, Music and Theatre (“Women’s Fund”), administered by the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) in partnership with the City of New York Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME), is part of a groundbreaking series of initiatives that address the underrepresentation of women in film, music, television and theatre. The Fund provides grants to encourage and support the creation of content that reflect the voices and perspectives of all who identify as women.

In 2021/22 cycle, the Women’s Fund will distribute $2.5M in funding to Media, Music and Theatre projects in NYC.

THE PROGRAM WILL PROVIDE: 

  • Finishing grants* for film, television, and digital projects

  • Funds for the creation of music recordings or videos

  • Production funds for live or online theatre

In addition to being made by, for, or about all who identify as women, projects are eligible if they feature a strong female perspective; and/or include a female-identified director and/or producer and/or writer/songwriter and/or engineer (for recordings) and/or female protagonist(s) or lead musical role. 

*To be eligible, projects need to have completed principal photography.

GRANTS WILL BE GIVEN IN THE FOLLOWING CATEGORIES (AMOUNTS LISTED ARE THE MAXIMUM POTENTIAL GRANT): 

  • Fiction Feature (running time of 60 minutes or more) – $50,000

  • Fiction Short (running time of 59 minutes or less) – $25,000

  • Fiction Webisode/Webseries (all forms) – $20,000

  • Documentary Feature (running time of 60 minutes or more) – 50,000

  • Documentary Short (running time of 59 minutes or less) – $25,000

  • Documentary Webisodes/Webseries (all lengths and forms) – $20,000

  • Music: Classical/Experimental/Jazz/New Music – $20,000

  • Music General – $20,000

  • Theatre Production – grant amounts up to $50,000

https://www.nyfa.org/awards-grants/nyc-womens-fund-for-media-music-and-theatre/

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FELLOWSHIP FOR DISABLED SCREENWRITERS

Inevitable Foundation

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Screenwriting Fellowship gives disabled screenwriters $25,000 and bespoke mentorship to advance their careers and projects.

We started the Inevitable Foundation Screenwriting Fellowship to substantially increase the number of disabled screenwriters working in film and TV. People with disabilities make up over 20% of the U.S. population but represent only 2% of characters on screen and less than 1% of writers behind the screen. Representation matters and film and TV present a key vehicle to counteract the often negative perceptions that surround disabilities.

How much is the Fellowship for? 

Fellows receive $25,000, which is meant to cover 4-6 months of living expenses. 

How can I use the Fellowship money? 

The money is unrestricted—you can use it to cover living expenses and other project-related fees—which is intended to give you the time and space over 4-6 months to further develop your projects. 

Is the Fellowship taxable income? 

If you receive a Fellowship, we recommend you speak to an accountant to make a determination on the tax status of the Fellowship money. 

 Who is eligible for the Fellowship? 

The Fellowship is for any screenwriter who meets the following conditions: 

  • Self-identifies as disabled.

  • 18 years of age or older.

  • Dedicated to or currently pursuing a career in screenwriting.

  • Currently or previously has worked in the entertainment industry.

  • Demonstrates that without the Fellowship or similar financial support, you are unable to advance your own full-time career as a screenwriter.

What information does the Application ask for?

The Application requires the following information:

  • A completed script. Scripts featuring authentic disabled characters are a plus but not required.

  • Project Logline: Describe the crux of your film (75 words or less).

  • Project Synopsis: A brief summary of a completed screenplay's core concept, major plot points, and main character arcs (500 words or less).   

  • Personal Statement: In 500 words or less, your personal statement should answer two questions. 1) What stories do you want to tell and why? 2) What does disability representation mean to you?

  • Biography: Write your bio in third person (150 words or less).

  • Resume or CV

  • Summaries of other projects you have completed or are working on. We ask that at least one of these projects (past, current or future) have disabled characters at the forefront.

What type of material do you accept? 

We only accept original material (films and TV shows), which may include material you own the rights to and are adapting into a project. 

We do not accept spec episodes or any material you do not have the rights to.  

What is the application process for the Fellowship? 

The application process has three rounds.  

ROUND 1

Focuses on selecting Applicants who possess professional screenwriting skills, which is a prerequisite for the Fellowship. 

Our reading committee will review all applications on a rolling basis and then invite a select group to the second round. 

ROUND 2

Focuses on advancing Applicants who are talent, ambitious, working professionally and have a passion for disability representation.

ROUND 3

Focuses on learning more about the Applicant during an hour-long interview.

ROUND 4

Takes everything into accounts from the first three rounds and our Selection Advisory Committee makes their final recommendations.

A questionnaire will determine if you are eligible to apply for the Screenwriting Fellowship. Complete the questions below and we will notify you about your eligibility via email within 24 hours of completing the application.

https://inevitable.foundation/eligibility-questionnaire

TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- SEPTEMBER 2021

TV PILOT SCREENWRITING COMPETITION

WeScreenplay

DEADLINE: September 15, 2021

INFO: WeScreenplay wants TV enthusiasts with great pilots. Our professional readers will provide feedback, and we’ll highlight our favorite scripts to the industry (starting with our pretty sweet jury).

PLUS, starting this year, WeScreenplay will be inviting winners to our very first TV Writing Lab! Writers will tackle meetings with industry executives, participate in hands-on workshops, and learn from current television writers. So what are you waiting for?

The top 3 winning scripts in both 1 hr and 1/2 hr pilot categories will be invited to WeScreenplay’s Virtual TV Writing Lab! This is a once-in-a-career opportunity to network, get exposure for your writing, and learn from working TV writers.

Winners will take meetings with development executives, experience a mock TV writer’s room with working TV writers, and learn how to make the most of a client/rep relationship from managers and agents. It’s an exciting, hands-on schedule of events that will help you further your career — all from the comfort of your own home.

Additionally, our top scripts are read by our incredible industry jury and the winners get access to ongoing mentorship from WeScreenplay including an initial phone call, guidance for drafting query letters, research methods for finding the right representation, prep before big meetings, and strategic planning for next steps in their careers — all based on the writer’s specific goals.

THE JURY:

  • Tze Chun (Showrunner, Director, Producer): Tze (pronounced “Z”) Chun is a writer, director, producer, and visual artist based in Los Angeles. He is currently creator and showrunner of the animated Gremlins prequel GREMLINS: SECRETS OF THE MOGWAI for Warner Bros and Amblin, premiering on HBO Max in 2022. He is also Executive Producer and Co-Showrunner of Boots Riley’s upcoming Amazon series I’M A VIRGO. Past credits include writer/producer on Fox’s hit Batman prequel show GOTHAM and on ABC’s ONCE UPON A TIME. With roots in independent film, Chun also wrote and directed the award-winning films WINDOWBREAKER (Sundance 2007), CHILDREN OF INVENTION (Sundance 2009) the Bryan Cranston thriller COLD COMES THE NIGHT (Sony), as well as an episode of BAFTA-nominee LITTLE AMERICA (Apple TV+) centering around his mother's life. Along with Salvatore Simeone, Chun also co-founded the graphic novel and fiction publishing company TKO Studios, which publishes original series by top creators such as Jeff Lemire, Garth Ennis, Roxane Gay, and more.

  • Monica Macer (Showrunner, Screenwriter, Executive Producer): Monica Macer is a screenwriter, executive producer, and showrunner of Korean and African American descent. She has written for some of the most acclaimed television series over the last 15 years, including LOST and QUEEN SUGAR. Currently, Monica is proud to serve as showrunner and executive producer for MACGYVER (CBS). Macer’s experience in television has spanned broadcast, cable, and streaming with writing and producing credits ranging from PRISON BREAK (FOX) to TEEN WOLF (MTV), NASHVILLE (ABC) to DECEPTION (NBC), and THE BREAKS (VH1). Last season, Macer served as showrunner and executive producer of Netflix’s Latinx dramedy, GENTEFIED. As showrunner of Queen Sugar’s second season, Macer was tapped as one of Variety’s 10 Writers to Watch. She currently serves on the Motion Picture Television Fund’s (MPTF) NextGen board and is a co-founder of the newly minted organization, Korean American Leaders in Hollywood. Monica was also in the inaugural class of the NetKAL (Network for Korean American Leaders) Fellowship at USC. Additionally, Macer is a 2020 Coalition of Asian Pacific (CAPE) Writing Fellows Mentor.

  • Brin Lukens (Senior Vice President of Live Action Development at Nickelodeon & Awesomeness Studios): Brin Lukens is the Senior Vice President of Live Action Development at Nickelodeon & Awesomeness Studios where she oversees scripted development. In her role, she has produced multiple series including Hulu’s critically acclaimed and Primetime Emmy nominated comedy, “PEN15,” YouTube Premium’s longest running comedy, “Foursome,” and the Daytime Emmy award-winning Netflix series, “TRINKETS.” Prior to joining Awesomeness, Brin was the Director of Development for Ashton Kutcher’s Katalyst Films developing both features and digital series. Prior to that she was a Creative Executive at Mockingbird Pictures where she developed numerous feature films.

  • Jason Kyle (Development at Sony Pictures TV): Jason Kyle currently works in Scripted Drama Development at Sony Pictures Television Studios (THE BLACKLIST, OUTLANDER, THE GOOD DOCTOR, THE BOYS, etc.) In 2019, he started as the Manager of Development under the production deal of Glenn Geller (former President of CBS Studios) and then went on to develop with Howard Gordon and Alex Gansa (Creators of HOMELAND, 24) under their overall production deal with Sony. He’s Co-Founder of The Creators Writing Room with Lee Aronsohn (Co-Creator TWO AND A HALF MEN, Exec. Producer BIG BANG THEORY) where they teach writers how to pitch their own shows, and hold free zoom webinars with other industry Pros. Jason is a former Management Consultant (don’t ask him about it - too much PTSD), and served in the Peace Corps in Albania. He’s traveled to 50+ countries and has one roommate, Maggie, who walks on all-fours and doesn’t pay any rent.

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

  • Quarterfinalist: Oct 15, 2021

  • Semifinalist: Nov 15, 2021

  • Finalist: Dec 15, 2021

  • Winner: Jan 15, 2022

https://www.wescreenplay.com/wetv/#

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SPRING 2022 RESIDENCY

Sundress Academy for the Arts

DEADLINE: September 15, 2021

INFO: The Sundress Academy for the Arts (SAFTA) is now accepting applications for short-term writing residencies in all genres—poetry, fiction, nonfiction, playwriting, screenwriting, journalism, academic writing, and more—for their spring residency period which runs from January 3 to May 15, 2022. These residencies are designed to give artists time and space to complete their creative projects in a quiet and productive environment.

Each farmhouse residency costs $300/week, which includes a room of one’s own, as well as access to our communal kitchen, bathroom, office, and living space, plus wireless internet.

Residencies in the Writers Coop are $150/week and include your own private dry cabin as well as access to the farmhouse amenities. Because of the low cost, we are rarely able to offer scholarships for Writers Coop residents.

Residents will stay at the SAFTA farmhouse, located on a working farm on a 45-acre wooded plot in a Tennessee “holler” perfect for hiking, camping, and nature walks. The farmhouse is also just a half-hour from downtown Knoxville, an exciting and creative city that is home to a thriving artistic community. SAFTA is ideal for writers looking for a rural retreat with urban amenities. 

SAFTA’s residencies, which also include free access to workshops, readings, and events, offer a unique and engaging experience. Residents can participate in local writing workshops, lead their own workshops, and even have the opportunity to learn life skills like gardening and animal care.

As part of our commitment to anti-racist work, we are now also using a reparations payment model for our farmhouse residencies which consists of the following:

  1. 3 reparations weeks of equally divided payments for Black and/or Indigenous identifying writers at $150/week

  2. 3 discounted weeks of equally divided payments for BIPOC writers at $250/week

  3. 6 equitable weeks of equally divided payments at $300/week

Black and/or Indigenous identifying writers are also invited to apply for a $350 support grant to help cover the costs of food, travel, childcare, and/or any other needs while they are at the residency. We are currently able to offer two of these grants per residency period (spring/summer/fall). If you would like to donate to expand this funding, you may do so here.

For the Spring 2022 residency period, SAFTA will be offering the following fellowships only: 

  • LGBTQIA+ Fellowship: one full and one 50% fellowship for writers who identify as LGBTQIA+

  • Dr. Kristi Larkin Havens Memorial Fellowship for Service to the Community

  • Black & Indigenous Writers Fellowships: one full fellowship for Black and/or Indigenous identifying writers

LGBTQIA+ Fellowship (Spring 2022): This year’s judge for the LGBTQIA fellowships is Nicole Shawan Junior, a counter-storyteller who was bred in the bass-heavy beat and scratch of Brooklyn, where the cool of beautiful inner-city life barely survived crack cocaine’s burn. Her work appears in The RumpusSLICE MagazineKweli JournalCURAZORAGay MagThe Feminist Wire, and elsewhere. Nicole has received residencies and fellowships from Hedgebrook, PERIPLUS, New York Foundation for the Arts, Lambda Literary, RADAR Productions and the San Francisco Public Library’s James C. Hormel LGBTQIA Center, and more. Her work has received support from Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship, Hurston/Wright Writers Week, Tin House Summer Workshop, VONA, Carnegie Hall, Sundress Academy for the Arts, and others. Nicole is the founder of Roots. Wounds. Words. (a literary arts revolution that serves BIPOC storytellers), editor in chief of Black Femme Collective, has guest edited for The Rumpus, and serves on the editorial board at Sundress Publications.

Dr. Kristi Larkin Havens Memorial Fellowship for Service to the Community (Spring 2022 or Fall 2022): Dr. Kristi Larkin Havens served as the Community Outreach Director for Sundress Academy for the Arts and then as the Vice President of the Board of Directors for Sundress Publications for over six years. She earned a Ph.D. in English from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, where she was a Lecturer and the Assistant Director of Undergraduate Studies. She was a photographer who served as a producer on films for several local competitions including The Knoxville 24-Hour Film Festival and the Grindhouse Grind-out. For many years she served as a coordinator for the Knoxville Girls Rock Camp, an organization dedicated to fostering inclusivity and creativity. For her, the arts were a natural venue for pursuing the aims of social justice. 

This fellowship will be awarded to a writer who has shown exceptional service to their own community through any of the following: volunteering, organizing, fundraising, board membership, etc. Fellowship winners will receive a one-week fully-funded residency the Sundress Academy for the Arts at Firefly Farms in Knoxville, TN for either the spring or fall of 2022. The spring residency period runs from January 3 to May 15, 2022, and the fall period runs from August 23-January 2, 2023.

Find out more about the application process at www.sundressacademyforthearts.com.

The application fee is waived for all BIPOC identifying writers. For all fellowship applications, the application fee will also be waived for those who demonstrate financial need; please state this in your application under the financial need section. Limited partial scholarships are also available to any applicant with financial need. 

https://sundressblog.com/2021/07/20/sundress-academy-for-the-arts-now-accepting-%E2%80%A8residency-applications-for-spring-2022/

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Mixed Mag

DEADLINE: September 15, 2021

INFO: Mixed Mag is an online multimedia publication dedicated to promoting creatives of color and celebrating our multiethnic/multicultural voices.

We’re accepting articles, think pieces, short stories, reviews and essays between 500-3000 words (sections include ART, FASHION, POLITICS, PROSE, TV/FILM/THEATER, MUSIC, FOOD, HEALTH/SEX/WELLNESS). Please read specific section requirements below: 

  • POETRY: Submit up to three poems. 

  • PROSE: Submit creative non-fiction, flash fiction or short stories between 500-3000 words.

  • TV, FILM & THEATER: Monologues must be 5 pages max. Plays/screenplays must be between 10-15 page max (this includes plays, films and web series). Short films or web series episodes must be no longer than 15 minutes. 

  • ART: Submit 10 photos/videos max for visual submissions. Please include an artist’s statement.

  • MUSIC: Send us your essays, albums reviews or original music links. Please include links to Soundcloud, Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Youtube, etc. as well as a paragraph about your submission. 

  • FOOD: Send us your food stories, recipes, conversations and good eats related to culture or ancestry. Please include photos and if sending a recipe, please include a paragraph explaining what this food means to you and your culture. 

  • FASHION: Submit articles, essays or reviews about clothing, accessories, upcoming designers, sustainable fashion and more. Also submit your own upcoming labels/lines with up to 10 photos/videos max and an artist statement. 

Please send your submissions to submissions@mixedmag.co

Please submit your written submission(s) in a word doc file, include what section you are submitting to in the email subject line and include a short 3rd person bio.

PUBLICATION RIGHTS: MixedMag reserves all rights to the author/creator. We just ask that you mention MixedMag as the original publisher of your piece, should it appear in another publication (i.e. This piece first appeared in the online publication MixedMag)

We are a volunteer-run magazine, so unfortunately we can’t pay contributors at this time, however we hope you will join our platform as we begin paving the way to promote, uplift and push your voices to the forefront.

https://mixedmag.co/about/

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THE MINORITY REPORT 2022

DIVERSO

DEADLINE: September 30, 2021

ENTRY FEE: $20

INFO: The Minority Report is an industry-vetted fellowship program for the top diverse screenwriters enrolled in undergraduate or graduate educational institutions (Class of 2021 Graduates are eligible). Made by students, for students, it's the first-ever initiative of its kind.

The contest is sponsored by DIVERSO, a student-run film nonprofit dedicated to changing the face of entertainment by empowering the underrepresented storytellers of the next generation.

At DIVERSO, we believe that long-term, systemic change in Hollywood starts at the student level: providing underrepresented student groups with exposure, resources, and connections in Hollywood that they may not otherwise have access to.

We offer an extensive professional platform to break into entertainment by connecting our Minority Report Fellows with top companies/executives/mentors and providing individualized guidance and stipend for career development.

Accepting Features and TV Pilots

Each year, the Minority Report Fellowship program changes. Below, you'll find the benefits afforded to the Fellows last season. 

LAST SEASON'S BENEFITS

1. Distribution to Agencies: The Minority Report was sent out to over a dozen agents and managers at different companies from Anonymous Content to Paradigm to United Talent Agency.

2. Virtual Panels with Top Industry Professionals

  • Shaka King, JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH

  • Ryan Bergara, BUZZFEED: UNSOLVED

  • JD Dillard, STARWARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER

  • Dennis Liu, RAISING DION

3. General Meetings: Our fellows were set up on 5+ general meetings with executives from studios and production companies such as Plan B, Paramount, Universal, Big Beach, JuVee, Tornante, and more.

4. Mentorship: Fellows were matched with experienced writers in the industry based on their personalized style and experience. Mentors provided both career and script guidance. 

Industry Jury Members last season included:

  • Dede Gardner - President, Plan B Entertainment

  • Meredith Lavitt - Executive Director, Sundance Ignite

  • Ben Lopez - Executive Director, NALIP

  • Yahlin Chang - Writer, THE HANDMAID'S TALE

  • Michelle Sugihara - Executive Director, CAPE

  • Teresa Hsiao - Co-Creator, NORA FROM QUEENS

  • Joey Soloway - Creator, TRANSPARENT

  • Minhal Baig - Writer/Director, HALA

  • Megan Halpern - Vice President, The Black List

  • Darell Britt-Gibson - Actor, BARRY, JUST MERCY

  • Poorna Jagannathan - Actress, NEVER HAVE I EVER

  • Persia White - Actress, GIRLFRIENDS

https://writers.coverfly.com/competitions/view/the-minority-report

TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- AUGUST 2021

NICKELODEON WRITING PROGRAM

DEADLINE: August 1, 2021 at 11:59 pm PT

INFO: Founded in the year 2000, the Nickelodeon Writing Program is a full-time, paid, yearlong development Program for television comedy writers with unique voices and from underrepresented communities. Join us at the studio in Burbank for classes and workshops to sharpen your skills, executive mentorship and networking to build your professional relationships, and the opportunity to work in the iconic live-action and animation writers’ rooms at Nick.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to dedicate yourself to the craft of writing and build your career from the ground up. The Nick Writing Program is not a writing contest – It’s a launching pad for diverse and emerging creatives. If you bring the unique voice and innovative ideas for kids’ and family content, we’ll help you launch a career with all the tools you’ll need to succeed in the industry for years to come.

HOW TO APPLY: Our submission period runs July 1st to August 1st. All submissions must be completed by 11:59pm PST on August 1st. No late submissions will be considered. You must be 18 years or older, and eligible to work in the United States to participate. To apply, follow the link under the “Apply Online” section, fill out the application through our submission portal, and submit two scripts: One spec from our Accepted Shows List which gets updated every year (watch our social media channels for announcements), and one half-hour original comedy pilot. If you have previously applied to the Program and were not selected, you are welcome and encouraged to apply again with a new spec script for each submission period.

Step 1: Pick a Focus

When you pick a focus, it helps us curate your experience in the Program to better help you reach your goals as a television writer. Picking a focus does not mean your time in the Program will be spent exclusively working on content for this audience, but simply helps us gauge your interests and set you on a course for success. Your spec and pilot submissions do not need to adhere to these audience age groups in any way.

  • Kids’ Content (Audience Age 6-11): This age group is Nickelodeon’s bread and butter. Most of Nickelodeon’s most iconic live-action and animated shows are developed for this demographic including SpongeBob SquarePants, Danger Force, and The Loud House. 

  • Preschool Content (Audience Age 2-6): The Preschool age group (including “bridge” content for tots moving into early elementary school age) loves to laugh and play along with their content. They’re smart, engaged, and always ready for new shows to watch like Paw Patrol, Ryan’s Mystery Playdate, and Baby Shark’s Big Show. 

  • Preteen/Young Adult (Audience Age 11-17): Nickelodeon shares its home in the ViacomCBS Kids & Family Group with our partners at Awesomeness who cater to a tween and teen audience. We’ll partner with ATV and the creators of Nick’s shows for a slightly older audience like Side Hustle, Drama Club, and iCarly to make this experience the right one for you. 

Step 2: Script Preparation

All applicants must submit a SPEC SCRIPT and ORIGINAL COMEDY PILOT that adhere to the following guidelines:

  • Must be based on a television series from the Accepted Shows List (spec only).

  • Typed in standard Final Draft (or equivalent) script format.

  • In black type, 12pt courier style font.

  • Do not upload a cover page with your script.

The following information should be included in the header/footer of your spec script on the first or all pages: 

  • Name of the show (center of the header).

  • Title of the episode (center of the footer).

  • File name should include only the name of your show and episode (Do not include your name or your submission will not be considered).

  • Do not put your name anywhere on the script, file, or file name.

THE FOLLOWING MATERIALS WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED: Feature-length screenplays, reality-based comedies or dramas, treatments, outlines, plays, short stories, books, graphics, magazine/newspaper articles, poems, headshots, audio/video tapes, or other digital media. If it's not on the Accepted Shows list or your comedy pilot, please do not submit it!
 
Please note: Submissions that do not adhere to these guidelines will not be considered.

Step 3: Accepted Shows

  • A.P. Bio

  • Atlanta

  • Awkwafina is Nora from Queens

  • Baby-Sitters Club (2020)

  • Big Mouth

  • Black-ish

  • Bob <3 Abishola

  • Bob's Burgers

  • Breeders

  • Central Park

  • Dickinson

  • Dollface

  • Family Reunion

  • Gentefied

  • Grown-ish

  • Harley Quinn

  • Letterkenny

  • Mixed-ish

  • Mr. Iglesias

  • Mr. Mayor

  • Mythic Quest

  • Never Have I Ever

  • PEN15

  • Raven's Home

  • Rick and Morty

  • Saved by the Bell (2020)

  • South Park

  • Tacoma FD

  • Ted Lasso

  • The Conners

  • The Goldbergs

  • The Great North

  • The Last O.G.

  • The Neighborhood

  • The Unicorn

  • What We Do in the Shadows

  • Woke

  • Young Sheldon

Step 4: Apply Online

SUBMISSION MATERIALS TO INCLUDE:

  • Completed application questions - some of these are long, so start your application early.

  • One spec script in .pdf format (this applies to both individual writers and writing teams).

  • One original comedy pilot in .pdf format (this applies to both individual writers and writing teams).

  • One-page resume in .pdf format.

  • Completed and digitally signed Submission Release form and Schedule A for each script. These can be downloaded from the link above the document upload section.

COMPLETE YOUR ONLINE APPLICATION

Beginning July 1st, you can start your application for the Nickelodeon Writing Program. Submissions must be uploaded before 11:59pm PT on August 1st.

  • All submission materials should be completed and uploaded to the Nickelodeon online submission platform Coverfly. All necessary forms can be downloaded via links embedded in the application.

  • Once in the platform, fill in the form with your "Project Info" about your spec from the Accepted Shows List.

  • Projects written by writing teams should only be submitted once. On the first page of the checkout form, writers will have the option to add one additional writer by clicking on the plus sign (+) next to the name fields.

  • Upload a .pdf of your spec script following the provided instructions. Leave off all identifiable information. At this stage, you will be asked to provide a few additional details about the script.

  • Choose the Program "Package" and "Add to Cart."

  • Give us some "Additional Info" including your contact details, a signed Schedule A form, and a signed Release form (one for each member in the case of writing teams) for each script you submit (spec and pilot). Both forms can be downloaded from the link above the document upload section.

  • We'll also need a resume in .pdf format. Please be sure to fill out all required fields and answer all questions or you will not be able to submit your application.

  • Finally, "Check Out" (at no cost) to complete your submission.

  • Don't wait until the last minute! We advise that you give yourself at least two weeks prior to the August 1st deadline to complete your submission. No exceptions will be made for late submissions regardless of circumstances.

  • If you are experiencing problems with the online application, please contact the technical support team at Coverfly by scrolling to the bottom of their site homepage and clicking "Contact."

https://www.nickanimation.com/writing-program

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NRDC CLIMATE STORYTELLING FELLOWSHIP

NRDC / The Black List / The Redford Center

DEADLINE: August 25, 2021

INFO: The Black List is pleased to partner with NRDC’s Rewrite the Future program and The Redford Center to offer financial grants and creative support for scripts telling stories with new perspectives on climate change.

The Black List, NRDC and The Redford Center will award $10,000 to each of three screenwriters to support revision of a feature screenplay or pilot with significant climate crisis and/or climate solution themes.

In addition, NRDC will connect each fellowship recipient with the following professionals for feedback and guidance on their scripts:

  • A credited professional screenwriter with an interest in climate storytelling (mentors include Sarah Treem, Scott Z. Burns and Naren Shankar)

  • A climate story consultant from NRDC’s Rewrite the Future program to advise on effective approaches to climate storytelling that are entertaining and impactful

  • As applicable, an NRDC expert to advise on climate issues highlighted in the script.

  • After receiving these consultations, Fellows have six (6) months to complete a revision of their script. Revised scripts may be reviewed for development by prominent studios, agencies and/or production companies including Hyperobject Industries, Madica Productions, Participant, UTA and WME.

  • At the end of the Fellowship, each recipient will provide a designated representative of the NRDC with a revised version of their script along with a short reflection on how the grant has been used to advance their work and/or impacted their career.

The first 50 writers that opt in with a qualified screenplay or pilot that has not been previously evaluated by the Black List will receive one free month of hosting and one free evaluation. If you meet these criteria when you opt in, you will receive a notification.

Each fellowship recipient will retain complete ownership of their work.

In order to apply for the fellowship, the script MUST include climate in the story in a meaningful way that involves major character(s), events and plot or subplot(s). The climate angle should be more than just a backdrop or setting.

WHAT CONSTITUTES CLIMATE STORYTELLING...

The script can be any genre but climate change and solutions must be a main driver of the action and affect important choices made by characters.

The climate crisis intersects with a wide variety of topics so a successful climate script could incorporate impacts and/or solutions in many areas:

  • Stories that personalize climate issues like environmental racism and climate injustice, climate disruption of food, water, public health, war/national security, natural disasters, corporate malfeasance, immigration, political scandal, conspicuous consumption, deforestation, wildlife and wilderness, pollution, sea-level rise, and other regional effects.

  • Stories that show the impacts of the climate crisis on people and communities, disproportionate effects on BIPOC frontline communities; personal impacts on relationships, emotions/psychology, romance, family planning, jobs, and career choices; facing the ethical dilemmas of a fossil fuel economy; becoming part of the solution through personal/community/political action, education, politics and journalism, activism, etc.

  • Stories that feature people discovering and engaging in climate solutions, including “green” innovations in farming and food, public health, law and policy, energy, transportation, science and high-tech, business and finance, building and product design, waste management, circular economy, community-based innovation like greening neighborhoods, food justice, urban farms, etc.

  • Stories about thought and action leaders meeting the immense challenge of solving the crisis and transitioning to a just, equitable, decarbonized economy.

  • Stories that show alternative futures, beyond the cliches of climate disaster/dystopia.

  • Scripts that highlight a new perspective on the human relationship with the planet that:

    • Engenders hope and illustrates solutions

    • Addresses human agency

    • Revises the relationship of “taking from” or carelessly destroying ecosystems to “caretaking”, or sustaining ecosystems

Note: For TV pilot submissions, applicants who make the short list must also provide a long synopsis or treatment describing the primary story arcs and how the climate themes will be developed throughout the show.

THE SELECTION PROCESS: Writers who meet the submission requirements will be able to opt into consideration via the Black List website until August 25, 2021. Up to 15 writers will be invited, based on the strength of their scripts as determined by the Black List, to submit a one-page personal statement and professional resume. From those submissions, three fellowship recipients will be selected no later than September 21, 2021.

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/86

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FELLOWSHIP FOR DISABLED SCREENWRITERS

Inevitable Foundation

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: The Screenwriting Fellowship gives disabled screenwriters $25,000 and bespoke mentorship to advance their careers and projects.

We started the Inevitable Foundation Screenwriting Fellowship to substantially increase the number of disabled screenwriters working in film and TV. People with disabilities make up over 20% of the U.S. population but represent only 2% of characters on screen and less than 1% of writers behind the screen. Representation matters and film and TV present a key vehicle to counteract the often negative perceptions that surround disabilities.

How much is the Fellowship for? 

Fellows receive $25,000, which is meant to cover 4-6 months of living expenses. 

How can I use the Fellowship money? 

The money is unrestricted—you can use it to cover living expenses and other project-related fees—which is intended to give you the time and space over 4-6 months to further develop your projects. 

Is the Fellowship taxable income? 

If you receive a Fellowship, we recommend you speak to an accountant to make a determination on the tax status of the Fellowship money. 

 Who is eligible for the Fellowship? 

The Fellowship is for any screenwriter who meets the following conditions: 

  • Self-identifies as disabled.

  • 18 years of age or older.

  • Dedicated to or currently pursuing a career in screenwriting.

  • Currently or previously has worked in the entertainment industry.

  • Demonstrates that without the Fellowship or similar financial support, you are unable to advance your own full-time career as a screenwriter.

What information does the Application ask for?

The Application requires the following information:

  • A completed script. Scripts featuring authentic disabled characters are a plus but not required.

  • Project Logline: Describe the crux of your film (75 words or less).

  • Project Synopsis: A brief summary of a completed screenplay's core concept, major plot points, and main character arcs (500 words or less).   

  • Personal Statement: In 500 words or less, your personal statement should answer two questions. 1) What stories do you want to tell and why? 2) What does disability representation mean to you?

  • Biography: Write your bio in third person (150 words or less).

  • Resume or CV

  • Summaries of other projects you have completed or are working on. We ask that at least one of these projects (past, current or future) have disabled characters at the forefront.

What type of material do you accept? 

We only accept original material (films and TV shows), which may include material you own the rights to and are adapting into a project. 

We do not accept spec episodes or any material you do not have the rights to.  

What is the application process for the Fellowship? 

The application process has three rounds.  

ROUND 1

Focuses on selecting Applicants who possess professional screenwriting skills, which is a prerequisite for the Fellowship. 

Our reading committee will review all applications on a rolling basis and then invite a select group to the second round. 

ROUND 2

Focuses on advancing Applicants who are talent, ambitious, working professionally and have a passion for disability representation.

ROUND 3

Focuses on learning more about the Applicant during an hour-long interview.

ROUND 4

Takes everything into accounts from the first three rounds and our Selection Advisory Committee makes their final recommendations.

A questionnaire will determine if you are eligible to apply for the Screenwriting Fellowship. Complete the questions below and we will notify you about your eligibility via email within 24 hours of completing the application.

https://inevitable.foundation/eligibility-questionnaire

TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- JULY 2021

Element Pictures NI Writers Award 2021

Element Pictures x BBC Writersroom x BBC Drama Commissioning

DEADLINE: July 8, 2021

INFO: Element Pictures (Normal People, The Favourite), BBC Writersroom and BBC Drama Commissioning are looking for the next generation of television writers who have bold and original stories to tell.

Open to both emerging and established writers, this programme will offer the opportunity to develop an original series idea for BBC One, BBC Two or BBC Three with Element Pictures. Four writers will be chosen to write a treatment commission; from those four, one idea will then be developed into a full pilot script.

This scheme is looking for stories that haven’t yet been told about Northern Ireland: the emotionally powerful, thought-provoking, inspiring, celebratory, relevant or surprising narratives that reflect the variety and diversity of life there today – and also speak to a global audience.

WHO CAN APPLY?

To be eligible for this scheme, you must be able to represent Northern Ireland with authenticity (for example you may be from there or have lived/worked there). You must also be confident that you can demonstrate a clear understanding of the culture, telling relevant stories in a fresh and original way.

This scheme is aimed at writers who have already gained some experience in crafting stories, and are ready to step up to developing a series idea. You must have had at least one professionally produced fiction script, at least 15 minutes long, for television, radio, podcast, theatre or film.

Writers with an original idea already in development (beyond treatment stage) with BBC Drama Commissioning, or those who have already had an original scripted series broadcast by the BBC, are not eligible to apply. However, writers in development outside the BBC are welcome to apply.

All applicants must be aged 18 or over, and resident in the UK or Ireland at the time of application and for the duration of the programme.

Individual writers and writing partnership of two (max) may enter. For writing partnerships, both writers must fulfil all the criteria.

HOW TO APPLY: Applications must be made through the BBC Writersroom online submission system – a link to the application form can be found at the bottom of this page.

To apply, you must submit:

  • An original drama or comedy-drama spec script written for television, film, radio, podcast, stage or online platform which should be at least 30 pages in length. Please ensure that the script is properly formatted, and that the writer(s) name(s) and any other identifying information has been removed to allow the script to be read anonymously

  • A pitch outlining a potential series or serial idea for BBC One, BBC Two or BBC Three, which should not exceed 2 pages

  • A one-page writing CV to include a short personal statement introducing yourself as a writer

Only original work can be accepted; your sample and idea may not be based wholly or in part, on the work of any other person, whether known, published, produced, or not, i.e. adaptations will not be accepted.

Bearing in mind the current, competitive TV landscape both in the UK and internationally, the series idea should be as distinctive as possible.

The writing sample should not be related to the original series that you want to pitch if selected, but ideally have tonal similarities to your series idea.

For writing partnerships, the writing sample and the pitch must be the work of both writers.

HOW SUBMISSIONS WILL BE ASSESSED:

  • Stage 1: All submissions will be read and assessed by a panel of experienced readers. Preliminary rounds of the sift will be primarily based on the writing sample. Submissions that reach full read stage will also be evaluated on the series idea pitch. For the writing sample, the readers will be looking for originality and authenticity.

  • Stage 2: Eight writers will be longlisted and invited to a one-day workshop on 28 September 2021.*

  • Stage 3: The workshop attendees will be invited to submit a revised series pitch, and attend an interview with Element Pictures & BBC Writersroom between 18 – 22 October 2021.*

  • Stage 4: Four ideas will be commissioned to treatment by Element Pictures.

  • Stage 5: Element Pictures will commission a pilot script from one writer or writing partnership. 

Your writing sample should be the best showcase of your writing talent and voice. We are looking for unique, well-crafted scripts that give us something that we haven’t seen before.

Through this process, we hope to find boldunexpected and fresh stories that celebrate the variety and diversity of life in Northern Ireland but still speak to a global audience. While not ruling anything out, we are particularly interested in contemporary relationships, thrillers and grounded genre pieces. We are open to experiment with length, structure and format, but would prefer series ideas to singles or telemovies. Tonally, anything goes, although we always appreciate it when those with darker themes offer some light, hope or humour. We welcome ideas for BBC Three, as much as BBC One & BBC Two.

* Applicants must be available for interview and workshop if selected on the dates stated. Any writers not able to attend on the selected dates may forfeit their place.

FEES:

The writers selected for commission will be paid the minimum script fee as agreed by the WGGB/PMA/PACT agreement:

  • The treatment commissions will be paid at 10% of the script fee (i.e. £1,332 for 60 minute series ideas), deductible from the script fee. Writers will be commissioned to write a minimum of two drafts of the treatment.

  • The pilot script commission will be paid at a rate of £13,320 for 60 minutes (less the treatment fee). The writer(s) will be commissioned to write a minimum of three drafts of their original script.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/opportunities/element-pictures-ni-writers-award-2021

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2021 BLACK LIST X WOMEN IN FILM EPISODIC LAB

The Black List x Women In Film

DEADLINE: July 22, 2021

INFO: The Black List and Women In Film will invite six to eight promising non-professional television writers who are of an underrepresented gender (women, NB/GNC, and/or trans, and others) to the Lab. The Lab will run twice weekly for four weeks beginning on Tuesday, October 5, 2021 and will consist of script development, peer workshopping sessions and Master Classes with established writers and industry executives. Lab participants will have their final pilots read by agencies and networks. Writers who are Women In Film members can also submit their script directly to WIF. Sessions will be held on Zoom until further notice.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS:

The Program is subject to the following requirements:

  • You must post an episodic pilot script on www.blcklst.com (“Site”) for at least one week during the Program Submission Period and opt in to the Program Submission Call.

  • Such script must be wholly original to you.

  • You must be the sole and exclusive author of the script submitted for consideration.

  • You must be competent to contract and over the age of 18.

  • You must not have earned more than $25,000 in the aggregate in connection with any

    prior television writing work.

  • If the script is written by a team consisting of one or more writers, each member of that

    writing team must comply with these Submission Requirements, including agreeing to

    the Submission Agreement as described below.

  • You must agree to these Submission Requirements, all terms relating to the Program

    posted on the Site, and the Submission Agreement, which governs the submission of your script. The Submission Agreement includes important terms and conditions (including arbitration of disputes) you should read before accepting.

  • If selected for participation in the Program, you must be available to participate in the Program online during the month of October, 2021. Please note, in the event you are selected but are not able to attend the Program on such dates, The Black List will have the right, but not the obligation to offer participation in the Program to someone else.

  • If requested, you must submit the following, which are also governed by the Submission Agreement by a date to be determined by The Black List:

    • a one-page biography and personal statement;

    • a resume;

    • contact and other personal information; and

    • signed originals of the Submission Agreement

IMPORTANT DATES:

  • Submission Period Closes July 22, 2021

  • Short List Writers Notified July 23, 2021

  • Personal Statements Due July 30, 2021

  • Zoom Interviews August 30-31, 2021

  • Final Participants Notified September 1, 2021

  • Lab Begins October 5, 2021

* In order for new script evaluations to qualify for consideration for the Lab, they must be purchased by midnight on the Evaluations Deadline. Please note, purchase of an evaluation is not required for consideration to participate in the Episodic Lab.

Please note, applicants can apply through either the Black List or Women In Film, however instructions are different for each platform. Women In Film applicants must be active WIF Members in good standing and can submit directly via WIF.

THE SELECTION PROCESS

The selection process will work like this: Up to 25 writers will be invited, based on the strength of their pilot scripts, to submit a one-page personal statement and professional resume. From those submissions, up to 15 writers will be invited to interview. From those interviews, 6-8 writers will be selected by the Black List and Women In Film to participate in the Lab.

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/97

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Nickelodeon Writing Program

DEADLINE: August 1, 2021 at 11:59 pm PT

INFO: Founded in the year 2000, the Nickelodeon Writing Program is a full-time, paid, yearlong development Program for television comedy writers with unique voices and from underrepresented communities. Join us at the studio in Burbank for classes and workshops to sharpen your skills, executive mentorship and networking to build your professional relationships, and the opportunity to work in the iconic live-action and animation writers’ rooms at Nick.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to dedicate yourself to the craft of writing and build your career from the ground up. The Nick Writing Program is not a writing contest – It’s a launching pad for diverse and emerging creatives. If you bring the unique voice and innovative ideas for kids’ and family content, we’ll help you launch a career with all the tools you’ll need to succeed in the industry for years to come.

HOW TO APPLY: Our submission period runs July 1st to August 1st. All submissions must be completed by 11:59pm PST on August 1st. No late submissions will be considered. You must be 18 years or older, and eligible to work in the United States to participate. To apply, follow the link under the “Apply Online” section, fill out the application through our submission portal, and submit two scripts: One spec from our Accepted Shows List which gets updated every year (watch our social media channels for announcements), and one half-hour original comedy pilot. If you have previously applied to the Program and were not selected, you are welcome and encouraged to apply again with a new spec script for each submission period.

Step 1: Pick a Focus

When you pick a focus, it helps us curate your experience in the Program to better help you reach your goals as a television writer. Picking a focus does not mean your time in the Program will be spent exclusively working on content for this audience, but simply helps us gauge your interests and set you on a course for success. Your spec and pilot submissions do not need to adhere to these audience age groups in any way.

  • Kids’ Content (Audience Age 6-11): This age group is Nickelodeon’s bread and butter. Most of Nickelodeon’s most iconic live-action and animated shows are developed for this demographic including SpongeBob SquarePants, Danger Force, and The Loud House. 

  • Preschool Content (Audience Age 2-6): The Preschool age group (including “bridge” content for tots moving into early elementary school age) loves to laugh and play along with their content. They’re smart, engaged, and always ready for new shows to watch like Paw Patrol, Ryan’s Mystery Playdate, and Baby Shark’s Big Show. 

  • Preteen/Young Adult (Audience Age 11-17): Nickelodeon shares its home in the ViacomCBS Kids & Family Group with our partners at Awesomeness who cater to a tween and teen audience. We’ll partner with ATV and the creators of Nick’s shows for a slightly older audience like Side Hustle, Drama Club, and iCarly to make this experience the right one for you. 

Step 2: Script Preparation

All applicants must submit a SPEC SCRIPT and ORIGINAL COMEDY PILOT that adhere to the following guidelines:

  • Must be based on a television series from the Accepted Shows List (spec only).

  • Typed in standard Final Draft (or equivalent) script format.

  • In black type, 12pt courier style font.

  • Do not upload a cover page with your script.

The following information should be included in the header/footer of your spec script on the first or all pages: 

  • Name of the show (center of the header).

  • Title of the episode (center of the footer).

  • File name should include only the name of your show and episode (Do not include your name or your submission will not be considered).

  • Do not put your name anywhere on the script, file, or file name.

THE FOLLOWING MATERIALS WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED: Feature-length screenplays, reality-based comedies or dramas, treatments, outlines, plays, short stories, books, graphics, magazine/newspaper articles, poems, headshots, audio/video tapes, or other digital media. If it's not on the Accepted Shows list or your comedy pilot, please do not submit it!
 
Please note: Submissions that do not adhere to these guidelines will not be considered.

Step 3: Accepted Shows

  • A.P. Bio

  • Atlanta

  • Awkwafina is Nora from Queens

  • Baby-Sitters Club (2020)

  • Big Mouth

  • Black-ish

  • Bob <3 Abishola

  • Bob's Burgers

  • Breeders

  • Central Park

  • Dickinson

  • Dollface

  • Family Reunion

  • Gentefied

  • Grown-ish

  • Harley Quinn

  • Letterkenny

  • Mixed-ish

  • Mr. Iglesias

  • Mr. Mayor

  • Mythic Quest

  • Never Have I Ever

  • PEN15

  • Raven's Home

  • Rick and Morty

  • Saved by the Bell (2020)

  • South Park

  • Tacoma FD

  • Ted Lasso

  • The Conners

  • The Goldbergs

  • The Great North

  • The Last O.G.

  • The Neighborhood

  • The Unicorn

  • What We Do in the Shadows

  • Woke

  • Young Sheldon

Step 4: Apply Online

SUBMISSION MATERIALS TO INCLUDE:

  • Completed application questions - some of these are long, so start your application early.

  • One spec script in .pdf format (this applies to both individual writers and writing teams).

  • One original comedy pilot in .pdf format (this applies to both individual writers and writing teams).

  • One-page resume in .pdf format.

  • Completed and digitally signed Submission Release form and Schedule A for each script. These can be downloaded from the link above the document upload section.

COMPLETE YOUR ONLINE APPLICATION

Beginning July 1st, you can start your application for the Nickelodeon Writing Program. Submissions must be uploaded before 11:59pm PT on August 1st.

  • All submission materials should be completed and uploaded to the Nickelodeon online submission platform Coverfly. All necessary forms can be downloaded via links embedded in the application.

  • Once in the platform, fill in the form with your "Project Info" about your spec from the Accepted Shows List.

  • Projects written by writing teams should only be submitted once. On the first page of the checkout form, writers will have the option to add one additional writer by clicking on the plus sign (+) next to the name fields.

  • Upload a .pdf of your spec script following the provided instructions. Leave off all identifiable information. At this stage, you will be asked to provide a few additional details about the script.

  • Choose the Program "Package" and "Add to Cart."

  • Give us some "Additional Info" including your contact details, a signed Schedule A form, and a signed Release form (one for each member in the case of writing teams) for each script you submit (spec and pilot). Both forms can be downloaded from the link above the document upload section.

  • We'll also need a resume in .pdf format. Please be sure to fill out all required fields and answer all questions or you will not be able to submit your application.

  • Finally, "Check Out" (at no cost) to complete your submission.

  • Don't wait until the last minute! We advise that you give yourself at least two weeks prior to the August 1st deadline to complete your submission. No exceptions will be made for late submissions regardless of circumstances.

  • If you are experiencing problems with the online application, please contact the technical support team at Coverfly by scrolling to the bottom of their site homepage and clicking "Contact."

https://www.nickanimation.com/writing-program

TV / WEB SERIES -- JUNE 2021

2022 Disney General Entertainment Writing Program

Walt Disney Television

DEADLINE: June 7, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. PST

INFO: The primary goal is to staff Program Writers on Disney General Entertainment Content (DGE) series as staff writers during the program year. Staffing is not guaranteed. The twelve-month program is tentatively set to begin in January 2022 and end in January of the following year.

Please note, time frames are subject to change. For the first few months of the Program, writers participate in a professional development curriculum designed to better prepare them for staffing consideration, including developing, writing, and polishing at least one (1) original pilot script to be used as a staffing sample. The Program also provides engagement with executives, producers and credentialed writers, designed to facilitate relationships that can prove invaluable in developing a television writing career. Additional past activities have included: workshops led by veteran television writers, producers and Program alumni and networking mixers with executives.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS

Applicants must be able to legally work in the United States and be at least twenty-one (21) years of age by December 1, 2021. Entertainment industry experience is not required but is strongly recommended. Those applying must fully complete an online application and submissions package, including uploading the following seven (7) items; eight (8) if you are opting in to be considered for the Boone Scholarship:

1) SCRIPT ONE: ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPT capturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on DGE. This will be the primary script for consideration of your application. It cannot be changed or replaced after submission. This sample must not have been submitted in a previous application.

2) EXHIBIT “A”: SCRIPT ONE SUMMARY FORM

3) SCRIPT TWO: SECONDARY ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPT capturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation

samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on DGE. This sample may have been submitted in a previous application and will receive the same score as before.

4) EXHIBIT “B”: SCRIPT TWO SUMMARY FORM

5) RESUME (two pages or less) outlining chronological salaried employment (which may include entertainment and non-entertainment positions). Only list jobs or positions where compensation was received, with the exception of entertainment industry internships and full- time volunteer work at non-profits. Positions must have been held within the past 15 years. Please also list any courses or training you have taken to develop your craft as a writer. Please do not list undergraduate coursework.

6) STAFFING PITCH (no more than 1500 characters): “Pitch” yourself as a potential staff writer on a current series (broadcast, cable, or streaming) at DGE. Before completing this section, please make sure you have a solid command of the breadth of programming across DGE and Disney+, as well as the particular show you are pitching yourself for; accepted series include both those confirmed to return for the 2021-22 season and those ending in the 2020-21 season. In your pitch, please specify: 1) why you think you would be a good fit for the particular show you selected, 2) how you identify with that show (whether it’s through a

character, series beat, series storyline, series location, premise, etc.), and 3) what you think you could add to this particular writers room. The pitch should address why you’re a fit, and not why you like the show or its impact.

7) PERSONAL ESSAY (no more than 3000 characters): a story from your life experience that conveys your unique perspective and/or multi-cultural sensibility.

8) BOONE SCHOLARSHIP PITCH (if applicable): If you opt in to be considered for the Eunetta T. Boone Comedy Writers Scholarship, please answer the following prompt in 1500 characters or less: Please share why you are applying for the Boone Scholarship. Specifically, share how familiar you are with Eunetta T. Boone’s life and work, your connection to the shows she ran, and, if selected for the scholarship, how you plan to honor Ms. Boone’s legacy in a Disney Channel writers room.

https://airtable.com/shr7yGLhOqg3ViDtc?fbclid=IwAR2jIf_EGB-01uUwHUoW_bcwpGaQmSc4HGh-JBTOUNlY5WehXjYy28qetwI

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Mixed Mag

DEADLINE: June 10, 2021

INFO: Mixed Mag, an online multimedia publication dedicated to promoting creatives of color and celebrating multiethnic/multicultural voices, is accepting articles, think pieces, short stories, reviews and essays between 500-3000 words (sections include ART, FASHION, POLITICS, PROSE, TV/FILM/THEATER, MUSIC, FOOD, HEALTH/SEX/WELLNESS).

Please read specific section requirements below: 

  • POETRY: Submit up to three poems. 

  • PROSE: Submit creative non-fiction, flash fiction or short stories between 500-3000 words.

  • TV, FILM & THEATER: Monologues must be 5 pages max. Plays/screenplays must be between 10-15 page max (this includes plays, films and web series). Short films or web series episodes must be no longer than 15 minutes. 

  • ART: Submit 10 photos/videos max for visual submissions. Please include an artist’s statement.

  • MUSIC: Send us your essays, albums reviews or original music links. Please include links to Soundcloud, Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Youtube, etc. as well as a paragraph about your submission. 

  • FOOD: Send us your food stories, recipes, conversations and good eats related to culture or ancestry. Please include photos and if sending a recipe, please include a paragraph explaining what this food means to you and your culture. 

  • FASHION: Submit articles, essays or reviews about clothing, accessories, upcoming designers, sustainable fashion and more. Also submit your own upcoming labels/lines with up to 10 photos/videos max and an artist statement. 

Please send your submissions to submissions@mixedmag.co

https://mixedmag.co/about/

TV / WEB SERIES -- MAY 2021

TV PILOT SCREENWRITING COMPETITION

Launch Pad

DEADLINE: May 9, 2021

INFO: The Launch Pad Competitions have led to more signings, success stories and careers than any other screenwriting competition. With nearly a decade of experience in promoting up-and-coming writers, The Launch Pad Competition has firmly established itself as the premier hub for Hollywood to discover fresh voices and new ideas.  We advocate for all of our Top 100 finalists, working with them to share their work with the right industry members to advance their career. 

Our prestigious juries of industry members include managers, agents, producers and executives at companies across Hollywood. We also offer exclusive partnerships with management and production companies to give writers an extra leg up. 

Through these partnerships, as well as our exclusive mentorship opportunities, we seek to provide as many avenues towards success as possible.  No competition will do more to help all of their finalists take the next steps in their careers, and no competition has had as much success in helping writers break into the industry. Enter now for a chance to join this tradition of Launch Pad success.

We are committed to helping writers take meaningful steps in their career, and there is nothing more important in developing your craft than thorough, in-depth notes from a trusted source. We are proud to offer our Feedback Notes program, providing 1-2 pages of in-depth notes on your competition entry, with insight into the story, characters, writing and commercial potential.

https://tblaunchpad.com/competitions/pilot/

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WRITERS’ ACCESS SUPPORT STAFF TRAINING PROGRAM

The Writers Guild Foundation

DEADLINE: May 10, 2021

INFO: TV writers and producers Tanya Saracho (Vida), Mike Royce (One Day at a Time), and Liz Hsiao Lan Alper (Day of the Dead) have partnered with the Writers Guild Foundation to launch the Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program, a first-of-its-kind initiative to support the full inclusion and employment of underrepresented groups in the television industry.

The program’s mission is to provide writers who are BIPOC, LGBTQ+, disabled writers, and writers over the age of 50, with tools and education to become a writers’ assistant and script coordinator, ultimately resulting in meaningful employment opportunities. These positions have historically been an invaluable way to learn the writing process first-hand, with the ultimate goal of getting a writing job.

Graduates of the program will be included in an ongoing list of trained writers’ assistants and script coordinators (WA/SCs) primarily from underrepresented groups, which will be made available to studios, networks and showrunners, in order to increase the pool of eligible hires. By offering this opportunity to writers who are typically excluded from the writers’ room, we hope to increase representation among television writers, and capture stories from all corners of the human experience.

Applicants will be reviewed by a committee of television creators, executive producers, and showrunners, and writers who previously worked as WA/SCs, including Saracho, Royce and Alper, along with Steven Canals (Pose), Sera Gamble (You), Jenniffer Gomez (Vida), Brigitte Muñoz-Liebowitz (Love Life), Lindsey Villarreal (Resident Evil), Prentice Penny (Insecure), Danielle Sanchez-Witzel (The Carmichael Show), Brian Tanen (Love, Victor), Liz Tigelaar (Little Fires Everywhere), Danny Chun (The Office) and Sanjay Shah (Central Park).

https://www.wgfoundation.org/programs/writers-access-support-staff-training-program

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NEW VOICES

Humanitas

DEADLINE / FEE: May 17, 2021 ($85)

INFO: NEW VOICES was created with the vision of discovering, developing and launching a new generation of talented writers under the mentorship of Hollywood showrunners and studio partners.

Every year, NEW VOICES selects up to six writers through a rigorous selection process. Candidates are asked to submit a script and participate in personal interviews. Once matched with a mentor, the writers have three months to further develop their script under their mentors’ supervision. After the script is honed, HUMANITAS sends it to a partnering studio or network executive. The winning writers are given recognition at the annual awards ceremony and are awarded with a $7,500 grant.

We are looking for well-written scripts with compelling stories and developed characters. Any genre is accepted as a 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay. We accept only one application and script per year. To be eligible a TV writer can have experience up to and including "Executive Story Editor", and feature writers cannot have earned more than $25,000 writing fictional work for film.

TIMELINE:

  • Announcement of semi-finalists and finalists: August 2021

  • Annual awards event: September 2021

A SIGNATURE HUMANITAS NEW VOICES STORY MUST:

  1. Challenge us to use our freedom to grow and develop.

  2. Confront us with our individual responsibility.

  3. Examine the consequences of our choices.

REQUIRED MATERIALS:

  • One original 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay (name redacted)

  • Logline

  • Brief synopsis (1 paragraph)

  • Release form

If you are selected as a Semifinalist, you must prepare:

  • Letter of interest (1 page, double-spaced)

  • Resume (no more than 2 pages)

  • Bio (1 page, double-spaced)

https://www.humanitasprize.org/new-voices

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2021 SCREENPLAY & TELEPLAY COMPETITION 

Austin Film Festival

DEADLINES / FEES:

  • Feature Screenplay: May 21, 2021 ($70)

  • Short Screenplay & Teleplay: May 21, 2021 ($60)

INFO: Austin Film Festival’s Script Competitions stand a league apart. No velvet ropes, no VIP areas. Join AFF in demystifying the festival experience and instead participating in a one of a kind, world class event.

AFF’s Competitions aren’t just about the winner either! We’re here for you the entire way. Not only do all entrants receive FREE “Reader Comments”, but all entrants receive registration discounts regardless of placement. Attendees of AFF’s world famous Writers Conference get access to over 175 panels, roundtables, pitch sessions, and workshops, covering every nook and cranny of the art, craft, and business of storytelling through film, television, and digital platforms.

However, unlike other screenplay competitions, your experience with AFF doesn’t end after making the first cut. Second Rounders, Semifinalists, and Finalists get larger discounts and have the opportunity to attend exclusive panels, intimate roundtable discussions, script reading workshops, and are afforded special access to industry professionals.

SCRIPT CATEGORIES:

If you would like to submit more than one script, you will need to submit a separate online form, entry fee, and PDF for each.

I - FEATURE SCREENPLAY COMPETITIONS

  • Drama Feature Screenplay presented by Writers Guild of America, East
    The category is open but not limited to feature drama scripts in genres such as historical, western, family, romance, horror, thriller, etc.

  • Comedy Feature Screenplay
    The category is open but not limited to feature comedy scripts in genres such as dark comedy, satire, family, animation, slapstick, horror, etc.

II - TELEPLAY COMPETITIONS

  • Drama Teleplay Pilot
    Open to any pilot script written in the one-hour or half-hour format for an original drama television series.

  • Comedy Teleplay Pilot 
    Open to any pilot script written in the half-hour or one-hour format for an original comedy television series.

  • Drama Teleplay Spec
    Open to any spec script for a current drama television show in the one-hour or half-hour format.

  • Comedy Teleplay Spec 
    Open to any spec script for a current comedy television show in the half-hour or one-hour format.

III - SHORT SCREENPLAY COMPETITION

  • Open to any narrative short script in all genres 5 to 40 pages in length. 

IV - SCRIPTED DIGTIAL SERIES COMPETITION

  • Deadlines & Pricing:
    Late: $45 thru May 21
    Extended: $50 thru July 9

  • Open to short-form episodic scripts intended for the web. Writers can submit 1-3 episodes of their series totaling no more than 30 pages.

V - SCRIPTED FICTION PODCAST COMPETITION

  • Deadline & Pricing: $40 thru July 9

  • Writers can submit up to three episodes 3-30 pages in length of their series with the overall content of the story not going longer than 90 pages. Writers should also include a series outline, detailing the events of the remaining episodes in the series.

VI - PLAYWRITING COMPETITION

  • Deadline & Pricing: $30 thru May 21

  • Open to full-length stage plays 60-90 pages or that could reasonably be performed within 90 minutes on stage.

ADDITIONAL AWARD AND FELLOWSHIP CATEGORIES

Additional Awards and Fellowship categories require an additional $20 entry fee per award and may not be applicable to all categories listed above. If you have already submitted and would like to add one of the following additional awards to your existing entry, please email us at screenplay@austinfilmfestival.com and include your Submission ID (found in your confirmation email).

Horror Award
The Horror Award is open to any feature horror script including dark suspense, thriller, sci-fi and macabre themes.

*This award can be added to the following category submissions: Drama Feature Screenplay, Comedy Feature Screenplay  


Sci-Fi Award
Open to science fiction, fantasy, horror, surrealism, myth/legend and fantastical storytelling.

*This award can be added to the following category submissions: Drama Feature Screenplay, Comedy Feature Screenplay  


Enderby Entertainment Award

The Enderby Entertainment Award category is open to feature scripts in all genres with an original concept and distinctive voice that can be independently produced under $10 million. Co-founded by Rick Dugdale and Daniel Petrie, Jr. (Beverly Hills Cop, The Big Easy), the production company acquired the 2008 AFF Finalist script Stranded (now titled Dawn Patrol) which premiered at the 2014 Festival starring Scott Eastwood and Rita Wilson.

*This award can be added to the following category submissions: Drama Feature Screenplay, Comedy Feature Screenplay  


AMC One-Hour Pilot Award
We’re proud to announce that AMC returns as the official sponsor and judge for the One-Hour Pilot Award. The AMC One-Hour Pilot Award is open to any pilot script written in the one-hour format for an original television series. Scripts submitted to this category must be at least 45 pages in length. Scripts submitted under this page-minimum will not be considered.  AMC will review the top scripts submitted in the category and will determine the semifinalists, finalists, and winner.  Finalists will be given the opportunity to meet with a representative from AMC during this year’s Conference (October 21-28) or over the phone at a later date.

*This award can be added to the following category submissions: Drama Teleplay Pilot, Comedy Teleplay Pilot 

 

Warner Brothers Pilot Award sponsored by WarnerMedia

We’re excited to announce WarnerMedia as the official sponsor and judge for the Warner Brothers Pilot Award. The award is open to any pilot script and any writer. WarnerMedia will review the top scripts submitted in the category and will determine the finalists and winner. Finalists will be given the opportunity to meet with a representative from WarnerMedia during this year’s Conference (October 21-28) or virtually at a later date. The winner will have the opportunity to meet with WarnerMedia executives either in LA or virtually.

The winner will also receive a $1,000 prize; reimbursement of roundtrip airfare (up to $500 per script excluding frequent flyer miles); hotel reimbursement at the Film Festival (up to $500 per script); and the AFF bronze typewriter award.

*This award can be added to the following category submissions: Drama Teleplay Pilot, Comedy Teleplay Pilot

 

The Rooster Teeth BIPOC Fellowship
The Rooster Teeth BIPOC Fellowship seeks scripts from underrepresented writers in the industry. While open to any genre, submissions should generally align with Rooster Teeth’s voice: an emphasis on comedy concepts that feature ordinary people in extraordinary situations, coming-of-age stories, or other engaging journeys of self-discovery.

The winner will receive a $2,500 prize and will be flown (travel-expenses covered) to Austin for a week-long mentorship with Rooster Teeth’s team. The winner will meet with Rooster Teeth executives and their development team.

*Note: This category is only open to writers who identify as BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color). To submit to this category please select one of the options within the Demographics section in this form. Applicants from underrepresented communities are highly encouraged to apply.

 

The Rooster Teeth Women & Animation Fellowship
The Rooster Teeth Women & Animation Fellowship seeks scripts from women looking to enter into the field of animation. While open to any genre, animation scripts should generally align with Rooster Teeth’s voice: an emphasis on comedy concepts that feature ordinary people in extraordinary situations, coming-of-age stories, or other engaging journeys of self-discovery.

The winner will receive a $2,500 prize and will be flown (travel-expenses covered) to Austin for a week-long mentorship with Rooster Teeth’s team. The winner will meet with Rooster Teeth executives and their development team.

*Note: This category is only open to writers who identify as female. Applicants from underrepresented communities are highly encouraged to apply.

 

Josephson Entertainment Screenwriting Fellowship

Acclaimed producer Barry Josephson has been a longtime supporter of AFF since the very first festival in 1994 when he optioned the winning script from the Screenplay Competition. For the third year, Barry will present the “Josephson Entertainment Screenwriting Fellowship” which will provide a one-on-one mentorship for the writers of two scripts – one feature script and one teleplay pilot – selected from the Final Round of the 2021 Screenplay Competition. Finalists will be invited to apply and AFF will select the top writers for Josephson Entertainment to further review. The selected fellows will be announced and presented by Barry Josephson at the Awards Luncheon on October 23, 2021. Each fellow will be flown to LA to be mentored by Barry and take meetings with various executives from Josephson Entertainment to take their writing to the next level.

*Finalists of the Drama Feature, Comedy Feature, Drama Teleplay Pilot, and Comedy Teleplay Pilot categories will be invited to apply for this fellowship.

 

VIRTUAL PITCH COMPETITION

Send in a 90-second video pitch, based on the feature script you’re submitting. If it passes our initial judging round, you’ll be invited to the finals where you’ll perform your pitch live (virtually) in front of a panel of industry judges. The winner will receive a one-on-one conversation with an industry professional. All who submit a video pitch will receive written feedback from the first round of judges.

*This competition can be purchased following category submissions: Drama Feature Screenplay, Comedy Feature Screenplay, Drama Teleplay Pilot, and Comedy Teleplay Pilot  

Rules for video pitch submissions:

  • All entrants must submit a feature or TV pilot script to the 2021 Script Competition. The pitch must be about the script submitted.

  • Video submissions cannot be longer than 90 seconds.

  • Pitches must be in English.

  • Pitch video should not be edited; but rather, performed as if one is pitching live in front of someone.

  • Video must be in .mp4 or .MOV format and less than 300 MB.

  • Only allowed to submit one (1) video pitch per script entry.

  • You will receive instructions on how to send in your video in your submission confirmation email. The deadline to submit your video pitch is 11:59pm PST, May 21, 2021.

https://austinfilmfestival.com/submit/screenplay-and-teleplay-submissions-2/

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Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop

DEADLINE: May 31, 2021

INFO: For over 40 years, the Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop has been the premier writing program for new writers looking to start and further their career in the world of television. The list of graduates who have gone on to do great things is long and includes showrunners: Jeff Astrof (Trial & Error), Marc Cherry (Desperate Housewives), Aaron Rahsaan Thomas (S.W.A.T.), Jenna Bans (Good Girls), and Joe Henderson (Lucifer), to name a few.

Every year, the Workshop selects up to eight participants out of more than 2,500 submissions and exposes them to Warner Bros. Television’s top writers and executives, all with the ultimate goal of earning them a staff position on a Warner Bros.-produced television show.

The Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop consists of three components, all geared towards preparing the writer for a successful career in television writing.

LECTURES:

Weekly lectures feature guest speakers currently working in television and include a mix of showrunners, directors, actors and agents. Each seminar will teach a new skill essential for surviving and excelling in a writers’ room as a staff writer and beyond.

SIMULATED WRITERS’ ROOM:

In the winter, the Workshop participants are divided into smaller groups for an intensive writing experience. Each participant will be required to complete a new spec script under the same deadlines typical for a show in production. How participants perform during this exercise will determine whether they will be supported for a possible staffing position on a Warner Bros. show. Yes, the stakes are that high!

STAFFING:

Upon completion of the program, studio executives will help participants who pass the Writers’ Room obtain a staff position on a Warner Bros. Television show. We can’t guarantee you will get staffed, but we will get your material in front of the people who make the ultimate decisions – the showrunners.

The 2021-2022 Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop will run October 2021 – March 2022, with meetings on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, one evening a week from 7 p.m.-10 p.m., with meetings on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, one evening a week from 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Full participation is mandatory.

HOW TO APPLY:

The Writers’ Workshop applications generally open each year during the month of May. Please check back for specific application dates and deadlines.

  • CURRENT RESUME: Your resume should be in pdf format and include all past writing-related work experiences, and beyond (please note writing experience is not required).

  • PERSONAL STATEMENT: Your personal statement should be no longer than one page, double-spaced (up to 2,000 characters, including spaces). It should tell us why you want to be a television writer and how your background will add a unique perspective to television writing.

  • SPEC SCRIPT: Specs MUST be written for a show that is listed on our Accepted Shows page. Not all shows are accepted. Please take a moment to make sure your show is listed. Please include a “Previously On” page after your title page if your show is serialized. The “Previously On” page lets the reader know where your episode takes place in the series, and must also include an episode number (please see the FAQ for a more detailed breakdown). It should be in paragraph form and not longer than a page. Your episode can take place anywhere within the series that you would like. If you have applied previously, you must submit a new spec script. If you apply with a Comedy spec, you will be considered as a Comedy writer, and if you apply with a Drama spec, you will be considered as a Drama writer.

  • SUBMISSION AGREEMENT: Each submission must include a submission agreement in order for us to review your material. You must download the agreement, print the agreement, sign it, and either scan or upload a picture of the signed document. The agreement must be uploaded to your application before the deadline. Faxes and emails of this document will not be accepted. Please take into account the time it will take to submit your submission agreement when applying.

https://televisionworkshop.warnerbros.com/writers-workshop/program-details/

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2021 TV PILOT CONTEST

Shore Script

DEADLINES / FEES:

  • Early: May 31, 2021 (1 HR $45 / 1/2HR $40)

  • Regular: July 31, 2021 (1 HR $55 / 1/2HR $50)

  • Final: Aug 31, 2021 (1 HR $65 / 1/2HR $60)

INFO: WE HAVE HELPED LAUNCH THE CAREERS OF NUMEROUS WRITERS THROUGH OUR TV PILOT CONTEST. THIS INCLUDES DEALS WITH SONY, YOUTUBE, CBS, & HULU. 

OUR TV PILOT CONTEST IS SPLIT INTO 1/2 & 1HR CATEGORIES.

WE ACCEPT ALL GENRES. IT DOESN’T MATTER IF YOU HAVE A BIG BUDGET EPIC OR CONTAINED DRAMA, EACH TV PILOT IS JUDGED EQUALLY. WE, AND OUR ROSTER OF OVER 150 OF THE MOST RESPECTED FILMMAKERS IN THE INDUSTRY, ARE LOOKING FOR WRITERS WITH ORIGINAL VOICES. 

PRIZE:

  • TWO GRAND PRIZE WINNERS $5000 EACH

  • TWO 2ND PLACE WINNERS $1000 EACH

https://www.shorescripts.com/tv/


TV / WEB SERIES -- APRIL 2021

Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program

The Writers Guild Foundation

APPLICATION PERIOD: April 5 - May 10, 2021

INFO: TV writers and producers Tanya Saracho (Vida), Mike Royce (One Day at a Time), and Liz Hsiao Lan Alper (Day of the Dead) have partnered with the Writers Guild Foundation to launch the Writers’ Access Support Staff Training Program, a first-of-its-kind initiative to support the full inclusion and employment of underrepresented groups in the television industry.

The program’s mission is to provide writers who are BIPOC, LGBTQ+, disabled writers, and writers over the age of 50, with tools and education to become a writers’ assistant and script coordinator, ultimately resulting in meaningful employment opportunities. These positions have historically been an invaluable way to learn the writing process first-hand, with the ultimate goal of getting a writing job.

Graduates of the program will be included in an ongoing list of trained writers’ assistants and script coordinators (WA/SCs) primarily from underrepresented groups, which will be made available to studios, networks and showrunners, in order to increase the pool of eligible hires. By offering this opportunity to writers who are typically excluded from the writers’ room, we hope to increase representation among television writers, and capture stories from all corners of the human experience.

Applicants will be reviewed by a committee of television creators, executive producers, and showrunners, and writers who previously worked as WA/SCs, including Saracho, Royce and Alper, along with Steven Canals (Pose), Sera Gamble (You), Jenniffer Gomez (Vida), Brigitte Muñoz-Liebowitz (Love Life), Lindsey Villarreal (Resident Evil), Prentice Penny (Insecure), Danielle Sanchez-Witzel (The Carmichael Show), Brian Tanen (Love, Victor), Liz Tigelaar (Little Fires Everywhere), Danny Chun (The Office) and Sanjay Shah (Central Park).

https://www.wgfoundation.org/programs/writers-access-support-staff-training-program

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TV PILOT SCREENWRITING COMPETITION

Launch Pad

DEADLINES:

  • Late: April 7, 2021

  • Final: May 9, 2021

INFO: The Launch Pad Competitions have led to more signings, success stories and careers than any other screenwriting competition. With nearly a decade of experience in promoting up-and-coming writers, The Launch Pad Competition has firmly established itself as the premier hub for Hollywood to discover fresh voices and new ideas.  We advocate for all of our Top 100 finalists, working with them to share their work with the right industry members to advance their career. 

Our prestigious juries of industry members include managers, agents, producers and executives at companies across Hollywood. We also offer exclusive partnerships with management and production companies to give writers an extra leg up. 

Through these partnerships, as well as our exclusive mentorship opportunities, we seek to provide as many avenues towards success as possible.  No competition will do more to help all of their finalists take the next steps in their careers, and no competition has had as much success in helping writers break into the industry. Enter now for a chance to join this tradition of Launch Pad success.

We are committed to helping writers take meaningful steps in their career, and there is nothing more important in developing your craft than thorough, in-depth notes from a trusted source. We are proud to offer our Feedback Notes program, providing 1-2 pages of in-depth notes on your competition entry, with insight into the story, characters, writing and commercial potential.

https://tblaunchpad.com/competitions/pilot/

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DIVERSE VOICES SCREENWRITING LAB

WeScreenplay

DEADLINE: April 15, 2021

INFO: Diverse Voices is a screenplay competition and lab that strives to encourage stories that are told from perspectives that are often underrepresented in Hollywood today. This includes writers of color, womxn writers, writers with disabilities, writers over 40, writers in the LGBTQ+ community, and any other voices that have historically been ignored by Hollywood.

A couple of cool things about this program: since it started in 2015, Diverse Voices has raised over $35,000 for various nonprofit organizations and over a dozen past winners have been signed, staffed, and optioned. All readers for this competition come from diverse backgrounds, and all entrants will receive a page of written feedback on their script from their first round’s judge.

PRIZES: The Diverse Voices Lab is a one-of-a-kind lab experience. Those chosen for the lab will have a long weekend PACKED with workshops to hone their craft, mentorship calls with working writers, and general meetings with studio execs, literary reps, and more. It’s truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for any emerging screenwriter.

Additionally, the winners get access to ongoing mentorship from WeScreenplay including an initial phone call, guidance for drafting query letters, research methods for finding the right representation, prep before big meetings, and strategic planning for next steps in their careers — all based on the writer’s specific goals.

JURY:

  • Talitha Watkins - Head of the Management for Issa Rae's company, ColorCreative

  • Charlie Swinbourne - Screenwriter focused on Deaf Culture

  • Jen Ray - Literary Manager at Heroes and Villains Entertainment

https://www.wescreenplay.com/diverse-voices/

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NHMC Series Scriptwriters Program

National Hispanic Media Coalition

DEADLINE: April 16, 2021 at 11:59pm

INFO: For nearly twenty years, the NHMC Series Scriptwriters Program has helped launch the careers of more than 200 Latinx writers. 

Ten diverse Latinx writers nationwide are selected for a five-week intense writers lab. At the end of the program, these writers will have a half an hour original series pilot, which they will pitch to industry leaders, beginning with our partners at ABC & NBC. Over the 5-week duration writers work with a professional writing mentor, meet and speak with professional industry writers, and build a community of Latinx writers. The program is officially conducted virtually. 

Our writers have worked on shows that can be viewed on Netflix, CW, NBCUniversal, HBOMax, Hulu, ViacomCBS, Amazon Prime, Disney+, and more.

HOW TO APPLY: Complete an online application, a Walt Disney Television and NBCUniversal Release form, submit one writing sample of any type to include, plays, pilots, specs and books in PDF format. Television scripts are preferred. Please note that writing teams are ineligible. You must be 18 or over to apply.

WHAT YOU WILL NEED:

  • Writing sample in PDF format (only one can be uploaded)

  • Resume or bio in PDF or DOC format

  • Statement of interest explaining why you want to write for a series, in PDF or DOC format

  • Signed Walt Disney Television and NBCUniversal release forms in PDF or DOC format (be sure to download the forms from this page, complete, sign, scan and upload to your application)

https://www.nhmc.org/writers/

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@BenTheWritersRoom

DEADLINE: April 30, 2021

INFO: @BenTheWritersRoom is an intimate 4-month, virtual TV pilot writing workshop for underrepresented writers of color and LGBTQ+ storytellers shepherded by writer, producer, and showrunner Ben Cory Jones.

The goal of @BenTheWritersRoom is simple: to train and equip new writers with an expertly crafted script that not only meets current industry standards, but also serves as a viable calling card to forge their path as a professional writer.  

In the workshop, writers will learn how to clearly and articulately pitch a series concept, structure and write a pilot, give and receive notes in a virtual writers’ room setting, and how table reads operate. They will also gain insight into what it takes for a series to be developed, produced, and run from the ground up. Every other work session, Ben Cory will invite a guest Showrunner to join the session. During the last 30-45 minutes of the meeting they will speak to the writers, offering personal and invaluable insight into the business and the craft of writing.

At the end of the program, a panel of showrunners will read and evaluate scripts. The script which garners the highest rating will receive a “live” table read where their words will be brought to life by celebrity actors and actresses before a room of industry leaders in Los Angeles.

Who can apply?

Writers of all genres (comedy, drama or dramedy) and formats (playwriters, web-series creators, reality TV writers/producers, etc.) are welcome to apply. Requirements that must be met are as followed:

  • Applicant must be a writer of color or an LGBTQ+ writer

  • Applicant must be over the age of 25

  • Applicant must not have ever been paid or garnered profits as a professional writer in any capacity

Application Materials

  • One-page bio. 400 words max. (Save Document as FirstNameLastName_Bio)

  • One paragraph synopsis of a feature film based on a real life experience. The writer must also specify the feature type. Ex: Comedy, Drama, Dramedy, Horror, Sci-fi, Rom-com, etc). 200 words max. (Save Document as FirstNameLastName_Synopsis)

  • One-page resume or CV (Save Document as FirstNameLastName_Resume)

  • Link to one of the following: Instagram, Twitter, Facebook

  • Signed “Submission Agreement Form”(Save Document as FirstNameLastName_SubmissionAgreement)

  • Writing Sample: First 15 pages of a previously written movie or TV script (this sample should be separate from the synopsis you are writing for this workshop). (Save Document as FirstNameLastName_WritingSample)

https://www.benthewritersroom.com/2021-cycle-3-application

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2021-2022 Writers Mentoring Program

ViacomCBS

DEADLINE: May 1, 2021 by 11:59pm PT

INFO: In its sixteen years, over 100 emerging diverse writers have graduated from the ViacomCBS Writers Mentoring Program. Over 75 careers have been launched. The goal of the program is to positively impact the presence of diverse writers throughout the industry.

There are many different paths writers can follow to get their first foothold in being hired in television. As part of its ongoing commitment to create additional access for writers of diverse backgrounds ViacomCBS’ Office of Global Inclusion has launched a different kind of writers program which highlights one of those paths.

The focus of this eight month program is on opening doors: providing opportunities to build relationships with network executives and show runners; to support new and emerging writers in their efforts to improve their craft; and to develop the interpersonal skills necessary to break in and succeed. The Writers Mentoring Program is not employment and there is no monetary compensation. It is, instead, a structured program of career development, support, and personal access to executives and the decision-making processes, with the goal of preparing aspiring writers for later employment opportunities in television. Each participant will be teamed with an executive mentor.

A ViacomCBS network or studio executive with whom they will meet on a regular basis, to discuss their work, get creative feedback on their material and get advice and support in furthering their career. Once a week, participants will be invited to attend a small workshop-style meeting with various ViacomCBS show runners and other industry professionals. Speakers include executive producers, agents, managers, development and current executives and show runners. The purpose of these gatherings is for participants to gain a better understanding of how the business works from many different perspectives as well as creating the opportunity to make critical networking connections.

Another important part of the program is the opportunity for each participant to spend time observing in a writers room, as well as in the ViacomCBS current and/or development departments. Each participant will have help in creating a rigorous career action plan and there will be on-going support in evaluating and achieving those goals. Another important benefit of the program is the development of a close-knit peer support group that will sustain participants through the program and beyond.

The ViacomCBS Writers Mentoring Program helps aspiring writers to understand the unwritten rules of breaking in and moving up. It is a combination of mentoring and networking opportunities. Program opportunities such as mentoring, workshops, and observing can be scheduled around participants’ existing work commitments.

In order for a participant to get the most out of the Program a meaningful commitment of time and effort are required. It has been found that in order to derive the greatest benefit from the program, participants should be available to:

1) attend a once a week (evening) workshop and

2) attend meetings or observe in various situations for a minimum of five full days (not necessarily in sequence) over the course of the eight-month program.

The primary focus of the ViacomCBS Writers Mentoring Program is to provide access and opportunities for talented and motivated diverse writers. Aspiring diverse writers with a strong desire to write for ViacomCBS television series are encouraged to apply.

You must be 21 or older to be eligible. All completed application materials must be received between March 1, 2021 and May 1, 2021. Any submissions received before March 1st or after May 1st, 2021 will not be considered. No hand delivered submissions will be accepted. Finalists will be notified in mid September 2021 (or such later date as may be determined by ViacomCBS). The program is scheduled to begin in October 2021 and continues through April 2022. ViacomCBS reserves the right to make adjustments to program schedule as necessary.

https://www.viacomcbs.com/writers-mentoring-program?fbclid=IwAR3_wQxMqyuL7pvd07VoF0JGFynl_c1C0EZdHm4PMVjsYt0skJpTl5fJ5uc

TV / WEB SERIES -- MARCH 2021

EPISODIC LAB 2021

Film Independent

DEADLINES: March 3, 2021 (for Film Independent Members)

INFO: Designed to support writers with original long-form episodic projects, Film Independent’s Episodic Lab will accept a diverse group of 6–8 writers or writing teams and provide them with critical support and mentorship. Through personalized feedback from experienced showrunners, creative producers and executives, Fellows will gain the tools to revise and refine their pilots and navigate a changing industry landscape.

The Episodic Lab helps to further the careers of its Fellows by introducing them to industry veterans who can offer guidance on both the craft and business of writing episodic content. Each Fellow will be paired with a Creative Advisor with whom they’ll work one-on-one and in group sessions to develop their project during the month of July. Additionally, guest speakers will screen and discuss their own work to offer insights into the creative process and industry best practices. A final networking and pitch event will offer Fellows the opportunity to introduce themselves and their work to studio and network executives.

NOTE: The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation will award one participant of the Film Independent Episodic Lab a $10,000 development grant. To apply for the Sloan Episodic Lab Grant, apply to the Episodic Lab and provide a statement on how the project fulfills the mission of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The applicant must possess the rights to the script with which they are applying. The teleplay should have a scientific, mathematical and/or technological theme and storyline or have a leading character that is a scientist, engineer or mathematician.

Who Can Apply?

The Episodic Lab is open to any emerging writer applying with a completed draft of a half hour or hour-long television pilot they wish to workshop during the program. Each applicant must be the author of the script he or she submits. The submitted pilot cannot have been pitched at any point to a studio or network.

Writing partners are welcome to apply as teams and need only submit a single application. International applicants are also welcome to apply. At this time, documentary and short-form digital series are not eligible to apply.

How to Apply

Applicants must submit the following materials for consideration:

Required

  • A cover letter explaining your interest in the Episodic Lab

  • One complete, original pilot

  • A series logline

  • A series description describing the story engine and series arc of the show

  • Project status and history, including any industry exposure

  • A series proposal document that includes brief descriptions of the world of the series and its premise and genre, as well as breakdowns for the show’s primary characters and their first season arcs

APPLICATION FEE:

Selection Criteria

Film Independent is looking for well-written, compelling, pilots with an original premise or vision. The submitted pilot may be original or adapted from optioned source material. Though applicants must submit a completed draft, the Lab is structured to support writers who are still creatively engaged in the writing process; those who welcome feedback and discussion will most benefit from the program as they further develop their work.

The Fine Print

Beyond the application fee, there is no cost or tuition to participate in any of Film Independent’s Artist Development programs.

Film Independent Membership is not required when applying to Artist Development Labs. However, all participants accepted into the Labs are required to join Film Independent at the standard annual General Membership rate of $95.

Applicants will be notified three to four weeks prior to the start of the program.

Applicants invited to participate in the program should plan to be in Los Angeles for the four-week duration of the Lab. Film Independent is unable to subsidize any travel, lodging and/or visa expenses for any participants attending from outside of Los Angeles. Participants are expected to attend all sessions in person.

https://www.filmindependent.org/programs/artist-development/episodic-lab/


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CALL FOR UNDISCOVERED TV WRITERS

Impact x Skydance

DEADLINE: March 7, 2021

INFO: Impact x Skydance is a year-long collaboration between Impact and Skydance TV to source television content from undiscovered writers worldwide through Impact’s innovative, open application and review system with the goal of developing them into global, premium series.

Over the course of the next year, Impact will host call-outs and online submissions across four specific prompts through which writers of all levels from around the world can apply with a well-thought out idea and writing sample. Applications will be vetted via Impact’s review process before a subset of applicants are interviewed. From there, a group of finalists will have their proposed project presented to Skydance by the Impact team. Writers then selected by Skydance will have the opportunity to enter into an if/come agreement with Skydance to develop the project further.

The first two prompts are ‘Premium Drama’ and ‘Grounded, Elevated Sc-Fi’.

Will I work with a Shaper on developing my project? Will there be an in-person program component?

No, writers who are selected by Skydance for this opportunity will work directly with the Skydance TV development team on developing their project further.

ELIGIBILITY & LEGAL:

What requirements do I and my project need to meet to apply?

We encourage writers from all backgrounds and experiences to apply: from beginner writer to seasoned professional. You must be 18 years or older and legally capable of entering into the agreements required by the program.

The project you submit must meet the following requirements:

  • the project is an English language, live action television series

  • the project is entirely owned by you without encumbrances and there are no attachments to the project, including yourself in any non-writing capacity (e.g. as a director, star, etc.)

  • the project has not been previously owned or optioned by another party

Do I have to be a US citizen to apply?

No, you do not need to be a US citizen nor located in the US to apply.

If Skydance selects my project, what will my writer deal look like?

Selected writers will be offered an if/come agreement to work with Skydance to develop their project further. If you choose to enter into the agreement with Skydance TV, Skydance will have the rights to develop, shop, and produce your project for the duration of the deal, and you will be paid an initial sum of US$3,500.

If Skydance solicits a script from the writer during the duration of the agreement, script fees will be in accordance with the then-current WGA scale. As the project continues forward, the writer shall also receive additional credits and royalties provided the writer stay engaged.

Can I see the full long-form agreement?

As writers will contract directly with Skydance TV and not through Impact, Skydance shall provide writers with a long-form agreement upon selection.

How do I know you won’t steal my idea?

Impact and Skydance do not repurpose any ideas we may read while reviewing Impact applications. Additionally, no applications will be exposed to Skydance without the applicant’s express written permission. The submission release form, which you can read here, sets forth rights and obligations with respect to your submission.

The Prompts

What does ‘Premium Drama’ mean? What television series are examples?

Premium Drama: This prompt is aimed at finding 60-minute, ongoing drama series that are elevated, commercial, and set within a specific world or lifestyle that provides the series’ engine. Shows like Big Little Lies, Bridgerton, Friday Night Lights, or Empire.

What does ‘Grounded, Elevated Sci Fi’ mean? What television series are examples?

Grounded, Elevated Sci Fi: This prompt is aimed at finding 60-minute, ongoing science fiction series that feel grounded in a realistic, contemporary world. Tonally, they should feel like premium, elevated shows that could air on any premium cable network or streaming service. Shows like Westworld, The OA, Devs, or Counterpart.

Note: We do not want to see shows that are bleak or post-apocalyptic.

Can I submit an idea that does not fit under the prompt?

No, we are only accepting submissions for the given prompts.

Will any prompts be for feature films?

No, we are only seeking television series under this partnership.

https://impactcreativesystems.com/skydance

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EPISODIC LAB

Sundance Institute

DEADLINE: March 10, 2021

INFO: The Episodic Lab: Pilot to Series offers writers an opportunity to workshop an original pilot, and to develop their writing and pitching skills. Working with accomplished showrunners, the fellows will participate in one-on-one story meetings, craft workshops, and simulated writers’ rooms, which together provide creative and strategic tools for success. Part one of the lab will take place October 1–3, 2021, and October 9–11, 2021.

Fellows will reconvene in February for part two of the lab with a polished draft of their lab project. During this time, they will participate in pitch sessions, group conversations about the episodic landscape, and meet with producers and creative executives to discuss next steps and career goals. Part two will take place February 27–28, 2022.

There are two rounds in the application process: in round one, applicants are required to submit the first five pages of an original pilot script, their bio, a series logline, a series overview, their personal statement, a thematic statement, and (optional) links to samples of previous work, along with a $40 nonrefundable processing fee. If selected for round two, applicants are notified by email and have two weeks to submit their full pilot script as well as up to three additional project ideas.

ELIGIBILITY:

Applicants must be 18 years of age or older at time of application.

  • The project must be the applicant’s original creation or adapted from optioned source material.

  • The project must be written in the English language, but it does not need to be intended to be fully produced in English.

  • The project should be new, or if previously submitted, it must be materially different from any and all versions previously submitted to Sundance Institute. Projects may not be already produced,sold to a third party, or distributed online or otherwise.

  • Applicants cannot have sold an episodic project (pilot or pitch) to a studio or network in the past that has been shot.

  • The project shall not infringe the copyright or any other proprietary right of another individual or entity. The creator/applicant is responsible for all rights pertaining to the project.

http://www.sundance.org/programs/episodic-storytelling

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My Time: A Writer's Fellowship for Parents

​The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow

DEADLINE: March 15, 2021

INFO: The Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow is pleased to announce the My Time fellowship funded by the Sustainable Arts Foundation. Writers who are also parents of dependent children under the age of 18 are invited to apply.  Work may be any literary genre: fiction or nonfiction, poetry or prose, scripts or screenplays. The successful application will demonstrate literary merit and the likelihood of publication however, prior publication is not a requirement. 

The fellowship winner will receive a one-week residency to allow the recipient to focus completely on their work. A $400 stipend is available to cover childcare and/or travel costs.  Each writers’ suite has a bedroom, private bathroom, separate writing space, and wireless internet. We provide uninterrupted writing time, a European-style gourmet dinner prepared five nights a week, and served in our community dining room, the camaraderie of other professional writers when you want it, and a community kitchen stocked with the basics for breakfast and lunch.

Fellowship applications must be accompanied by a writing sample and a non-refundable $35 application fee. There is a limit of one submission per application. The winner will be announced no later than March 31, 2021. Residency may be completed at any time during 2021. This may be extended up to twelve months for extenuating circumstances including COVID-19 concerns.

https://www.writerscolony.org/fellowships

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DIVERSE VOICES SCREENWRITING LAB

WeScreenplay

DEADLINES:

  • Regular: Mar 15, 2021

  • Final: Apr 15, 2021

INFO: Diverse Voices is a screenplay competition and lab that strives to encourage stories that are told from perspectives that are often underrepresented in Hollywood today. This includes writers of color, womxn writers, writers with disabilities, writers over 40, writers in the LGBTQ+ community, and any other voices that have historically been ignored by Hollywood.

A couple of cool things about this program: since it started in 2015, Diverse Voices has raised over $35,000 for various nonprofit organizations and over a dozen past winners have been signed, staffed, and optioned. All readers for this competition come from diverse backgrounds, and all entrants will receive a page of written feedback on their script from their first round’s judge.

PRIZES: The Diverse Voices Lab is a one-of-a-kind lab experience. Those chosen for the lab will have a long weekend PACKED with workshops to hone their craft, mentorship calls with working writers, and general meetings with studio execs, literary reps, and more. It’s truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for any emerging screenwriter.

Additionally, the winners get access to ongoing mentorship from WeScreenplay including an initial phone call, guidance for drafting query letters, research methods for finding the right representation, prep before big meetings, and strategic planning for next steps in their careers — all based on the writer’s specific goals.

JURY:

  • Talitha Watkins - Head of the Management for Issa Rae's company, ColorCreative

  • Charlie Swinbourne - Screenwriter focused on Deaf Culture

  • Jen Ray - Literary Manager at Heroes and Villains Entertainment

https://www.wescreenplay.com/diverse-voices/

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Disruptors Fellowship

Center for Cultural Power

DEADLINE: March 19, 2021

INFO: The Center for Cultural Power is pleased to announce the application is now open for the second cycle of The Disruptors Fellowship

Co-created and launched in 2020 by The Center for Cultural Power and 5050by2020, The Disruptors Fellowship is an unprecedented fellowship supporting emerging television writers of color who identify as transgender, non-binary, disabled, undocumented, and/or formerly undocumented.

This 3-month fellowship for LA-based emerging talent includes mentorship, professional development, master classes and a $6,000 stipend.

https://www.artistdisruptors.org/

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2021 WarnerMedia Access Writers Program

DEADLINE: March 21, 2021

INFO: WarnerMedia is a leading media and entertainment company that creates and distributes premium and popular content from a diverse array of talented storytellers to global audiences through its consumer brands including HBO, HBOMax, Warner Bros, TNT, TBS, truTV, CNN, DC Entertainment, New Line, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Turner Classic Movies and more.

Formerly the HBO Access Writing Fellowship, the WarnerMedia Access Writers Program is a multi-month pipeline program for lower-level narrative TV writers. The objective of the program is to provide marginalized voices a pathway for entry into the television industry through instruction, mentorship and exposure. Up to 20 writers from across various genres will be selected to be a part of the inaugural cycle in 2021.

The virtual program will kick-off in mid-July 2021 and continue through January 2022, meeting 1 – 2 times per week, covering the business of television and the creative process. The final leg of the workshop will focus on script development and the creation of a new sample. At the conclusion of the program, the WarnerMedia Equity & Inclusion group will work with the participants to find potential staffing opportunities within the enterprise.

An Advisory Council comprised of established producers (Sara Hess, Nkechi Okoro Carroll, Sarah Schechter, Bird Runningwater, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Sonya Winton-Odamtten, Jonathan Kidd, Bill Lawrence, Mindy Kaling and Ben Stephenson) and executives (Casey Bloys, Chief Content Officer, HBO and HBO Max and Channing Dungey, Chairman Warner Bros. Television Group) within WarnerMedia will help conduct a rigorous interviewing and screening process to select up to 20 writers across various genres for the inaugural seven-month program.  Additionally, this Advisory Council will consult on the curriculum and lead master classes for the workshop. 

All participants will be mentored by upper-level writers who will offer their perspective on their creative growth and career advancement.

Eligibility criteria:

  • Must have the right to work in the US.

  • Must be 18 years of age or older

  • Must not have been staffed on more than one TV show

  • Writers from historically underrepresented backgrounds are highly encouraged to apply.

Program timeline:

  • Submission window: Monday, March 8 – Sunday, March 21, 2021

  • Video interviews: Mid-June 2021

  • Cohort notification: By end of June 2021

  • Workshop begins: Mid-July 2021

  • Workshop ends: Late January 2022

https://warnermediaaccess.submittable.com/submit

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2nd Scriptwriting Competition

Reel Sisters

DEADLINE:

  • Early Bird: March 31, 2021

  • Regular: May 21, 2021

  • Final: May 31, 2021

  • Extended: June 18, 2021

INFO: Reel Sisters is hosting our 2nd Scriptwriting Competition and giving screenwriters a chance to win cash awards including the top prize of $1,000 with opportunities to get featured in African Voices magazine, our website, a table read and one-on-one script consultation with an industry professional!

Scripts must be written by women of color. Feature length films, television pilots, short films and web series are eligible. Reel Sisters is the first Oscar qualifying film festival in the nation for women filmmakers.

The Reel Sisters of the Diaspora Film Festival & Lecture Series is a two-day annual film festival founded by African Voices magazine and LIU's Media Arts Dept., Brooklyn Campus. Established in 1997, Reel Sisters (www.reelsisters.org) is dedicated to providing opportunities for women of color to advance their careers in the film industry. Reel Sisters accepts films written, directed, or produced by women/non-binary filmmakers of color. Reel Sisters is the first Academy Qualifying Film Festival for short narratives devoted to women of color across the globe. Reel Sisters is an IMDb qualifying film festival.

APPLICATION INFO: YOU MUST SUBMIT PRODUCTION STILLS/PHOTOS and a TRAILER for your submission to be ELIGIBLE AND COMPLETE. You can screenshot photos from your film if you were unable to hire a photographer.

PLEASE NOTE: Reel Sisters is scheduled to be held Oct. 23-24, 2021 at the Alamo Cinema Drafthouse and other NYC venues but due to the pandemic the festival may be held virtually to keep our audience safe. Join our mailing list & visit our website for updates: www.reelsisters.org.

Reel Sisters is a competitive festival and films are selected by an independent jury. Please submit films early as deadlines are final. The festival provides quality customer service and does not offer fee waivers. The fee covers a small fraction of the administrative costs for running a professional Oscar qualifying film festival.

Reel Sisters accepts all genres and formats with a special interest in submissions from animated and web series producers. Send us films that will make our audience “cry, dance, laugh, sing and explore." The festival curates events throughout the year so all entries will be considered for Reel Sisters Tea & Cinema series. Join our worldwide community of film professionals in celebrating stories produced, directed and written by women of color!

https://filmfreeway.com/ReelSistersoftheDiasporaFilmFestival

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Marble House Project

DEADLINE: April 1, 2021

INFO: Marble House Project is a multidisciplinary artist residency program that fosters collaboration and the exchange of ideas, by providing an environment for artists across disciplines to live and work together. The residency integrates sustainable practices, including small-scale organic food production and waste conservation. Residents sustain their growth by engaging with the grounds while working on their artistic practice. Marble House Project is founded on the belief that the act of creating, whether in the studio or in nature, is how human potential expands and community thrives.

Marble House Project accepts approximately 60 residents and is open to artists living in the United States and abroad. You must be at least 21 years old.   Residencies run from April through October, scheduled into six three-week residencies and one two-week family-friendly residency for artists with children. Please note that if you apply to the family friendly residency, it is a specific date within the artist in residency application. Each session accommodates eight artists and is specifically curated to bring together a diverse group of creative workers, to maximize potential for collaboration and dialogue while in residence and beyond. 

All residents live together in the historic, eight-bedroom Manley-Lefevre house, a communal space organized around responsibilities-sharing systems which highlight sustainability and community. All residents will be paired and asked to cook for shared dinners three times over the course of their residency, Monday-Friday. A substantial amount of the food we provide comes from our organic garden, which also serves as a space for gathering and an educational tool. Residents are invited to help with planting, harvesting, and maintenance. While not required, our hope is that you will spend some time in the garden alongside your studio practice. Each session culminates with ART SEED, our public open house weekend event. Artists are invited to share their work with our community through artist talks, readings, performances, and open studios.

Marble House Project provides private bedrooms, food, private studio space, and artist support. We are not able to cover costs related to travel or materials. There is no fee to attend the residency.

Applications are accepted in all creative fields including but not limited to writing, dance and choreography, performance, music composition and sound, film and video, visual arts, and culinary arts. Applications are reviewed by a jury of alumni, staff, and outside experts, and artists are selected based on quality of work, commitment to practice, and project description. Please choose the application that best describes your work. Two artists may apply together as a collaborative, and should complete one application. Within each application you will be asked to select the session dates best for you. You may choose the family friendly residency only if you will be bringing your children. Family friendly applicants may select additional dates if willing to attend without your children.

Marble House Project does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion (creed), gender, gender expression, age, national origin (ancestry), disability, marital status, sexual orientation, or military status, in any of its activities or operations. For exact dates, more information or questions about the residency, visit our FAQ page.  If you still have questions you may   contact info@marblehouseproject.org

APPLICATION FEE: $35

https://marblehouseproject.submittable.com/submit

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NEW VOICES

Humanitas

DEADLINES / FEES:

  • Regular Deadline: April 1, 2021 ($75)

  • Extended Deadline: May 17, 2021 ($85)

INFO: In 2010, Executive Director Cathleen Young created NEW VOICES with the vision of discovering, developing and launching a new generation of talented writers under the mentorship of Hollywood showrunners and studio partners.

Every year, NEW VOICES selects up to six writers through a rigorous selection process. Candidates are asked to submit a script and participate in personal interviews. Once matched with a mentor, the writers have three months to further develop their script under their mentors’ supervision. After the script is honed, HUMANITAS sends it to a partnering studio or network executive. The winning writers are given recognition at the annual awards ceremony and are awarded with a $7,500 grant.

We are looking for well-written scripts with compelling stories and developed characters. Any genre is accepted as a 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay. We accept only one application and script per year. To be eligible a TV writer can have experience up to and including "Executive Story Editor", and feature writers cannot have earned more than $25,000 writing fictional work for film.

TIMELINE

  • Announcement of semi-finalists and finalists: August 2021

  • Annual awards event: September 2021

A SIGNATURE HUMANITAS NEW VOICES STORY MUST:

  1. Challenge us to use our freedom to grow and develop.

  2. Confront us with our individual responsibility.

  3. Examine the consequences of our choices.

REQUIRED MATERIALS:

  • One original 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay (name redacted)

  • Logline

  • Brief synopsis (1 paragraph)

  • Release form

Depending on what deadline you submit your entry by, there is a different fee to submit to NEW VOICES. Candidates will submit payment with their application.

If you are selected as a Semifinalist, you must prepare:

  • Letter of interest (1 page, double-spaced)

  • Resume (no more than 2 pages)

  • Bio (1 page, double-spaced)

https://www.humanitasprize.org/new-voices

TV / WEB SERIES -- FEBRUARY 2021

STOWE STORY LABS

DEADLINE: February 10, 2021

INFO: Stowe Story Labs is a nonprofit dedicated to helping emerging screenwriters, filmmakers, and creative producers get work made and seen. We look for people demonstrating talent and a good story worth developing, whether or not they have experience in film or TV. This application is for all of our 2021 programs. Details about our programs, schedule of programs, and template agendas can be found here under the tabs for "labs" and "retreats." Although we do charge for our programming, we work to keep the cost of programming as low as possible. 

Application process

We have one application for all of our programs. On the application, you may rank the programs you are most interested in, but we will review your application for all slots and, if you are admitted, we will discuss with you which program might be best. You can choose "no preference" when applying. As we review material, we may reach out to ask follow up questions.

Fellowships and Scholarships

Although we rely on fees to operate, we do offer as much support to our participants as possible. We offer several fellowships to the Stowe Narrative Lab. Each fellowship has its own criteria and goals. At a minimum, the fellowships cover the fees for one participant to attend the Lab, as well as other benefits. Please check the website for information about each fellowship. We also offer dozens of partial scholarships to help ensure deserving applicants can attend our programs. There is not a separate application process for these opportunities. If interested in financial support, you will be steered to questions about these programs.

Fees and Other Notes

The fee to attend an in-person four-day Narrative Lab in 2021 will be $2,450. The fee to attend an in-person five-day writers' retreat will be $2,700. Fees include all content and most meals. Travel and lodging are separate, and lodging is offered through our lodging partners, who offer deep and meaningful discounts to participants (and most include breakfast ....). 

We would prefer not to need to charge an application fee at all, but as a non-profit with limited funding, we need to cover the cost of reviewing and responding to applications. We have set the application fee as low as practicable to allow us to meaningfully process the applications without discouraging serious applicants. 

Your application will not be complete until you pay the entry fee. After payment is processed you will receive a confirming email, which will also serve as your receipt. The Application fee is wholly non-refundable. 

Given the uncertainty about the novel coronavirus, all programs could end up running remotely. Online program fees are not set for 2021. 

Please note we do not provide feedback on projects through our submission process. 

Please familiarize yourself with our programs and fellowships before applying

As noted above, we look for talented people - regardless of experience or background - bringing us interesting stories, and we look especially for underrepresented voices. 

SUBMISSION FEE: $42

https://writers.coverfly.com/competitions/view/stowelabsandretreats#about

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EPISODIC LAB

Sundance Institute

APPLICATION PERIOD: February 10 - March 10, 2021

INFO: The Episodic Lab: Pilot to Series offers writers an opportunity to workshop an original pilot, and to develop their writing and pitching skills. Working with accomplished showrunners, the fellows will participate in one-on-one story meetings, craft workshops, and simulated writers’ rooms, which together provide creative and strategic tools for success. Part one of the lab will take place October 1–3, 2021, and October 9–11, 2021.

Fellows will reconvene in February for part two of the lab with a polished draft of their lab project. During this time, they will participate in pitch sessions, group conversations about the episodic landscape, and meet with producers and creative executives to discuss next steps and career goals. Part two will take place February 27–28, 2022.

There are two rounds in the application process: in round one, applicants are required to submit the first five pages of an original pilot script, their bio, a series logline, a series overview, their personal statement, a thematic statement, and (optional) links to samples of previous work, along with a $40 nonrefundable processing fee. If selected for round two, applicants are notified by email and have two weeks to submit their full pilot script as well as up to three additional project ideas.

ELIGIBILITY:

Applicants must be 18 years of age or older at time of application.

  • The project must be the applicant’s original creation or adapted from optioned source material.

  • The project must be written in the English language, but it does not need to be intended to be fully produced in English.

  • The project should be new, or if previously submitted, it must be materially different from any and all versions previously submitted to Sundance Institute. Projects may not be already produced,sold to a third party, or distributed online or otherwise.

  • Applicants cannot have sold an episodic project (pilot or pitch) to a studio or network in the past that has been shot.

  • The project shall not infringe the copyright or any other proprietary right of another individual or entity. The creator/applicant is responsible for all rights pertaining to the project.

http://www.sundance.org/programs/episodic-storytelling

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DIVERSE VOICES SCREENWRITING LAB

WeScreenplay

DEADLINES:

  • Early: Feb 15, 2021

  • Regular: Mar 15, 2021

  • Final: Apr 15, 2021

INFO: Diverse Voices is a screenplay competition and lab that strives to encourage stories that are told from perspectives that are often underrepresented in Hollywood today. This includes writers of color, womxn writers, writers with disabilities, writers over 40, writers in the LGBTQ+ community, and any other voices that have historically been ignored by Hollywood.

A couple of cool things about this program: since it started in 2015, Diverse Voices has raised over $35,000 for various nonprofit organizations and over a dozen past winners have been signed, staffed, and optioned. All readers for this competition come from diverse backgrounds, and all entrants will receive a page of written feedback on their script from their first round’s judge.

PRIZES: The Diverse Voices Lab is a one-of-a-kind lab experience. Those chosen for the lab will have a long weekend PACKED with workshops to hone their craft, mentorship calls with working writers, and general meetings with studio execs, literary reps, and more. It’s truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for any emerging screenwriter.

Additionally, the winners get access to ongoing mentorship from WeScreenplay including an initial phone call, guidance for drafting query letters, research methods for finding the right representation, prep before big meetings, and strategic planning for next steps in their careers — all based on the writer’s specific goals.

JURY:

  • Talitha Watkins - Head of the Management for Issa Rae's company, ColorCreative

  • Charlie Swinbourne - Screenwriter focused on Deaf Culture

  • Jen Ray - Literary Manager at Heroes and Villains Entertainment

https://www.wescreenplay.com/diverse-voices/

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2021 Jerome Emerging Artist Residency - For MN & NYC Artists

The Anderson Center

DEADLINE: February 15, 2021, by 11:59pm CST.

INFO: The Anderson Center’s Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program offers month-long residency-fellowships at Tower View to a cohort of early-career artists from Minnesota or one of the five boroughs of New York City for concentrated, uninterrupted creative time to advance their personal artistic goals and projects.

The program aims to meet the specific needs of emerging artists while welcoming them into a supportive and inspiring residency environment that empowers them to take risks, embrace challenges, and utilize unconventional approaches to problem-solving. 

Thanks to support from the Jerome Foundation, selected emerging artists receive a $625/week artist stipend, documentation support, art-making resources, facilitation of community connections, lodging & studio space, a travel honorarium, groceries, and chef-prepared communal dinners.

Located at the historic Tower View estate, a venerable research-and-development lab for the arts rooted in an expansive natural setting, the program is an ideal fit for early-career artists whose work reveals a significant potential for cultural and community impact, is technically accomplished, engages diverse communities. 

The Anderson Center’s goal is for connections participating artists make with one another, as well as connections made with other creatives and community members, to outlast the duration of their residency visit. The organization believes that the environment and resources of Tower View, along with an exchange of ideas across disciplines, can serve as a catalyst for new inspiration and innovative directions for the work emerging artists create while in residence. 

APPLICATION FEE: $0

TO APPLY: Applications must be submitted on or before the deadline in order to be considered in the jury review period. 

Jury review will take place in late February and early March. Applicants will be notified by March 4 at the latest as to the status of their application. A phone interview process with finalists will take place in late March following a second round of jury review. Selected artist residents, wait-list and runners-up will be notified by April 5, 2021.

Artists must be legal residents of Minnesota or one of the five boroughs of New York City to be eligible to apply. To be considered, eligible artists must submit an application through the Anderson Center’s online form via Submittable. Each artist in a collaborative / partnership / collective should submit their own application and then note in the materials they are applying as a group. Complete program details are below. Please contact Adam Wiltgen at 651-388-2009 x4 or adam@andersoncenter.org for any questions.

LOCATION: The Anderson Center campus is located on the 350-acre historic Tower View Estate, built by scientist & farmer Dr. Alexander Pierce Anderson between 1915 and 1921, on the western edge of Red Wing, Minnesota, and its buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Center features a large sculpture garden, and is adjacent to the Cannon Valley Trail, a 20-mile biking and walking trail that runs from Cannon Falls to Red Wing. 

The Center is approximately 45 minutes southeast of Minneapolis and St. Paul. Transportation is provided between the Center and the Twin Cities airport on the first and last day of residencies only. Artist Residents that choose to drive will have access to private parking on the property.

The community of Red Wing, Minn., (pop. 16,000) is nestled amidst the scenic bluffs of the upper Mississippi River. The town is settled on the ancestral homelands of the Mdewakanton & Wapakute bands of the Dakota people. The City of Red Wing is named after Tatanka Mani (Walking Buffalo), a leader of the Mdewakanton Dakota in the upper Mississippi Valley who wore a ceremonial swan’s wing dyed in brilliant red. In 1815, Tatanka Mani and his people moved their village south to a place they called Khemnichan (Hill, Wood, & Water) in present-day downtown Red Wing. Euro-American immigrants who met him as they advanced into the region in the early nineteenth century came to know him and his village as “Red Wing.”

Since its settlement and eventual incorporation in 1857, Red Wing established itself as a center for agriculture, industry, tourism, medical care, technology, and the arts. The Red Wing Shoe Company and its iconic brands, in particular, continue to have a significant impact on the community’s economic, business, and community development climates. Natural resources abound with Red Wing's riverfront, winding paths through the majestic bluffs, bike trails, and 35 city parks. The Prairie Island Indian Community is located northwest of the city. Frontenac State Park is to the southeast on Lake Pepin. Minnesota State College Southeast Technical’s Red Wing campus is known for its string and brass instrument repair programs. The MN Dept. of Corrections also operates a large juvenile residential facility in Red Wing.

Other amenities include a destination bakery, a chocolate shop, coffee shops, restaurants, the flagship Red Wing Shoe Company store, Goodhue County Historical Society Museum, the Red Wing Stoneware & Pottery store, the Pottery Museum of Red Wing, a Duluth Trading store, the Red Wing Marine Museum, a Target, several pharmacies, a plant nursery & garden center, a Mayo Health System Hospital, a small independent bookstore, and a public library (the Center has arranged for residents to have access to a library card for their month at the Center)

Other key community stakeholders include the historic Sheldon Theatre, the Red Wing Arts Association, Red Wing YMCA, Red Wing Youth Outreach, Hispanic Outreach of Goodhue County, Red Wing Area Friends of Immigrants, Red Wing Area Women’s Art History Club, Live Healthy Red Wing, Artreach, Red Wing Artisan Collective, the Artist Sanctuary, Pier 55 Red Wing Area Seniors, Big Turn Music Festival, Red Wing AAUW, Red Wing Environmental Learning Center, Red Wing Girl Scouts, Red Wing Public Schools, Tower View Alternative School, and Universal Music Center, as well as several City boards, commissions, and departments.

ELIGIBILITY AND DEFINITION OF “EMERGING ARTIST”: While the Anderson Center’s general Artist Residency Program hosts artists with a wide range of talent and experience, the Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program exclusively focuses on meeting the specific needs of artists who are in the early stages of their artistic development and career. 

The Anderson Center defines an emerging artist as someone who has some evidence of professional achievement but has not yet a substantial record of accomplishment. These are the applicants who are practicing vocational artists but are not yet recognized as "established" by the artistic community (other artists, curators, producers, critics, and arts administrators). 

The organization looks for artists whose work reveals a significant potential for cultural and community impact. These are artists who are uncompromising in their approach to creation and production, people who are not afraid to take risks, embrace challenges, and utilize unconventional approaches to problem-solving. 

Degree-seeking students at the time of application, or during the grant period, are not eligible for a residency (including K-12, college, graduate or post graduate studies). Age is not a factor in determining emerging artist status.

Artists that are part of an artistic collective, partnership, or collaborative are welcome to apply! However, each artist should complete their own application form. Please note in the materials you submit that you are applying as group and wish to be reviewed by the jury as a collaborative. 

Artists of all disciplines are eligible and are encouraged to apply. Artists must currently be legal residents of Minnesota or one of the five boroughs of New York City and have been residents for at least one year prior to the submission of an application. Applications must be submitted through the Anderson Center’s online webform via Submittable. The primary goal of eligible artists must be to generate new works, as opposed to remounting or re-interpreting existing works.

Further details from the Jerome Foundation on emerging artist eligibility requirements can be found here: https://www.jeromefdn.org/defining-early-career-emerging-artists

APPLICATION: A completed application form includes a brief artist statement, a work plan, an emerging artist statement, work samples, and a resume. Incomplete or late applications will not be reviewed by the panel. You may begin your application, leave and return as many times as necessary to complete the form PRIOR to clicking the submit button at the bottom of the completed form. Important: do not submit your application form until you are completely finished editing as your application will be finalized at that time.

The Artist Statement, provides an opportunity for you to share, in 100 words or less, a brief statement or summary about your current and future work.

The Work Plan is a 1-2 page Word or PDF document. Write about your work, yourself, and your current thinking about what you’d like to accomplish at the Anderson Center as clearly and concisely as possible. The document can be single-spaced.

An Emerging Artist Statement addresses, in 250 words or less, your status as an emerging artist or early-career artist. How would participating in this program impact or advance your practice as an emerging artist? In what ways would this program meet your needs as an emerging artist? Why is this residency important to this stage of your career path? How do you identify as an emerging artist?

Work Samples should be of recent work and should include:

  • For composers and musicians: 3 to 5 recordings

  • For visual artists: At least 5 images of work (300 dpi or larger)

  • For nonfiction and fiction writers: 10 pages of double-spaced prose

  • For playwrights & screenwriters: 10-page excerpt (does not need to be from the beginning)

  • For poets: 10 pages of poetry

  • For translators: 10 pages of translation and original text

  • For performance artists: 3 short videos excerpts of performances (no videos longer than 5 minutes)

  • For filmmakers: at least 3 short film clips (no videos longer than 5 minutes)

The Resume, CV, or Biographical Outline is a Word or PDF document that shows education, work experience, publications, awards, and any previous residency experience. 3 pages maximum.

DURATION OF RESIDENCY: The Anderson Center’s Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program offers residencies-fellowships of two weeks or one month in August. Preference is given to those applying for month-long stays. August is the only month the Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program takes place. 

PROGRAM DETAILS:

Each artist-in-residence receives:

  • $625/week artist stipend

  • Travel honorarium ($550 for New Yorkers and $150 for Minnesotans)

  • $450 documentation budget (services for photography, video, audio, etc.)

Evening dinners are prepared and presented by the Anderson Center chef Monday through Friday. The chef also shops for meal items for artist residents, and residents are responsible for preparing their own breakfasts and lunches, and meals over the weekends. 

There is also a housekeeper who cleans and maintains the historic facilities. Additional cleaning and sanitization measures are being taken during the pandemic to help ensure the health and safety of artists, staff, and the community.

ACCOMMODATIONS: Each resident is provided room, board, and workspace for the length of the residency period in the historic Tower View mansion. Visual artists are provided a 15' x 26' studio. Other workspaces on site include gas and electric kilns, a print studio (with a Vandercook 219 letterpress and a Charles Brand-like etching press), and an open-air metalsmith facility. Options for rehearsal and studio space are also available for musicians, composers, dancers and choreographers.

Residents have access to the many walking trails on campus and to the Cannon Valley Trail, which goes through the Anderson Center’s property. Bicycles are also provided. Residents have responded to many different aspects of the gorgeous Tower View campus through their work, including composers sampling natural sounds and visual artists harvesting plant materials to create site-specific natural inks.

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT: The program is set-up to minimize distractions and other obligations so that artists have every opportunity to fully focus on their work. However, the Anderson Center was one of the first artist residency programs in the country to require that residents give back to the local community and connect with area residents & organizations through community engagement activities.

Staff work with artists to facilitate and customize at least one hour of mutually beneficial exchange with the Red Wing community that helps foster connection and greater a sense of place.

Within the last few years, Anderson Center residents have connected with 12 schools in five area communities (ranging from elementary through college), 5 senior centers, 2 correctional or detention facilities, 7 community organizations serving children and families, and 8 community organizations serving adults. Residents have also engaged individuals from all walks of life through public workshops, events, discussions, and artful interventions. 

During the pandemic, community engagement activities have safely and creatively continued in small group, outdoor, online or distance settings. Examples from the later half of 2020 include a writing exercise letter exchange with residents of a correctional facility, a poetry walk along a park trail, an outdoor natural dye workshop, a distanced reading/discussion with students of Tower View Alternative High School, and various public & private online interviews/discussions with community stakeholders.

PROGRAM MISSION & VALUES: The mission of the Anderson Center is to, in the unique and historic setting of Tower View, offer residencies in the arts, sciences, and humanities; provide a dynamic environment for the exchange of ideas; encourage the pursuit of creative and scholarly endeavors; and serve as a forum for significant contributions to society.

The Anderson Center Residency Program was set-up by a working poet to support other artists and continues to function by those with hands-on experience in the creative process. The organization seeks out feedback from residents each month in order to implement necessary changes as it works toward continual improvement of the program. Most importantly, staff trust artists to know what they need most to advance their individual practices. The Center does not dictate specific outcomes. Instead, the expectation is that the gift of time and space will generate significant advancements in residents' work. The Anderson Center trusts the artists to best use their time to benefit their own work and reach their own goals.

As an interdisciplinary arts organization, the Anderson Center embraces artists who are diverse in every way. Since its inception, the organization has intentionally worked with artists representing a wide range of disciplines, with the belief that the exchange of ideas is generative. The residency program supports artists from around the world, representing a wide range of cultures, races, sexual identities and genders. The Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program exemplifies this diversity of identity and background for artists living in New York City and Minnesota. The Center strives to bring people and ideas together and operates with a spirit of welcome for all.

The Anderson Center aims to support work that is technically accomplished, conceptually rigorous and engages diverse communities. A goal of the Jerome Emerging Artist Residency Program in particular is to advance the practice of early-career artists that are uncompromising in their approach to creation and production, and whose work pushes boundaries and explores new creative territories.

SELECTION TIMELINE:

  • February 15, 2021 (11:59 p.m. CST) – application deadline

  • March 4, 2021 – Jury has selected Round 2 applications. All artists are notified of the status of their application

  • March 22, 2021 – Jury has selected finalists. Phone interviews with finalists begin.

  • April 4, 2021 – Final notification to selected artists, wait-list and runners-up

https://theandersoncenter.submittable.com/submit/174353/2021-jerome-emerging-artist-residency-for-mn-nyc-artists

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Episodic Lab 2021

Film Independent

DEADLINES:

  • Non-Member Deadline: February 17, 2021

  • Film Independent Member Deadline: March 3, 2021

INFO: Designed to support writers with original long-form episodic projects, Film Independent’s Episodic Lab will accept a diverse group of 6–8 writers or writing teams and provide them with critical support and mentorship. Through personalized feedback from experienced showrunners, creative producers and executives, Fellows will gain the tools to revise and refine their pilots and navigate a changing industry landscape.

The Episodic Lab helps to further the careers of its Fellows by introducing them to industry veterans who can offer guidance on both the craft and business of writing episodic content. Each Fellow will be paired with a Creative Advisor with whom they’ll work one-on-one and in group sessions to develop their project during the month of July. Additionally, guest speakers will screen and discuss their own work to offer insights into the creative process and industry best practices. A final networking and pitch event will offer Fellows the opportunity to introduce themselves and their work to studio and network executives.

NOTE: The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation will award one participant of the Film Independent Episodic Lab a $10,000 development grant. To apply for the Sloan Episodic Lab Grant, apply to the Episodic Lab and provide a statement on how the project fulfills the mission of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The applicant must possess the rights to the script with which they are applying. The teleplay should have a scientific, mathematical and/or technological theme and storyline or have a leading character that is a scientist, engineer or mathematician.

Who Can Apply?

The Episodic Lab is open to any emerging writer applying with a completed draft of a half hour or hour-long television pilot they wish to workshop during the program. Each applicant must be the author of the script he or she submits. The submitted pilot cannot have been pitched at any point to a studio or network.

Writing partners are welcome to apply as teams and need only submit a single application. International applicants are also welcome to apply. At this time, documentary and short-form digital series are not eligible to apply.

How to Apply

Applicants must submit the following materials for consideration:

Required

  • A cover letter explaining your interest in the Episodic Lab

  • One complete, original pilot

  • A series logline

  • A series description describing the story engine and series arc of the show

  • Project status and history, including any industry exposure

  • A series proposal document that includes brief descriptions of the world of the series and its premise and genre, as well as breakdowns for the show’s primary characters and their first season arcs

APPLICATION FEE:

Selection Criteria

Film Independent is looking for well-written, compelling, pilots with an original premise or vision. The submitted pilot may be original or adapted from optioned source material. Though applicants must submit a completed draft, the Lab is structured to support writers who are still creatively engaged in the writing process; those who welcome feedback and discussion will most benefit from the program as they further develop their work.

The Fine Print

Beyond the application fee, there is no cost or tuition to participate in any of Film Independent’s Artist Development programs.

Film Independent Membership is not required when applying to Artist Development Labs. However, all participants accepted into the Labs are required to join Film Independent at the standard annual General Membership rate of $95.

Applicants will be notified three to four weeks prior to the start of the program.

Applicants invited to participate in the program should plan to be in Los Angeles for the four-week duration of the Lab. Film Independent is unable to subsidize any travel, lodging and/or visa expenses for any participants attending from outside of Los Angeles. Participants are expected to attend all sessions in person.

https://www.filmindependent.org/programs/artist-development/episodic-lab/

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BLACK WRITERS IN FOCUS

Diverso

DEADLINE / FEE: February 21, 2021 ($20)

INFO: DIVERSO is a student-run film nonprofit dedicated to changing the face of entertainment by empowering the next generation of underrepresented storytellers.

In partnership with RIDEBACK (Aladdin, It, The LEGO Movies) and THE WRITERS GUILD FOUNDATION, we have created Black Writers in Focus: a paid internship program for Black student screenwriters.

Vetted by a rigorous committee of all Black readers, four talented students will spend ten weeks over the summer fine-tuning a writing sample with a personalized mentor, attending panels and classes with industry leaders, and learning from the best by shadowing in a writers' room.

Selected students will receive a $5,000 stipend to support a part-time commitment over 10 weeks. Interns are expected to make a 20-hour commitment each week. The internship program will be hosted virtually over the summer (June 7th - August 16th).

BENEFITS:

A 10-week, virtual, part-time internship program over the summer that includes:

  • $5000 stipend for each intern

  • Shadowing in writers’ rooms

  • Panels & Workshops from top industry leaders

  • Access to Diverso's vast professional network

  • Personalized mentorship to develop an industry-ready writing sample

SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS: Applicants must be Underrepresented writers currently enrolled in a university as an UNDERGRADUATE or GRADUATE student (2020 Winter Graduates are eligible). For eligibility and submissions information, please scroll down and read the Frequently Asked Questions portion.

Please ensure your submission has a cover sheet with only the TITLE of the screenplay. The author's name must NOT appear anywhere in the script in order to preserve anonymity in the judging process. Please specify genre when submitting material. 

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

Who can submit?

Black student writers currently enrolled at an undergraduate or graduate institution whose script has not been optioned. Winter 2020 Graduates are also eligible. Screenwriters may not have earned more than $25,000 writing fictional work for film or television. The BWIF is intended to promote and assist amateur writers exclusively. 

Who is considered "Black?"

In accordance to the US Census, Black or African American refers to a person having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa, including Sub‐Saharan African entries (e.g., Kenyan; Nigerian) and Afro‐Caribbean entries (e.g., Haitian; Jamaican). This includes individuals of mixed heritage.

What's your refund/resubmission policy? 

At this time, no refunds will be issued, please read all instructions before submitting. If you wish to submit a new/corrected draft, applicants will incur a second submission fee. Please reach out for assistance with this. 

Can I submit with a writing partner? 

No. Only solo writers may submit.

What does the entry fee cover?

The entry fee of $20/submission allows us a way to sustainably pay our professional, all-Black reader base.

What if I can't afford the entry fee?

We offer waivers to students who have difficulty affording the entry fee.

How long should my script be?

We accept submissions within the page count below for each category:          

  • Screenplays - 80-125

  • Teleplays - 25-70  

  • Scripts over 125 will be charged an additional $0.50 per page.

Does my script have to be centered around a Black narrative?

No. The script doesn't necessarily have to have anything to do with Black narratives as long as it's written by a Black student. Just give us your best work! 

What if my script is optioned during the contest?

Your script will still be eligible. In fact, we encourage writers to continue marketing their scripts as they wait for their scripts to be evaluated.

Can I submit a script that was optioned in the past?

Any script that is NOT currently under option or contract can enter the contract. If a pre-existing option has expired, you are eligible to enter. 

Can I send my script in another language than English?
You may enter the contest, but the script must be written in English so that our readers can read it. If a script has other languages in it as part of the plot, simply denote that the line will be spoken in another language using a parenthetical, e.g. (speaking in Spanish). 

What scripts are accepted?
We accept feature scripts, original pilot scripts, and both half-hour and hour-long teleplays. Any script submitted must not be currently optioned at time of submission. 

How many scripts may I submit? 
Writers may submit a single draft of one script only per category (e.g. one pilot, one feature). 

Why should my name and contact information not appear on my title page?
To ensure a meritocratic and anonymous judging process, we ask for the absence of a name and contact information. All your contact information can be found by us in your application. 

Who is reading my script?
A variety of Black analysts with script-reading experience. This can range anywhere from executive assistants, professional readers, writers, and/or studio executives.

Are only digital scripts accepted?
Diverso is environmentally conscious and only accepts digital scripts in PDF format.

Is coverage provided?
We provide all who enter actionable feedback on their scripts from our industry readers. 

How can I verify that my script has been submitted? 
You will be notified by e-mail immediately after your script is submitted. If you have received a confirmation e-mail, your script is in our system and no further action is necessary. If you have not received a confirmation e-mail, please check your junk mailbox or filter. If the confirmation is not in either place, e-mail us at hello@dvrso.org for a copy of your confirmation. We will contact you if there is any technical issue with your file. 

What genre is recommended? 

There is no recommended genre. Scripts from all categories are accepted and will be evaluated according to the execution of the story, originality, and dialogue. 

Can I submit images or accompanying documents along with my screenplay or teleplay?

No. The purpose of the contest is to judge the scripts based on the merit of the writing alone. 

I don't live in the United States. May I enter?

Yes.

My script is based off a true story. May I submit? 
Yes. However, unless the story is in the public domain, you must have the agreement and consent of the people represented in the script. In order to enter, you must be able to grant the rights to the story you wrote to a producer, should he/she want to option the script. 

Securing the rights to the source material is the responsibility of the screenwriter. If you feel that the rights are available, you may certainly enter. Regrettably, we cannot offer any advice on whether or not the rights are available. We recommend that you consult an attorney if you plan to pursue the project, as the question regarding rights -- even life rights -- would eventually come up and need to be addressed prior to anyone's optioning of or buying the script.

Can my script be plagiarized?

Diverso and its partners, employees, and/or associated agents claim no ownership nor first right of option to any submitted original screenplay. All ownership and rights to the submitted scripts remain with the original rights holders until and unless other agreements are made. 

In addition, all readers will sign confidentiality agreements to ensure that your work is protected. 

https://writers.coverfly.com/competitions/view/black-writers-in-focus

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Susan M. Haas Fellowship

DEADLINE: February 21, 2021 by 11:59pm PST

INFO: Emmy- and WGA-award winning writer Cord Jefferson is excited to partner with the WGA Foundation to launch the 2021 Susan M. Haas Fellowship, which will provide two journalists interested in TV-writing with financial and creative support as they develop original pilots.

Jefferson’s experience as a journalist turned screenwriter gives him a unique lens into the entertainment industry. After regularly offering advice and behind-the-scenes counsel to journalists interested in pursuing careers in film and television, Jefferson decided to offer support in a more formal way with the Haas Fellowship.

Two writers with backgrounds in journalism will receive $25,000 each to assist with living expenses for a six-month period, during which recipients will develop their original teleplays. Each writer will also be paired with a mentor who will provide notes and guidance throughout the drafting process. At the end of the six months, fellows will have the opportunity to meet with at least two industry professionals (agents, managers, and/or executives) to aid in the process of representation, staffing, and/or further project development.

The fellowship is named after Jefferson’s late mother, who dedicated her life to education.

ELIGIBILITY: This fellowship is open to journalists without a full-time job or steady source of income. This includes part-time, freelance, unemployed, or laid-off journalists. Applicants must not have earned credit(s) or financial compensation for any prior television or film work to be considered.

Writers of all race, color, gender, religion, national origin, age, disability and sexual orientation are encouraged to apply. Special attention will be given to applicants from communities which have been traditionally underrepresented in television writers’ rooms. You must be 21 or older and authorized to work in the United States to participate.

Additionally, applicants must be:

  • Committed to completing one (1) TV pilot during the program.

  • Able to participate in all program meetings and fulfill all program requirements.

  • Open to constructive criticism and respectful of all other participants and mentors.

The Susan M. Haas Fellowship will not tolerate discrimination by participants on the basis of race, religion, gender, age, disability, or national origin. Participants who violate this rule will be immediately removed from the program.

REQUIREMENTS:

  • Current Resume: Your resume should include all past writing-related work experiences.

  • Cover Letter/Personal Statement: Your cover letter should be no more than 500 words. It should outline your interest in television writing and experience in journalism.

  • Writing Clips/Sample: Applicants should submit three journalistic writing clips, ideally those that have been featured in a publication. Your writing sample should not be a screenplay or teleplay.

  • Pitches/Ideas: Applications should include three brief original pilot ideas. Pitches should not exceed 250 words and can be about original topics of any genre.

  • Terms of Use: Applicants will be required to agree to a submission agreement before submitting their applications.

https://www.haasfellowship.org/

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CALL FOR DIVERSE COMEDY WRITERS

Yes, And…Laughter Lab

DEADLINE: March 1, 2021 at 11:59pm

INFO: The Yes, And…Laughter Lab is a competitive incubation lab and pitch program that lifts up diverse comedy writers and performers creating new comedy about topics that matter. The Laughter Lab is designed to introduce these comedians to the entertainment industry, social justice organizations, philanthropists and activists who can help bring their work into the comedy marketplace – and into movements for social change.

The Yes, And Laughter Lab invites all comedy creators to apply for a chance to receive some training, some money, and a chance to pitch their project to a room full of potential allies and partners. The Laughter Lab is a pipeline for the best comedy projects that address pressing social issues.

The Lab will select ten original comedy projects from the pool of applicants. Winners will present their original projects, online or in person either in New York City (September 2021) or Los Angeles (October 2021), to a curated room of traditional and digital media platforms, grantmakers and investors, leading NGOs/nonprofits, production companies, and other select industry players. We aim to build support around each winning comedy project to accelerate its impact and influence.

The Laughter Lab is also providing training for up to 20 Finalists to provide them with the knowledge and skills needed to make the most of this opportunity. In light of COVID-19, the training may take place in person or virtually through a series of webinars, workshops, and videos. All participants will be updated when a final decision is made closer to the event date.

Our 2021 Laughter Lab Finalists will be informed the week of April 12, 2021 and announced the week of May 3, 2021. The final Pitch Winners will be announced the week of July 12, 2021. To get in touch, please contact us at info@yesandlaughterlab.com.

If you’re considering applying to the Laughter Lab, we are hosting a webinar on February 9, 2021 (6:00pm-7:00pm ET) where we will answer questions from interested applicants and explain more about the application and selection processes, what it means to be selected as a pitch winner, and what to expect along the way. RSVP here. You can view a recording of our 2020 applicant webinar on our YouTube channel.

See Official Rules for specific entry periods, complete entry details, judging criteria, and prize descriptions.

https://yesandlaughterlab.com/

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Mentorship Matters

DEADLINE: March 1, 2021

INFO: Mentorship Matters is an intensive year-long mentorship program with a simple goal: To help place emerging writers of color inside television writers rooms, and change the landscape of who gets to tell stories in our industry.

1. Who is eligible for the Program?

Participants will be emerging writers of color over 18, with at least one original pilot sample, who are not WGA members and have not been (or are not currently) staffed on a scripted series or have not been (or are not currently) employed in a Writers Room. Applicants can reside anywhere in the US but must be willing to move to Los Angeles if offered a paid position in a Writers Room.

If you live in another country, you are eligible if you have a current valid work visa and can move to Los Angeles immediately if a job is offered.

Writing teams may apply, and should fill out one application together.

2. What are the main elements of the Program?

Over the course of one year, Mentors and Mentees will meet or talk at least once a month. Mentors will provide advice, support, accountability and help prepare Mentees for the challenges of a career in television. Additionally Mentors will guide Mentees in developing and polishing one original pilot, with a calendar of steps clearly outlined:

• Mentor will hear/read pitch concept(s) and give general advice on one idea
• Mentor will provide Mentee with pilot outline and script samples if needed
• Mentor will read pilot outline and give notes
• Mentor will read first draft and give notes
• Mentor will give final set of polish notes

Mentors are committed to making introductions and fostering connections with other writers, agents, managers and executives. The goal is to help Mentees build genuine, rewarding, professional relationships and collaborations that will continue beyond the program and ultimately lead to a career in television.

REQUIRED MATERIALS:

  • Letter of Interest: 1 page, double spaced, 12pt font

  • Brief background, including:

    • Where are you from? How does your background influence your writing?

    • How long have you been writing?

    • What kinds of stories are you most interested in telling?

    • Do you have a favorite genre – or a specific strength as a writer?

    • What steps have you taken/are you taking now to pursue a career in television?

    • What existing shows could you see yourself writing for?

  • How do you think your unique voice/perspective will contribute to a Writers Room?

  • Resume: Relevant education and work experience.

  • Writing Sample: Original comedy or drama pilot.

  • Video Introduction: 1 Minute (file size < 1GB)‍

    • What do you want us to know about you?

    • What do you hope to get out of the Program?

https://www.mentorshipmatters.tv/

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New Voices

Humanitas

DEADLINES / FEES:

  • Early Deadline: March 1, 2021 ($65)

  • Regular Deadline: April 1, 2021 ($75)

  • Extended Deadline: May 17, 2021 ($85)

INFO: In 2010, Executive Director Cathleen Young created NEW VOICES with the vision of discovering, developing and launching a new generation of talented writers under the mentorship of Hollywood showrunners and studio partners.

Every year, NEW VOICES selects up to six writers through a rigorous selection process. Candidates are asked to submit a script and participate in personal interviews. Once matched with a mentor, the writers have three months to further develop their script under their mentors’ supervision. After the script is honed, HUMANITAS sends it to a partnering studio or network executive. The winning writers are given recognition at the annual awards ceremony and are awarded with a $7,500 grant.

We are looking for well-written scripts with compelling stories and developed characters. Any genre is accepted as a 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay. We accept only one application and script per year. To be eligible a TV writer can have experience up to and including "Executive Story Editor", and feature writers cannot have earned more than $25,000 writing fictional work for film.

TIMELINE

  • Announcement of semi-finalists and finalists: August 2021

  • Annual awards event: September 2021

A SIGNATURE HUMANITAS NEW VOICES STORY MUST:

  1. Challenge us to use our freedom to grow and develop.

  2. Confront us with our individual responsibility.

  3. Examine the consequences of our choices.

REQUIRED MATERIALS:

  • One original 30-minute pilot, 60-minute pilot, or feature film screenplay (name redacted)

  • Logline

  • Brief synopsis (1 paragraph)

  • Release form

Depending on what deadline you submit your entry by, there is a different fee to submit to NEW VOICES. Candidates will submit payment with their application.

If you are selected as a Semifinalist, you must prepare:

  • Letter of interest (1 page, double-spaced)

  • Resume (no more than 2 pages)

  • Bio (1 page, double-spaced)

https://www.humanitasprize.org/new-voices

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GENERAL SUBMISSIONS

Tulsa Review

DEADLINE: March 1, 2021

INFO: The Tulsa Review seeks bold, unique voices for publication in our annual journal. We accept submissions of any unpublished, short creative writing (such as poems, fiction, novel excerpts, creative nonfiction, one-act plays, and short screenplays) and visual artwork (such as photographs, illustrations, or digital images).

GUIDELINES:

  1. Any writer or artist who is not a TCC student may submit their unpublished work as a General Submission.

  2. Do not include your name on your manuscript or artwork. We read and judge submissions blindly.

  3. Each submission in every category must be submitted individually.

  4. Prose and poetry submissions must be in a .DOC, .DOCX, .RTF, or .TXT file format. Please use Times New Roman font, size 1

    • For fiction and nonfiction use double spaced lines. Do not exceed 7,500 words. Writers can submit up to 2 works in each genre.

    • Poets can submit up to 5 poems. Do not exceed 25-30 lines.

    • For drama, writers can submit up to 3 works.

    • Visual artwork must be submitted as a .PDF of less than 5 MB. (If your artwork is selected for publication, we will contact you for a higher-resolution image.) Artists can submit up to 5 pieces.

  5. We encourage submissions to multiple genres.

  6. Submissions are accepted year-round but are reviewed only during the spring semester.

  7. Simultaneous submissions are welcome, but please let us know immediately if a work has been accepted for publication elsewhere.

  8. When a submission is accepted for publication, Tulsa Review is given first-publication rights. (Rights revert to the author/artist after publication.)

  9. TCC students, if you wish to submit to the TCC Student Writing Contest, please see the TCC Student Writing Contest Guidelines. If you are a TCC student submitting to a contest, there is no need to make a separate General Submission.

SUBMISSION FEE: $0

For each piece submit a short bio (no more than 30 words) to be included with publication. Feel free to include any social media information, or personal creative website in the bio. All contributors will be notified by April 1, 2021 whether their work has been accepted.

https://www.tulsaccreview.com/submit/

TV / WEB SERIES -- JANUARY 2021

WRITERS DISCOVERY FELLOWSHIP

Circle of Confusion

DEADLINE: January 5, 2020

INFO: Circle of Confusion — a premiere management and production destination for exceptional actors, writers, directors, content creators, publishers and journalists — will establish an ongoing fellowship program to nurture and assist in accelerating the diversity of voices in our industry. Circle of Confusion’s core mission has always been discovery, and we have been fortunate enough to have identified and promoted many talented writers, directors, actors and creators from all walks of life. It is based on this tradition and fundamental strength of the company that Circle of Confusion is launching the program. The excitement of film and television has always been the joy that great storytelling brings to audiences around the globe. By promoting voices that have been historically excluded, the Fellowship will enrich both the professional lives of the Fellows and the dynamic quality of the entertainment industry.

THE FELLOWSHIP: Circle of Confusion will provide an immersive introductory experience to the world of professional screen and television writing to a diverse group of aspiring writers who have not yet been employed or represented by the industry. The Fellows will each be given a $10,000 stipend by way of a first look deal with Circle of Confusion Television Studios. Twice per year, the program will select six to eight writers for a six-month fellowship which closely replicates the writer-manager dynamic. Each Fellow will be assigned a mentor who will educate and guide them by way of script development, career advice, and support. While the Fellowship cannot guarantee the sale of the pilot or specific employment, by the end of each Fellowship session, each Fellow will have developed a submission-ready television pilot, been afforded multiple opportunities for industry networking, and generally equipped with the essential tools for their success as writers in the entertainment industry.

The Fellowship is open to applicants of all ethnicities, races, cultural backgrounds, gender identities, sexual orientations, and ages.

MENTORSHIP: Our mentors will include Circle of Confusion literary managers and other senior industry professionals, offering general business advice and script development within the duration of the Fellowship. In the first four months, each Fellow will develop an original pilot script with their dedicated mentor. The pilot scripts will be reviewed by the Fellowship’s Advisory Board (composed of established members of the film and television community with an expertise in content evaluation) and then submitted to relevant industry professionals, with the explicit goal of using the last two months of the Fellowship to arrange general one-on-one Zoom meetings with producers and executives. Throughout the entire Fellowship session, the mentor will be available to guide the Fellow through each step, assisting the Fellow in their development of writing and storytelling skills, pitching skills and navigating the meeting process.

PROGRAMMING: The Fellowship program will begin in March of 2021 and include informational panels, speakers and workshops with industry professionals. Additionally, Fellows will have the opportunity to participate in several practice/mock-general meetings in preparation for their final professional meetings.

Applicant Qualifications:

  • Have never worked or held representation in the entertainment industry as a writer

  • Must have two storytelling samples, with at least one being a pilot script draft to further develop alongside a mentor during the Fellowship

Application Materials:

  • Fellowship application

    • Personal statement

    • Brief questionnaire

  • Two samples of narrative storytelling (The development sample must be a pilot script. Other writing samples may include but are not limited to pilot scripts, feature screenplays, short stories, personal essays, produced short form content, slam poetry, plays, audio-drama scripts, etc.)

http://www.circleofconfusion.com/fellowship/?fbclid=IwAR2kFtkzMxaKNmvB0QCa5Emjmg9UxM8rq6fQNkKSpFIh4zkeiNeRLbH-LBc

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GULF SOUTH WRITER IN THE WOODS

A Studio in the Woods

DEADLINE: January 8, 2021

INFO: Gulf South Writer in the Woods, a program of A Studio in the Woods and the New Orleans Center for the Gulf South, supports the creative work, scholarship and community engagement of writers examining the Gulf South region.

Specifically, this year we aim to support BILAPOC Speculative Fiction writers working in prose, poetry and stage/screenwriting. Special consideration will be given to southern voices, under-represented communities, and perspectives not often heard. Eligible writers must live in the Gulf South, be from/have heritage in the Gulf South, and/or write about the Gulf South. The awardee will receive a stipend of $5,000, a 6-week residency at A Studio in the Woods over 18 months, Tulane University library access, and staff support from the presenting partners.

DATES The term of the Gulf South Writer in the Woods will be Winter 2021 through Summer 2023. The six weeks of residency at A Studio in the Woods can be scheduled in up to three sessions between July 2021-June 2022.

REQUIREMENTS

  • Exploration and early development of concept for a significant manuscript

  • Creative and radical thinking

  • Participation in six week residency

  • Giving a public lecture

  • Design and implement a community engagement event

  • Participating in a public dinner

ELIGIBILITY Creative writers working in Speculative Fiction in the format of prose, poetry, or stage/screenwriting will be considered. This year we aim to support BILAPOC writers working in prose, poetry and stage/screenwriting who live in the Gulf South, are from/have heritage in the Gulf South, and/or write about the Gulf South. There are no degree requirements. If the applicant is a student, they must be an active and advanced graduate student—in their second year of coursework and beyond. Note that this is an opportunity for a single writer, not a collaborative team or ensemble. Foreign language projects are welcome, however application and primary work sample must be in English.

SPECULATIVE FICTION Speculative Fiction is a broad category of fiction encompassing genres with certain elements that do not exist in terms of the recorded history and observed phenomena of the current universe, covering various themes in the context of the supernatural, futuristic, and many other imaginative topics.[1] Under this umbrella category, the genres include, but are not limited to, science fiction, fantasy, horror, superhero fiction, alternate history, utopian and dystopian fiction, and supernatural fiction, as well as combinations thereof (e.g. science fantasy).[2]

SELECTION PROCESS Every two years, a new Gulf South Writer in the Woods is selected through a jury process. The position will be awarded on the merit of the proposal, the stage of the manuscript, and its potential to result in new and refreshed understandings about this region. We will also consider the impact of the position on the writer’s career trajectory. The next selection process will take place in Winter 2023.

SUPPORT The awardee will receive a stipend of $5,000, a 6-week residency at A Studio in the Woods over 18 months, Tulane University library access, and staff support from the presenting partners. We are looking to support projects in the exploratory phase and will endeavor to connect the writer with faculty and experts in relevant fields. We will provide full room and board including food, utilities for living and studio space to selected resident. Resident is expected to cover personal living expenses, additional materials and supplies, and any other expenses relating to the cost of producing work incurred while in the program. Travel and shipping expenses to and from A Studio in the Woods for the residency are also the responsibility of the artist. To better understand project impact, each artist will work with an external evaluator.

GUIDELINES:

Gulf South Writer in the Woods proposals should include the following:

  • 500-word project summary.

  • Project narrative of no more than five double-spaced pages.

http://www.astudiointhewoods.org/2020/11/18/open-call-for-next-gulf-south-writer-in-the-woods/

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BIPOC WRITERS FELLOWSHIP: ADAPTING BOOKS FOR THE SCREEN

The Writers Room 5050

DEADLINE: January 8, 2021 

INFO: The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press Present: The BIPOC Writers Fellowship, "Adapting Books for the Screen," beginning March 2021. In this 12-week fellowship, fellows will adapt a book into a feature film screenplay, receive mentorship from industry leaders, a stipend for participating, and more. 

The fellowship will focus on adapting a book into a screenplay, the release of fictional feature films for theatrical, streaming, and television movies-of-the-week (MOWs). In the process, BIPOC writers will learn the highest industry standards for developing, writing, financing and producing an adapted feature film project. Each fellow will adapt one Level 4 Press book into a feature film screenplay.

The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press are currently working with top executives, writers, representatives and guest speakers to provide mentorship, feedback, and firsthand industry knowledge. 

The BIPOC Writers Fellowship includes but is not limited to:

  • A 12-week lab taking you from book-to-screenplay

  • Mentorship on creating and crafting your script

  • A $750 Writer Stipend to all participants and accepted writers

  • Expert development notes and assessments by industry professionals

  • A 'table read' with professional actors

  • Script Sales and Career Strategy instruction

  • Pitch deck and high-end marketing collateral created for the project

  • Live Industry Event to pitch your new script and meet high-end industry decision-makers

  • For those scripts optioned, setup or sold, there will be financial participation 

REQUIREMENTS:

  • BIPOC Writer: Applicants must be of BIPOC heritage/ethnicity (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color)

  • Script Submission: Writers must submit a completed screenplay (90 to 120 pages) for consideration

  • Application Fee: An Early, Regular or Late application processing fee will apply.

Announcements:

  • Semi-Finalists: January 22, 2021

  • Finalists: February 5, 2021

  • Fellows Announced: February 19, 2021

  • Fellows Begins: Week of March 8, 2021

Fellowship Schedule:

  • Dates: Wednesdays, March 10th to May 26th, 2021

  • Time: 6pm to 9pm PST - (1 class per week, 3 hours per class)

  • Venue: Zoom

SUBMISSION FEE: $60

https://www.writersroom5050.com/fellowship-details

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2021 SESAME WORKSHOP WRITERS’ ROOM

DEADLINE: January 8, 2021 at 5pm EST

INFO: Sesame Workshop Writers’ Room is a writing fellowship from the creators of Sesame Street. And we’re looking for YOU! Fresh new writing talent from underrepresented racial backgrounds. Emerging storytellers who are selected to join the Writers’ Room will receive hands-on writing experience guided by Sesame Street veterans and other media industry leaders. Each participant will develop and write a pilot script for their own original kids concept. Past fellows have gone on to develop their own original content with Sesame Workshop, as well as write for Sesame Street and various programs at Nickelodeon, Disney, DreamWorks, and more!

  • Up to 8 writers from underrepresented racial backgrounds will be selected

  • Sessions will take place from May through July 2021

  • Includes eight, three-hour sessions on creating original children's content

  • Learn from industry writers, producers, agents and executives

  • Learn and complete all steps of creating an original pilot episode script

  • Up to two participants will have the opportunity to receive creative development deals and further mentorship

Application Check List:

  • Application form

  • Resume: this can feature your overall work experience, NOT only writing experience

  • Personal statement: tell us about yourself, for example, why you want to write for children's educational media, how your experiences influence the stories you tell, why you value diversity/representation in children's media, etc. (up to 250 words)

  • Original script sample: 11-page maximum, it should NOT contain Sesame Street elements, it can be an excerpt from a larger piece you've written, it must be kid-friendly content for viewers up to age 12...we're looking for great characters and stories that inspire kids to be smarter, stronger and kinder!

  • More info on your script: what's the bigger picture/idea of your script sample? (up to 100 words)

https://sesamewritersroom.org/?utm_source=swr&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2020_1020_SWR_Annoucement&utm_content=cta

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Hillman Grad Mentorship Lab

Hillman Grad Productions

DEADLINE: January 10, 2021

INFO: The Hillman Grad Mentorship Lab provides opportunities for marginalized storytellers to connect, grow, and accelerate their career in television and film.

Committed to infusing new narratives and perspectives in front of and behind the camera, the Hillman Grad Mentorship Lab provides a robust slate of workshops, educational resources, and professional development and networking opportunities for a cohort of diverse writers, actors, and aspiring creative executives.

The tuition-free, 10-month program grants fellows the unique opportunity to enhance their creative skillset through personalized instruction from industry professionals, creating additional pathways to bring more people from diverse backgrounds into the entertainment industry.

CURRICULUM: The Hillman Grad Mentorship Lab consists of three separate tracks: television writing, screen acting, executive development.

Writing fellows will engage in a comprehensive writing experience, developing an original pilot from concept ideation to a fully polished and packaged script. Fellows will learn how to plan and write a pilot, participate in a simulated writers room–undergoing a series of rewrites from notes by both the instructor and peers–capped off by a table read featuring actors from the Hillman Grad Network.

Acting fellows will explore the fundamental tools and techniques of screen acting, engaging in a series of classes and workshops designed to fine tune their ability to bring a story to life. Fellows will critically explore a wide array of text, expanding their creative capacity to successfully deliver powerful performances, slay their audition, and get booked.

Executive development fellows will learn how to transition from working as an assistant to becoming a creative executive. Fellows will receive direct mentorship from Hillman Grad Productions development team, led by President of Film/TV, Rishi Rajani.

PROGRAM PERKS:

  • Instant access to the exclusive Hillman Grad Network–a diverse and comprehensive group of industry professionals, including writers, actors, directors, producers, creative executives, network executives and many more

  • Monthly speaker series with industry experts

  • Professional development resources and exclusive job opportunities

  • Opportunities to shadow a writer’s room and visit set

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS:

The Program is subject to the following requirements: 

  • You must submit a complete and accurate application through the Hillman Grad website prior to the application deadline, which application will include:

  • A Personal Statement;

  • Short Answers to a series of questions; 

  • A resume and biography;

  • For Television Writing applicants: a writing sample, written solely by the applicant (no writing teams), which must be either an original feature screenplay or television pilot;

  • For Screen Acting applicants: a monologue 90-120 seconds in length from a film, television program or play.

  • You must also agree to (1) these Submission Requirements, (2) all terms relating to the Program posted on Hillman Grad’s website, which you should review and read in full, and (3) the Submission Agreement, which governs the submission of your materials to Hillman Grad. The Submission Agreement includes important, legally binding terms and conditions, including arbitration of any disputes, which you must read in full before accepting.

  • You must be at least 18 years of age and not a minor in the state or country of your residence at time of submission.

  • You must be the sole owner of all rights in and to the materials submitted to Hillman Grad (“Submission Materials”). The Submission Materials must not in any way infringe upon the copyright of any person or entity or, to the best of your knowledge in the exercise of reasonable prudence, constitute libel, defamation or invasion of privacy or any other rights of any third party.

https://www.hillmangrad.com/mentorship-labs

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2020-2021 BLACK LIST & GOOGLE ASSISTANT STORYTELLING FELLOWSHIP

The Black List / Google Assistant

DEADLINE: January 15, 2021

INFO: Up to five writers will receive $20,000 each for the purpose of supporting those writers for six months as they work to draft their new feature screenplays and/or teleplays. During the course of those six months, the Black List and Google Assistant will also pair each fellowship recipient with a screenwriting mentor.

Pitches should be contemporary in nature and avoid violence and/or illegal activity as the premise of the story. Completed scripts can include the natural helpfulness of technology in everyday life, but shouldn’t be focused around technology or from a dystopian view. At the end of the Fellowship, each recipient would provide Google with a copy of their new draft along with a report addressing how the grant has been used to advance their work.

THE SELECTION PROCESS

Opt-ins will be open until midnight on Friday, January 15, 2021. On Monday, January 18, 2021, up to 15 writers will be invited, based on the strength of their scripts as determined by the Black List, to submit a one-page personal statement and professional resume. Those materials will be due on Friday, January 22, 2020. From those submissions, up to five (5) writers will be selected by the Black List and Google Assistant to receive the 2020-2021 Storytelling Fellowship. Fellowship recipients will be notified in February 2021.

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/90

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Wurlitzer Foundation RESIDENCY

Helene Wurlitzer Foundation

DEADLINE: January 18, 2021

INFO: The Helene Wurlitzer Foundation of New Mexico (HWF) is a private, 501(c)(3) non-profit, educational and charitable organization committed to supporting the arts. Founded in 1954, the HWF manages one of the oldest artist residency programs in the USA and is located on fifteen acres in the heart of Taos, New Mexico, a multicultural community renowned for its popularity with artists.

The Foundation offers three months of rent-free and utility-paid housing to people who specialize in the creative arts. Our eleven artist casitas, or guest houses, are fully furnished and provide residents with a peaceful setting in which to pursue their creative endeavors.

The Foundation accepts applications from painters, poets, sculptors, writers, playwrights, screenwriters, composers, photographers, and filmmakers of national and international origin.

Applications are reviewed by a selection committee consisting of professionals who specialize in the artistic discipline of the applicant. Numerous jurors serve on committees for each: visual arts, music composers, writers, poets, playwrights, and filmmakers. Jurors, who know nothing about the artist's demographics, score in five categories based purely on the merit of the applicant's creative work samples.

Artists in residence have no imposed expectations, quotas, or requirements during their stay on the HWF campus. The HWF’s residency program provides artists with the time and space to create, which in turn enriches the artistic community and culture locally and abroad.

GUIDELINES:

Literary artists may upload writing samples in .pdf format using the application form above. Alternatively, literary artists may choose to mail hard-copies. Include a cover sheet containing your contact info and table of contents, but please omit names and contact info on the writing samples themselves.
• Writers: samples should not exceed 35 double-spaced pages
• Poets: a maximum of six poems.
• Playwrights: include one complete play.
• Screenwriters: include one complete screenplay.

Digital work samples are accepted and encouraged for applications from visual artists and composers. Applicants should prepare to submit five work sample files when filling out the online application form. Acceptable file types for images include jpg, gif and png. Accepted types for audio files are mp3 and m4a.

Filmmakers must mail a DVD or USB-drive containing up to 30 minutes of video which represents no more than five different samples of your work.

APPLICATION FEE: $25

https://wurlitzerfoundation.org/apply

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2020 FICTION PODCAST CONTEST

Shore Scripts

DEADLINE: January 21, 2021

INFO: Podcasts are kind of a big deal! Over 100 million people in USA listen to at least one Podcast a month and that rate is increasing by 20 million year on year. Fiction podcasts are taking a century’s worth of entertainment in radio plays and pushing the boundaries to tell stories in fresh and innovative ways, quickly becoming the fastest-growing sub-section of this booming industry. Many writers, including our Judges, have forged successful careers for themselves through Podcasts. Hollywood’s taking notice too! More and more of these shows are being adapted for Televsion: Homecoming, Limetown, Carrier, Left Right Game & LORE to name but a few. 

The beauty of the fiction Podcast format is that it allows you as a w

riter to be completely free to tell the story you wish to tell, without having to factor in the budgetary constraints of filmmaking. Our Podcast Contest offers more in funding and prize money than any other. 

In collaboration with our winning writers, Shore Scripts will produce both episodes, making use of our industry connections to find talented cast and crew. We will look to attach a named actor/actress to each episode to further elevate the show and draw in a larger audience. Once both episodes are live, we will contact commissioners in an attempt to greenlight the series. The writers have final say on all potential commissioning offers.

This is a great opportunity to get your work commissioned and voice heard in this ever-growing industry. You don’t even need to write an episode from scratch. Perhaps you have a screenplay, novel or stageplay that could be adapted to fit this medium. Read our How to Adapt my Screenplay into a Podcast for some pointers.  

We accept screenplay, radio and stageplay format. Check out our Rules and FAQ’s for all the info. 

AWARD:

  • Two winners will be chosen to have their pilot scripts produce, each with a budget of $5,000

  • Plus, each winner will also receive $1000 Cash!

https://filmfreeway.com/ShoreScriptsFictionPodcastContest

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Call for Applications: Cultural Mentorship Funding Program

Indigenous Screen Office (ISO) / Netflix

DEADLINE: January 22, 2021 at 5pm EST

INFO: ISO is partnered with Netflix to provide new funding opportunities to support training, capacity building and culturally specific approaches for Indigenous on-screen content creators.  

The goal of Cultural Mentorship program is to offer the opportunity for Indigenous producers, directors and writers to engage in cultural mentorship, engagement, learning, and protocols work during the development phases of their project.  This may include travel and fees to engage with Elders, language speakers, knowledge keepers and/or community members to develop the project.

1. Application Questionnaire (view and download here). Please download the questionnaire, complete it, and upload it into the application form when you are ready to apply. 
2. Project Budget
3. Bio (max 500 words)
4. Letter from mentor or community confirming engagement in this process
5. A letter of confirmation from mentor and apprentice
6. Resume/CV for project lead

Eligibility Requirements:

The Cultural Mentorship Program is open to the following applicants: 

  1. Indigenous Individuals: Indigenous creatives may apply directly to serve as an apprentice on a production. In this case, the production and/or specialist who will be serving as a mentor may be Indigenous or non-Indigenous.

  2. Indigenous Productions must be Indigenous-controlled (minimum 51% ownership by person/s who are First Nations, Inuit or Métis from Canada);

For the purposes of ISO programs, “Indigenous” is defined as status and non-status First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples residing in Canada. 

For both programs, funding is available for fiction, non-fiction, or documentary screen-based projects in all genres. The following types of productions are eligible: 

  • Short works

  • Feature-length works

  • Television series

  • Web series

  • VR, 360, digital and interactive works

FUNDING: Maximum funding $15,000

https://iso-bea.ca/call-for-applications-iso-netflix-apprenticeship-and-cultural-mentorship-funding-programs/

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EPISODIC LAB

Realness Institute / Netflix

DEADLINE: January 31, 2021

INFO: Realness Institute’s mission is to unearth the wealth of African stories – stories from the continent, told with an honest and unapologetic point of view by African filmmakers. Their Episodic Lab will focus on developing pitch documents with selected writers for series content of all genres.

6 writers will spend 3 months in an online ‘writers room’ format. They will work with a script consultant and a creative producer to fully develop their story concepts into an episodic pitch. Along with creative training, writers will receive feedback from NETFLIX’s series development team.

Selected writers will receive a stipend of $2000 per month to dedicate 3 months to cover their living expenses as they develop their ideas.

At the end of the lab, selected writers will have the opportunity to pitch to NETFLIX and have their series developed for production.

Should the pitch not be picked up for production, the development rights of the story revert to the writer.

ELIGIBILITY:

  • Applicants must be from South Africa, Kenya OR Nigeria only.

  • Concept must be set in South Africa, Kenya OR Nigeria

  • Writer/writing team* with either Film or Television experience *only one writer will be able to participate if selected.

  • Any genre, must be fictional

  • Series Language: English and/or local language *Please note that the working language of the lab is in English and all documents must be delivered in English.

  • Creators should not be committed to a producer or a director to participate in this lab.

APPLICATION:

You will be required to fill in the following in the online application:

  • 1 paragraph of your story idea,

  • 1 paragraph description of the story world,

  • 1 paragraph description of the tone and references for the series,

  • ½ page bio of writer or per writer if writing team,

  • 10 words description of each main character,

  • 8x one- line episode ideas;

  • and two writing samples of which you are the sole writer (10 page max.) It could be any writing but preferably a synopsis, a treatment or a short script or scenes of a long form one.

You must also pay a 30 Euro Application Fee via Paypal (Wire Transfer option of R550.00 available for South African participants only).

https://www.realness.institute/episodic-lab-application

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Chaotic Merge

DEADLINE: Rolling

INFO: Chaotic Merge is looking for submissions from all different forms of artist. We seek work that is adventurous and test the border of art and structure. Don't be afraid to mess with everything you have ever learned in your lives. We write to have fun!We encourage voice of people of color and members of the LGBTQ+ community to submit their work.

We are open for submissions all year round.*We strongly suggest following all guidelines upon submitting. 

GUIDELINES:

  • Submit all work to ChaoticMergeMagazine@gmail.com

  • Title your email subject as follows: Full name_Genre_Title of work. Anything labelled otherwise will not be read.

  • Depending on your genre, please limit each submission to:

    • Up to 5 unpublished poems (a non-English work & its English translation count as one poem submission)

    • 2 unpublished short fiction piece (up to 5,000 words) 

    • Up to 5 unpublished art/photographs/ illustrations in pdf, png, and jpeg or

    • 2 unpublished Screenplay or Play (up to 10-15 pages) 

  • All work submitted should be accompanied by a short author bio between 50 and 100 words, a author/creator photo in jpg, and your pronouns.While we accept simultaneous submissions, do indicate in your email that this is a simultaneous submission, and write in to us immediately to withdraw your work once it has been accepted elsewhere.

  • Publication Rights: Chaotic Merge Magazine publishes only unpublished work, unless we ourselves request for them. By submitting your work, you affirm that you are the sole author and maintain all rights for your work. By submitting your work, you authorize Chaotic Merge Magazine to publish your work in both its e-journal and online platforms.

https://chaoticmergemagazine.com/submit/


TV / WEB SERIES -- DECEMBER 2020

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Books at Berlinale

JAFTA / JAWS

INFO: The Jamaica Film and Television Association (JAFTA) and Jamaican Writers Society (JaWS) are encouraging Jamaican novelists and rights holders to apply to the Books at Berlinale international Open Call for the chance to have the novel paired with an international film producer and adapted into a film. This is a drive to diversify, to create more awareness of great Jamaican stories and to get those stories to the screen.

DEADLINE: December 3, 2020

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qTpxooT-GIgaxQryZBa6GAPLPg30B934/view

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THE 2020 MUSLIM LIST

The Black List / Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) / Pillars Fund

INFO: The Black List has partnered with the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) and Pillars Fund to create The Muslim List, highlighting the very best unproduced scripts written by at least one Muslim writer. 

Filmmakers and content creators are invited to submit a script for consideration by uploading it to The Black List website during fall 2020. Submissions will be accepted until December 4, 2020. Feature film, one-hour, and half-hour original pilot submissions will be considered for this opportunity (no webseries, please.) Scripts from any genre are eligible for this partnership. 

 Writers selected for the Muslim List will be notified of their placement in January-February 2021, with a public announcement to follow.

DEADLINE: December 4, 2020

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/87

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2020 FICTION PODCAST CONTEST

Shore Scripts

INFO: Podcasts are kind of a big deal! Over 100 million people in USA listen to at least one Podcast a month and that rate is increasing by 20 million year on year. Fiction podcasts are taking a century’s worth of entertainment in radio plays and pushing the boundaries to tell stories in fresh and innovative ways, quickly becoming the fastest-growing sub-section of this booming industry. Many writers, including our Judges, have forged successful careers for themselves through Podcasts. Hollywood’s taking notice too! More and more of these shows are being adapted for Televsion: Homecoming, Limetown, Carrier, Left Right Game & LORE to name but a few. 

The beauty of the fiction Podcast format is that it allows you as a w

riter to be completely free to tell the story you wish to tell, without having to factor in the budgetary constraints of filmmaking. Our Podcast Contest offers more in funding and prize money than any other. 

In collaboration with our winning writers, Shore Scripts will produce both episodes, making use of our industry connections to find talented cast and crew. We will look to attach a named actor/actress to each episode to further elevate the show and draw in a larger audience. Once both episodes are live, we will contact commissioners in an attempt to greenlight the series. The writers have final say on all potential commissioning offers.

This is a great opportunity to get your work commissioned and voice heard in this ever-growing industry. You don’t even need to write an episode from scratch. Perhaps you have a screenplay, novel or stageplay that could be adapted to fit this medium. Read our How to Adapt my Screenplay into a Podcast for some pointers.  

We accept screenplay, radio and stageplay format. Check out our Rules and FAQ’s for all the info. 

AWARD:

  • Two winners will be chosen to have their pilot scripts produce, each with a budget of $5,000

  • Plus, each winner will also receive $1000 Cash!

DEADLINES:

  • Regular - December 18, 2020

  • Final - January 21, 2021

https://filmfreeway.com/ShoreScriptsFictionPodcastContest

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Open Call

ITVS

INFO: Open Call is looking for exceptional storytelling that’s in line with our mission: stories that take risks, tackle important issues, address the needs of underserved audiences, and are seldom seen in public media. We know how hard you’ve worked on your project, and we’ll partner with you to help you finish it, then distribute it on public television. 

Open Call gives independent producers up to $350,000 to complete production for a standalone broadcast length documentary to air on public television. The documentary can be on any subject, viewpoint or style as long as it is in active production already, as evidenced via a ten to fifteen minute work in progress sample. For pre-production nonfiction projects, see Diversity Development Fund or Short-Form Open Call. 

Open Call is not a grant. You will receive funding in the form of a co-production agreement that assigns ITVS certain rights over your project during the term of the contract. 

Be sure to allow sufficient time (2-4 weeks) to complete the application. ITVS has adopted the Documentary Core standards as a foundation for our funding applications. Much of the Open Call application has been aligned with this model, however, there is additional production detail required to complete the application as ITVS funds documentaries for public television. 

WHO WE FUND:

  • Single, non-fiction projects of standard broadcast length (30, 60, or 90 minutes) that aren’t intended solely for theatrical or SVOD (Subscription Video on Demand) release. We do not accept live-action drama or fiction.

  • Broadcast distribution for feature length programs on public television are very limited. ITVS may require you to deliver a one-hour version of your program.

  • Works in progress.

WHAT TO EXPECT:

Review Process

After you submit your application, you will receive notification of your status within 16-20 weeks. If you are among a small group of finalists who advance through a series of peer reviews, you will be asked to submit additional materials for a feasibility review. 

Decisions are final and may not be appealed. However, unsuccessful applicants are welcome to apply again in the future. Reviewer feedback will only be provided to those applicants that make it to panel review or, based on staff capacity, for those applicants from Phase One.

Production and Distribution 

ITVS doesn’t just fund your film. We provide you with creative development and feedback, and, depending on the broadcast outlet, with marketing, publicity, and audience engagement services. You own copyright and maintain full editorial, creative, and financial control.

Funded projects will be expected to acknowledge the production support from ITVS in all program and publicity materials; cooperate with ITVS’ publicity protocols; provide timely information to ITVS about project activities, including notification of and request for approval of any major changes to the project; and submit contract deliverables, including final financial reporting at the conclusion of the project. Failure to submit the final financials will preclude applicants from eligibility to apply for future funding. 

When your program is at or near completion, we offer it to and work closely with public television programmers across the U.S. to secure a sublicense of public television broadcast rights and ensure the broadcast of your program. ITVS will enter into a license agreement for exclusive domestic television rights. 

Most ITVS-funded programs air on PBS series such as Independent LensPOVAmerican Masters, and FRONTLINE. Our programs also have success in the festival, educational video, home video, SVOD and foreign broadcast markets. 

ELIGIBILITY:

You are eligible to apply if you are:

  • The owner of the copyright of your production and maintain editorial control of the story.

  • Not employed as a producer or director by a broadcast entity or film studio.

  • Someone with previous film or television production experience in a principal role: director, producer or first-time filmmakers with an experienced producer attached to the project. 

  • Graduate theses are eligible as previously completed work. Undergraduate student work will not be reviewed

  • Applying to only this ITVS funding initiative at this time – we won’t review projects already under consideration for other ITVS funding.

  • A citizen or legal resident of the U.S. or its external territories age 18 or older.

  • Individuals can only submit one application per round, as either an applicant or co-applicant. However, an applicant can be a member of the key creative personnel on multiple projects.

  • Seeking funding for only production activities that support completion and delivery of a program for broadcast.

  • Submitting a project that is in production or post-production. Projects that are early in production may not be as competitive unless you have demonstrated access, strong storytelling in your treatment and work sample, and an urgency to the story. 

You are not eligible to apply if you are: 

  • Currently enrolled student.

  • Current signatories of any ITVS production contracts who have not yet completed delivery.

  • Producers representing foreign-based production entities.

  • Persons regularly employed as producers/directors by a public or commercial broadcast entity, including public access stations.

  • Organizations including universities, foundations, and nonprofit organizations.

  • Your project is too advanced (e.g. at fine cut or festival submission cut).

  • Programs that have been previously broadcast, or distributed publicly (including theatrical, festivals, educational, community screenings or online platforms). 

DEADLINE: December 18, 2020, at 11:59pm PST

https://itvs.org/funding/open-call

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BIPOC Writers Fellowship: Adapting Books for the Screen

The Writers Room 5050

INFO: The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press Present: The BIPOC Writers Fellowship, "Adapting Books for the Screen," beginning March 2021. In this 12-week fellowship, fellows will adapt a book into a feature film screenplay, receive mentorship from industry leaders, a stipend for participating, and more. 

The fellowship will focus on adapting a book into a screenplay, the release of fictional feature films for theatrical, streaming, and television movies-of-the-week (MOWs). In the process, BIPOC writers will learn the highest industry standards for developing, writing, financing and producing an adapted feature film project. Each fellow will adapt one Level 4 Press book into a feature film screenplay.

The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press are currently working with top executives, writers, representatives and guest speakers to provide mentorship, feedback, and firsthand industry knowledge. 

The BIPOC Writers Fellowship includes but is not limited to:

  • A 12-week lab taking you from book-to-screenplay

  • Mentorship on creating and crafting your script

  • A $750 Writer Stipend to all participants and accepted writers

  • Expert development notes and assessments by industry professionals

  • A 'table read' with professional actors

  • Script Sales and Career Strategy instruction

  • Pitch deck and high-end marketing collateral created for the project

  • Live Industry Event to pitch your new script and meet high-end industry decision-makers

  • For those scripts optioned, setup or sold, there will be financial participation 

REQUIREMENTS:

  • BIPOC Writer: Applicants must be of BIPOC heritage/ethnicity (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color)

  • Script Submission: Writers must submit a completed screenplay (90 to 120 pages) for consideration

  • Application Fee: An Early, Regular or Late application processing fee will apply.

Announcements:

  • Semi-Finalists: January 22, 2021

  • Finalists: February 5, 2021

  • Fellows Announced: February 19, 2021

  • Fellows Begins: Week of March 8, 2021

Fellowship Schedule:

  • Dates: Wednesdays, March 10th to May 26th, 2021

  • Time: 6pm to 9pm PST - (1 class per week, 3 hours per class)

  • Venue: Zoom

DEADLINES / SUBMISSION FEES:

  • Regular: December 18, 2020 / $50

  • Late: January 8, 2021 / $60

Payment Methods: PayPal, Venmo, Zelle

https://www.writersroom5050.com/fellowship-details

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WRITERS DISCOVERY FELLOWSHIP

Circle of Confusion

INFO: Circle of Confusion — a premiere management and production destination for exceptional actors, writers, directors, content creators, publishers and journalists — will establish an ongoing fellowship program to nurture and assist in accelerating the diversity of voices in our industry. Circle of Confusion’s core mission has always been discovery, and we have been fortunate enough to have identified and promoted many talented writers, directors, actors and creators from all walks of life. It is based on this tradition and fundamental strength of the company that Circle of Confusion is launching the program. The excitement of film and television has always been the joy that great storytelling brings to audiences around the globe. By promoting voices that have been historically excluded, the Fellowship will enrich both the professional lives of the Fellows and the dynamic quality of the entertainment industry.

THE FELLOWSHIP: Circle of Confusion will provide an immersive introductory experience to the world of professional screen and television writing to a diverse group of aspiring writers who have not yet been employed or represented by the industry. The Fellows will each be given a $10,000 stipend by way of a first look deal with Circle of Confusion Television Studios. Twice per year, the program will select six to eight writers for a six-month fellowship which closely replicates the writer-manager dynamic. Each Fellow will be assigned a mentor who will educate and guide them by way of script development, career advice, and support. While the Fellowship cannot guarantee the sale of the pilot or specific employment, by the end of each Fellowship session, each Fellow will have developed a submission-ready television pilot, been afforded multiple opportunities for industry networking, and generally equipped with the essential tools for their success as writers in the entertainment industry.

The Fellowship is open to applicants of all ethnicities, races, cultural backgrounds, gender identities, sexual orientations, and ages.

MENTORSHIP: Our mentors will include Circle of Confusion literary managers and other senior industry professionals, offering general business advice and script development within the duration of the Fellowship. In the first four months, each Fellow will develop an original pilot script with their dedicated mentor. The pilot scripts will be reviewed by the Fellowship’s Advisory Board (composed of established members of the film and television community with an expertise in content evaluation) and then submitted to relevant industry professionals, with the explicit goal of using the last two months of the Fellowship to arrange general one-on-one Zoom meetings with producers and executives. Throughout the entire Fellowship session, the mentor will be available to guide the Fellow through each step, assisting the Fellow in their development of writing and storytelling skills, pitching skills and navigating the meeting process.

PROGRAMMING: The Fellowship program will begin in March of 2021 and include informational panels, speakers and workshops with industry professionals. Additionally, Fellows will have the opportunity to participate in several practice/mock-general meetings in preparation for their final professional meetings.

Applicant Qualifications:

  • Have never worked or held representation in the entertainment industry as a writer

  • Must have two storytelling samples, with at least one being a pilot script draft to further develop alongside a mentor during the Fellowship

Application Materials:

  • Fellowship application

    • Personal statement

    • Brief questionnaire

  • Two samples of narrative storytelling (The development sample must be a pilot script. Other writing samples may include but are not limited to pilot scripts, feature screenplays, short stories, personal essays, produced short form content, slam poetry, plays, audio-drama scripts, etc.)

DEADLINE: January 5, 2020

http://www.circleofconfusion.com/fellowship/?fbclid=IwAR2kFtkzMxaKNmvB0QCa5Emjmg9UxM8rq6fQNkKSpFIh4zkeiNeRLbH-LBc

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2021 Sesame Workshop Writers’ Room

INFO: Sesame Workshop Writers’ Room is a writing fellowship from the creators of Sesame Street. And we’re looking for YOU! Fresh new writing talent from underrepresented racial backgrounds. Emerging storytellers who are selected to join the Writers’ Room will receive hands-on writing experience guided by Sesame Street veterans and other media industry leaders. Each participant will develop and write a pilot script for their own original kids concept. Past fellows have gone on to develop their own original content with Sesame Workshop, as well as write for Sesame Street and various programs at Nickelodeon, Disney, DreamWorks, and more!

  • Up to 8 writers from underrepresented racial backgrounds will be selected

  • Sessions will take place from May through July 2021

  • Includes eight, three-hour sessions on creating original children's content

  • Learn from industry writers, producers, agents and executives

  • Learn and complete all steps of creating an original pilot episode script

  • Up to two participants will have the opportunity to receive creative development deals and further mentorship

Application Check List:

  • Application form

  • Resume: this can feature your overall work experience, NOT only writing experience

  • Personal statement: tell us about yourself, for example, why you want to write for children's educational media, how your experiences influence the stories you tell, why you value diversity/representation in children's media, etc. (up to 250 words)

  • Original script sample: 11-page maximum, it should NOT contain Sesame Street elements, it can be an excerpt from a larger piece you've written, it must be kid-friendly content for viewers up to age 12...we're looking for great characters and stories that inspire kids to be smarter, stronger and kinder!

  • More info on your script: what's the bigger picture/idea of your script sample? (up to 100 words)

DEADLINE: January 8, 2021 at 5pm EST

https://sesamewritersroom.org/?utm_source=swr&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2020_1020_SWR_Annoucement&utm_content=cta

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2020-2021 BLACK LIST & GOOGLE ASSISTANT STORYTELLING FELLOWSHIP

The Black List / Google Assistant

INFO: Up to five writers will receive $20,000 each for the purpose of supporting those writers for six months as they work to draft their new feature screenplays and/or teleplays. During the course of those six months, the Black List and Google Assistant will also pair each fellowship recipient with a screenwriting mentor.

Pitches should be contemporary in nature and avoid violence and/or illegal activity as the premise of the story. Completed scripts can include the natural helpfulness of technology in everyday life, but shouldn’t be focused around technology or from a dystopian view. At the end of the Fellowship, each recipient would provide Google with a copy of their new draft along with a report addressing how the grant has been used to advance their work.

THE SELECTION PROCESS

Opt-ins will be open until midnight on Friday, January 15, 2021. On Monday, January 18, 2021, up to 15 writers will be invited, based on the strength of their scripts as determined by the Black List, to submit a one-page personal statement and professional resume. Those materials will be due on Friday, January 22, 2020. From those submissions, up to five (5) writers will be selected by the Black List and Google Assistant to receive the 2020-2021 Storytelling Fellowship. Fellowship recipients will be notified in February 2021.

DEADLINE: January 15, 2021

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/90

TV / WEB SERIES -- NOVEMBER 2020

2020 FICTION PODCAST CONTEST

Shore Scripts

INFO: Podcasts are kind of a big deal! Over 100 million people in USA listen to at least one Podcast a month and that rate is increasing by 20 million year on year. Fiction podcasts are taking a century’s worth of entertainment in radio plays and pushing the boundaries to tell stories in fresh and innovative ways, quickly becoming the fastest-growing sub-section of this booming industry. Many writers, including our Judges, have forged successful careers for themselves through Podcasts. Hollywood’s taking notice too! More and more of these shows are being adapted for Televsion: Homecoming, Limetown, Carrier, Left Right Game & LORE to name but a few. 

The beauty of the fiction Podcast format is that it allows you as a w

riter to be completely free to tell the story you wish to tell, without having to factor in the budgetary constraints of filmmaking. Our Podcast Contest offers more in funding and prize money than any other. 

In collaboration with our winning writers, Shore Scripts will produce both episodes, making use of our industry connections to find talented cast and crew. We will look to attach a named actor/actress to each episode to further elevate the show and draw in a larger audience. Once both episodes are live, we will contact commissioners in an attempt to greenlight the series. The writers have final say on all potential commissioning offers.

This is a great opportunity to get your work commissioned and voice heard in this ever-growing industry. You don’t even need to write an episode from scratch. Perhaps you have a screenplay, novel or stageplay that could be adapted to fit this medium. Read our How to Adapt my Screenplay into a Podcast for some pointers.  

We accept screenplay, radio and stageplay format. Check out our Rules and FAQ’s for all the info. 

AWARD:

  • Two winners will be chosen to have their pilot scripts produce, each with a budget of $5,000

  • Plus, each winner will also receive $1000 Cash!

DEADLINES:

  • Early - November 15, 2020

  • Regular - December 18, 2020

  • Final - January 21, 2021

https://filmfreeway.com/ShoreScriptsFictionPodcastContest

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2021 CASSIAN ELWES INDEPENDENT SCREENWRITING FELLOWSHIP AT THE SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL

Sundance Institute

INFO: The Cassian Elwes Independent Screenwriting Fellowship is an annual program designed to encourage and identify new talent in the field of independent cinema by awarding two screenwriters each year with an all-expenses paid trip to the Sundance Film Festival and an opportunity to meet with producer Cassian Elwes (MUDBOUND, LEE DANIELS' THE BUTLER, DALLAS BUYERS CLUB).

Due to COVID-19 and the resulting changes to both general travel and the 2021 Sundance Film Festival, this year's Fellowship recipients will not travel to Park City, UT. Fellows will receive a pass to the modified 2021 Sundance Film Festival (including satellite events in New York and Los Angeles) and a stipend of $2,500. Fellows that do not live in the Los Angeles or New York metropolitan areas will be traveled to either Los Angeles or New York for Sundance events, subject to current COVID-19 travel restrictions and the 2021 Sundance Film Festival schedule. Additional events and meetings will be hosted with Mr. Elwes via Zoom.

Unrepresented feature writers with an independent sensibility who have made less than $5,000 in aggregate in their film or television writing careers will be able to opt into consideration via the Black List website until November 15, 2020. At that time, the Black List will choose ten screenplays imbued with an independent spirit by unrepresented screenwriters, which will be sent on to Mr. Elwes for his consideration. Two fellowship recipients will be selected by Mr. Elwes by calendar year's end.

Evaluations purchased before midnight on October 15, 2020 will be guaranteed consideration. The Black List recommends—but does not require—that writers obtain at least one script evaluation for their hosted scripts, as the data from script evaluations inform the process by which the short list of writers is determined for this opportunity.

Check out our FAQ for more information on how to obtain hosting and evaluations at no cost, and for more details on the 2021 Cassian Elwes Independent Screenwriting Fellowship.

DEADLINES: November 15, 2020

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/88

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BIPOC Writers Fellowship: Adapting Books for the Screen

The Writers Room 5050

INFO: The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press Present: The BIPOC Writers Fellowship, "Adapting Books for the Screen," beginning March 2021. In this 12-week fellowship, fellows will adapt a book into a feature film screenplay, receive mentorship from industry leaders, a stipend for participating, and more. 

The fellowship will focus on adapting a book into a screenplay, the release of fictional feature films for theatrical, streaming, and television movies-of-the-week (MOWs). In the process, BIPOC writers will learn the highest industry standards for developing, writing, financing and producing an adapted feature film project. Each fellow will adapt one Level 4 Press book into a feature film screenplay.

The Writers Room 5050 and Level 4 Press are currently working with top executives, writers, representatives and guest speakers to provide mentorship, feedback, and firsthand industry knowledge. 

The BIPOC Writers Fellowship includes but is not limited to:

  • A 12-week lab taking you from book-to-screenplay

  • Mentorship on creating and crafting your script

  • A $750 Writer Stipend to all participants and accepted writers

  • Expert development notes and assessments by industry professionals

  • A 'table read' with professional actors

  • Script Sales and Career Strategy instruction

  • Pitch deck and high-end marketing collateral created for the project

  • Live Industry Event to pitch your new script and meet high-end industry decision-makers

  • For those scripts optioned, setup or sold, there will be financial participation 

REQUIREMENTS:

  • BIPOC Writer: Applicants must be of BIPOC heritage/ethnicity (Black, Indigenous, Person of Color)

  • Script Submission: Writers must submit a completed screenplay (90 to 120 pages) for consideration

  • Application Fee: An Early, Regular or Late application processing fee will apply.

DEADLINES:

  • Early: November 20, 2020

  • Regular: December 18, 2020

  • Late: January 8, 2021 

SUBMISSION FEES:

  • Early - $40.00

  • Regular - $50.00

  • Late - $60.00 

Payment Methods: PayPal, Venmo, Zelle

Announcements:

  • Semi-Finalists: January 22, 2021

  • Finalists: February 5, 2021

  • Fellows Announced: February 19, 2021

  • Fellows Begins: Week of March 8, 2021

Fellowship Schedule:

  • Dates: Wednesdays, March 10th to May 26th, 2021

  • Time: 6pm to 9pm PST - (1 class per week, 3 hours per class)

  • Venue: Zoom

DEADLINE: November 20, 2020

https://www.writersroom5050.com/fellowship-details

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THE 2020 MUSLIM LIST

The Black List / Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) / Pillars Fund

INFO: The Black List has partnered with the Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) and Pillars Fund to create The Muslim List, highlighting the very best unproduced scripts written by at least one Muslim writer. 

Filmmakers and content creators are invited to submit a script for consideration by uploading it to The Black List website during fall 2020. Submissions will be accepted until December 4, 2020. Feature film, one-hour, and half-hour original pilot submissions will be considered for this opportunity (no webseries, please.) Scripts from any genre are eligible for this partnership. 

 Writers selected for the Muslim List will be notified of their placement in January-February 2021, with a public announcement to follow.

DEADLINE: December 4, 2020

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/87

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2020-2021 BLACK LIST & GOOGLE ASSISTANT STORYTELLING FELLOWSHIP

The Black List / Google Assistant

INFO: Up to five writers will receive $20,000 each for the purpose of supporting those writers for six months as they work to draft their new feature screenplays and/or teleplays. During the course of those six months, the Black List and Google Assistant will also pair each fellowship recipient with a screenwriting mentor.

Pitches should be contemporary in nature and avoid violence and/or illegal activity as the premise of the story. Completed scripts can include the natural helpfulness of technology in everyday life, but shouldn’t be focused around technology or from a dystopian view. At the end of the Fellowship, each recipient would provide Google with a copy of their new draft along with a report addressing how the grant has been used to advance their work.

THE SELECTION PROCESS

Opt-ins will be open until midnight on Friday, January 15, 2021. On Monday, January 18, 2021, up to 15 writers will be invited, based on the strength of their scripts as determined by the Black List, to submit a one-page personal statement and professional resume. Those materials will be due on Friday, January 22, 2020. From those submissions, up to five (5) writers will be selected by the Black List and Google Assistant to receive the 2020-2021 Storytelling Fellowship. Fellowship recipients will be notified in February 2021.

DEADLINE: January 15, 2021

https://blcklst.com/partnerships/opportunities/90

TV / WEB SERIES -- OCTOBER 2020

REEL WORK FILMMAKING INITIATIVE

BIPOC TV & FILM / Vinay Virmani

INFO: In partnership with BIPOC TV & FILM, actor, writer, and producer Vinay Virmani announces Reel Work Filmmaking Initiative, a $25,000 fund for two short films to be awarded to BIPOC creatives.

PROGRAM GUIDELINES: We are in search of two short films from BIPOC-identifying creatives that can be springboards for a future feature film or TV series. These short films will act as their creators’ calling card. 

We are also paying close attention to the feasibility of the films. For example, the closer to camera a project is, the better. We are aware that physical distancing measures related to COVID-19 have complicated productions. As such, we are in search of projects that propose effective and attainable measures to maintain the safety of their cast and crew members. 

Eligibility

Primary applicants must be:

  • BIPOC identifying 

  • 18 years old or older

  • Canadian citizens or permanent residents only

  • The writer, director, and/or producer of the submitted project. Primary applicants can hold more than one title on the project (e.g. writer & director)

Creative Team Requirements:

  • Canadian citizens or permanent residents only

  • 2 out of the 3 of the key above-the-line creative positions (i.e. writer, director, producer) must be filled by BIPOC-identifying folks 

  • At least 2 of the 3 key above-the-line creative positions (i.e. writer, director, producer) must be filled at the time of submission, one of which must be a producer. 

  • Must have full ownership of underlying rights  

DEADLINE: October 1, 2020

https://www.bipoctvandfilm.com/reel-work-filmmaking-initiative

WRITERS & ARTIST RESIDENCY

Millay Colony for the Arts

INFO: Each year Millay Colony for the Arts invites up to 62 individuals (including writers, poets, playwrights, screenwriters and visual artists) for residencies through the colony's application process.  

Residency sessions are held each month from April through November, usually lasting around 3 1/2 weeks, with 2 twelve-day sessions also available in June & September. In each discipline, decisions are made by juries of artists, critics and academics.

Your work is presented anonymously to the jury and is considered solely on the merit of your artist statement and work sample. Please keep these factors in mind as you prepare your application. It is very important that you do not include your name anywhere on your artist statement or work samples as you may be disqualified if they are within the body of work shown to the jurors.  Your application will instead be assigned a number by the administration.

DEADLINE: October 1, 2020

https://millaycolony.submittable.com/submit

CAPE NEW WRITERS FELLOWSHIP

Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (CAPE)

INFO: The CAPE New Writers Fellowship (CNWF) discovers and nurtures emerging writers launching their careers in television and film. Founded and co-chaired by Emmy Award-winning creator and Showrunner Leo Chu and veteran film and TV executive Steve Tao, CNWF is one of few programs created by a creative and an executive. This immersive Fellowship arms each writer with the practical and business knowledge they need to succeed as a professional writer in the entertainment industry.

Over several weeks, CAPE brings in top television and film writers, producers, agents, managers, and executives for a series of intimate panels, workshops, and discussions. The Fellowship also features a Writing Lab where each Fellow is matched with a high-level industry mentor to help them revise their original script into professional level writing samples to get them noticed and land that all-important first staff job.

The Fellowship typically runs each year in early spring. Each Fellowship session and Writing Lab meeting takes place on weekday evenings - Pacific Time - for approximately 3 hours, twice a week.

The 2021 CAPE New Writers Fellowship will take place virtually via Zoom.

DEADLINE: October 30, 2020

https://www.capeusa.org/cnwf

SCREENWRITING FELLOWSHIP

ScreenCraft

INFO: Past ScreenCraft-winning writers have been hired by producers, optioned their projects to major studios,  and signed with top representatives at CAA, WME, 3 Arts Entertainment, United Talent Agency, Anonymous Content, Paradigm Talent Agency, Untitled, ICM, Writ Large, Bellevue Productions, Romark Entertainment, Lit Entertainment and many others.

The chosen Fellowship recipients will receive ongoing professional support and a special trip to Los Angeles for meetings, mentorship and personal introductions to key entertainment studio executives, producers, literary managers and agents. To apply, simply submit your feature film script or original television script, along with an optional cover letter that expresses your vision and background as an emerging writer.

Apply now and join a thriving community of talented screenwriters with meaningful connections to industry mentors.

2020 Fellows will meet with the following Hollywood manager mentors:

  • Adam Kolbrenner, Lit Entertainment, renowned boutique literary management company known for such clients as Nicole Perlman, Aaron Guzikowski, Justin Marks, Greg Russo, Jonathan Mostow and many more

  • Kailey Marsh, Brillstein Entertainment Partners, the management company behind such stars as Brad Pitt, Amy Adams, Rachel Brosnahan, Rachel Weisz,  Adam Sandler, Vin Diesel and many more

  • Ari Lubet, 3 Arts Entertainment, the management and production company behind such shows as Orange is the New BlackBrooklyn Nine-NineSilicon ValleyParks and Recreation30 RockThe Mindy ProjectIt’s Always Sunny in PhiladelphiaSaint George and more. Clients of 3 Arts Entertainment include such legends as Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, Aziz Ansari, Maya Rudolph, Kevin Hart, Mindy Kaling, George Lopez, Matt LeBlanc, BJ Novak, James Franco, Charlie Day, and many more!

  • Scott Stoops, Good Fear, the management company behind such notable talent as Evan Daugherty, James Duval, Tiffany Dupont and Billy Brown

  • Jake Dellman, Verve Talent and Literary Agency, the agency behind many great writers, directors and actors as Colin Trevorrow (Jurassic World), Greg Russo (Mortal Combat), Emily Carmichael (Pacific Rim: Uprising, Jurassic World 3) and many more!

  • Tracy Kopulsky, MXN Entertainment, the management company behind such celebrated filmmakers as Diablo Cody, Melina Matsoukas, Jesse Andrews and Amanda Marsalis

  • Alex Platis, Untitled Entertainment, the management company behind such stars as Jared Leto, Penelope Cruz and Naomi Watts

DEADLINES:

  • Early - October 31, 2020

  • Regular - January 31, 2021

  • Final - February 29, 2021

https://screencraft.org/fellowship/

TV / WEB SERIES -- SEPTEMBER 2020

DOCU WORK-IN-PROGRESS SHORTS LAB

DCTV

INFO: DCTV’s Docu Work-In-Progress Shorts Lab supports select filmmakers with their independent documentary short film currently in post-production, providing dedicated feedback and crit-building germane to the editing process.

This year’s Lab will be held online due to the pandemic. The Lab is scheduled and designed with an iterative structure in mind. Docu WIP Lab filmmakers share and workshop each others' initial rough cuts during screening/discussion sessions, providing crucial insight for each other under the guidance of an industry professional. Outside of these sessions, participants edit two new iterations of their rough cut based on the discussions. Participants present a refined cut at the final session, which is a showcase for closing feedback with a special guest.

Past participants include Lisa D’Appolito (Love, Gilda), Yi Chen (First Vote), Katy Scoggin (Flood), and G. Anthony Svatek (.TV). Past facilitators and guests for final crit include Charlotte Cook (Field of Vision), Yance Ford (Strong Island), Kathleen Lingo (The New York Times' Op-Docs), Maya Mumma (O.J.: Made in America), David Osit (Thank You For Playing), Sierra Pettengill (The Reagan Show), Bernardo Ruiz (Harvest Season), and Lana Wilson (Miss Americana).

2020 PROGRAM DATES:
10/28, 10/29, 11/12, 11/18, 11/19, 6:30 - 9:30pm ET +
Final Crit: 12/2, 11-2pm and 12/3, 11-2pm ET

Facilitator: Chloe Gbai
Guest for Final Crit: TBA
Participants: 4-6 accepted filmmakers

DEADLINE: September 9, 2020 at 11:59pm ET

https://dctvny.submittable.com/submit/171440/dctv-docu-work-in-progress-shorts-lab-2020

REEL WORK FILMMAKING INITIATIVE

BIPOC TV & FILM / Vinay Virmani

INFO: In partnership with BIPOC TV & FILM, actor, writer, and producer Vinay Virmani announces Reel Work Filmmaking Initiative, a $25,000 fund for two short films to be awarded to BIPOC creatives.

PROGRAM GUIDELINES: We are in search of two short films from BIPOC-identifying creatives that can be springboards for a future feature film or TV series. These short films will act as their creators’ calling card. 

We are also paying close attention to the feasibility of the films. For example, the closer to camera a project is, the better. We are aware that physical distancing measures related to COVID-19 have complicated productions. As such, we are in search of projects that propose effective and attainable measures to maintain the safety of their cast and crew members. 

Eligibility

Primary applicants must be:

  • BIPOC identifying 

  • 18 years old or older

  • Canadian citizens or permanent residents only

  • The writer, director, and/or producer of the submitted project. Primary applicants can hold more than one title on the project (e.g. writer & director)

Creative Team Requirements:

  • Canadian citizens or permanent residents only

  • 2 out of the 3 of the key above-the-line creative positions (i.e. writer, director, producer) must be filled by BIPOC-identifying folks 

  • At least 2 of the 3 key above-the-line creative positions (i.e. writer, director, producer) must be filled at the time of submission, one of which must be a producer. 

  • Must have full ownership of underlying rights  

DEADLINE: October 1, 2020

https://www.bipoctvandfilm.com/reel-work-filmmaking-initiative

WRITERS & ARTIST RESIDENCY

Millay Colony for the Arts

INFO: Each year Millay Colony for the Arts invites up to 62 individuals (including writers, poets, playwrights, screenwriters and visual artists) for residencies through the colony's application process.  

Residency sessions are held each month from April through November, usually lasting around 3 1/2 weeks, with 2 twelve-day sessions also available in June & September. In each discipline, decisions are made by juries of artists, critics and academics.

Your work is presented anonymously to the jury and is considered solely on the merit of your artist statement and work sample. Please keep these factors in mind as you prepare your application. It is very important that you do not include your name anywhere on your artist statement or work samples as you may be disqualified if they are within the body of work shown to the jurors.  Your application will instead be assigned a number by the administration.

DEADLINE: October 1, 2020

https://millaycolony.submittable.com/submit

TV / WEB SERIES -- AUGUST 2020

NICKELODEON WRITING PROGRAM

INFO: Our global Writing Program is one of the best in the biz. Consider the facts: alum have gone on to create their own Nickelodeon shows and write for all sorts of TV series and films. While in the Program, writers meet our series creators, work in writers’ rooms, and receive hands-on experience writing spec scripts and pitching story ideas in both live-action and animated television. Basically, they write a lot and do cool things, all while being provided a salary!

There are two creative avenues to pursue: the General Track (up to 1 year) and the Preschool Track (6-months). The Preschool Track was created to develop writers specifically interested in writing and/or creating shows for the preschool demographic. You bring the smart, funny, engaging stories and characters, and we’ll help you bring the preschool.

General Track

The Nickelodeon Writing Program offers emerging television writers from around the world a paid opportunity to develop their craft and launch their careers.

While in the Program, writers hone their skills, build a professional network and gain real-world experience in writers’ rooms for our critically acclaimed live-action and animated shows. The General Track is a full-time commitment for up to 1 year.

Your submission must include a spec script based on a show from the Accepted Shows List (see Step 3) and an original comedy pilot.

Preschool Track

If you’re interested in writing for an audience who’s smart, funny, and likes to laugh and play this is the opportunity for you!

The Preschool track offers talent development opportunities with a focus on Nick Jr. content.  The Preschool Track is a full-time 6-month commitment.

Your submission must include a spec script based on a show from the Accepted Shows List (see Step 3) and an original comedy pilot.

DEADLINE: August 1, 2020

https://www.nickanimation.com/writing-program

BLACK SCREENWRITERS GRANT

One-Eyed Rabbit

INFO: One-Eyed Rabbit's annual BLACK SCREENWRITERS GRANT was established to amplify Black voices, create a bridge between Black writers and more funding opportunities, and to increase representation within the film & television industry.

We're looking for submission-ready screenplays and teleplays by Black writers with an original voice and three-dimensional POC characters at the center. We're open to any genre and any form (feature, short, pilot, web series) of the writer's choice. Writing teams welcome to apply.

GRANT AMOUNT: This year's Black Screenwriters Grant of $250 will be awarded to two writers/writing teams to aid them in submitting their winning scripts to larger screenwriting competitions and/or furthering their writing careers in whatever way they choose. For writing teams, funds will be distributed to the first writer's name listed.

DEADLINE: August 15, 2020

https://www.one-eyedrabbit.com/bsg

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Mixed Mag

INFO: Mixed Mag is a multimedia publication dedicated to promoting multiethnic/multicultural voices.

We are always accepting submissions covering politics, TV/film, theatre, creative writing, health/sex/wellness, food & visuals/photography. Send us your stories, poems, articles, personal essays, recipes & more! 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES​

  • Written Submissions such as articles, think pieces, short stories, reviews and essays must be between 1500-3000 words (sections include FICTION/CNF, POLITICS, TV/FILM/THEATER, MUSIC, FOOD, HEALTH AND WELLNESS)

  • POETRY: Submit up to three poems

  • TV/FILM/THEATER: Monologues must be 5 pages max. Plays/screenplays must be between 10-15 page max (this includes plays, films and web series). Short films or web series episodes must be no longer than 15 minutes.

  • ART: Photo/visual submissions should be 10 photos/videos max 

  • Please include what section you are submitting to in the email subject line.

send to submissions@mixedmag.co

DEADLINE: August 25, 2020

https://twitter.com/MixedMag/status/1276631534586429441

2020's TV PILOT CONTEST

Shore Script

INFO: WE HAVE HELPED LAUNCH THE CAREERS OF NUMEROUS WRITERS THROUGH OUR TV PILOT CONTEST. THIS INCLUDES DEALS WITH SONY, YOUTUBE, CBS, QUIBI & HULU. 

OUR TV PILOT CONTEST IS SPLIT INTO 1/2 & 1HR CATEGORIES.

WE ACCEPT ALL GENRES. IT DOESN’T MATTER IF YOU HAVE A BIG BUDGET EPIC OR CONTAINED DRAMA, EACH TV PILOT IS JUDGED EQUALLY. WE, AND OUR ROSTER OF OVER 150 OF THE MOST RESPECTED FILMMAKERS IN THE INDUSTRY, ARE LOOKING FOR WRITERS WITH ORIGINAL VOICES. 

DEADLINE: August 31, 2020

https://www.shorescripts.com/tv

TV / WEB SERIES -- JULY 2020

Television Scriptwriters Program

National Hispanic Media Coalition

INFO: The NHMC Television Scriptwriter’s Program is designed to familiarize participants with the format, characters and storyline structure of specific shows that are currently on the air. The five-week, *total immersion workshop is mentored and guided by former NBC V.P of Script Development, Geoff Harris and is conducted in Sherman Oaks, CA. A total of 10 writers are accepted nationwide from an established network of non-profit agencies, schools, universities, guilds and media organizations. The goal is that the writers garner the skills necessary to obtain employment in the industry.

The program will be held September 28 – October 30th.

DEADLINE: July 20, 2020

https://www.nhmc.org/writersprogram

Nickelodeon Writing Program

INFO: Our global Writing Program is one of the best in the biz. Consider the facts: alum have gone on to create their own Nickelodeon shows and write for all sorts of TV series and films. While in the Program, writers meet our series creators, work in writers’ rooms, and receive hands-on experience writing spec scripts and pitching story ideas in both live-action and animated television. Basically, they write a lot and do cool things, all while being provided a salary!

There are two creative avenues to pursue: the General Track (up to 1 year) and the Preschool Track (6-months). The Preschool Track was created to develop writers specifically interested in writing and/or creating shows for the preschool demographic. You bring the smart, funny, engaging stories and characters, and we’ll help you bring the preschool.

General Track

The Nickelodeon Writing Program offers emerging television writers from around the world a paid opportunity to develop their craft and launch their careers.

While in the Program, writers hone their skills, build a professional network and gain real-world experience in writers’ rooms for our critically acclaimed live-action and animated shows. The General Track is a full-time commitment for up to 1 year.

Your submission must include a spec script based on a show from the Accepted Shows List (see Step 3) and an original comedy pilot.

Preschool Track

If you’re interested in writing for an audience who’s smart, funny, and likes to laugh and play this is the opportunity for you!

The Preschool track offers talent development opportunities with a focus on Nick Jr. content.  The Preschool Track is a full-time 6-month commitment.

Your submission must include a spec script based on a show from the Accepted Shows List (see Step 3) and an original comedy pilot.

DEADLINE: August 1, 2020

https://www.nickanimation.com/writing-program

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Mixed Mag

INFO: Mixed Mag is a multimedia publication dedicated to promoting multiethnic/multicultural voices.

Submission guidelines:

  • prose submissions must be under 1500 words in the following categories (fiction/CNF, politics, tv/film/theatre, music, health/wellness/food)

  • submit up to 3 poems

  • submit up to 10 original photos or visuals

send to mixedmag.media@gmail.com

DEADLINE: August 1, 2020

https://twitter.com/MixedMag/status/1276631534586429441

TV / WEB SERIES -- JUNE 2020

ABC DISCOVERS: TALENT SHOWCASE

ABC Discovers

iNFO: ABC Casting is seeking original scene submissions for our upcoming Talent Showcases. This is a one night event produced by the ABC Casting Department to showcase new talent to an invited industry audience. ABC has a long-standing commitment to promoting diversity in the entertainment industry through a variety of projects administered by the ABC Casting Department. The Talent Showcase offers an excellent opportunity for talent that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Since 2012, 64 new writers and 61 original scenes have been selected including 2011 NY Showcase Alum Jermaine Fowler who wrote and performed his original scene, Black Genie. Jermaine currently stars in the series Superior Donuts. In 2012, NY Showcase participant Andrew Law wrote and performed his original scene, Once We Go Black, went on to join Late Night with Seth Meyers as a staff writer, and currently writes on the series The Good Place. Selected writers will have an opportunity to meet with the Walt Disney Television’s Creative Talent Development & Inclusion Department.

Experience in writing for television, film, or theater is strongly recommended, but not required. Those submitting must provide a completed application package adhering to the guidelines listed below

DEADLINE: Extended to June 5, 2020

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DFtRMUBmtb4h6G3SxBJfeP-iuK-F7Woe/view?fbclid=IwAR0GzfLJr2iVDLNA2dhDpwS6zj74m8TbIkFRkriL99s8p7BnYLMoZpQJRF8

Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop

INFO: For over 40 years, the Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop has been the premier writing program for new writers looking to start and further their career in the world of television. The list of graduates who have gone on to do great things is long and includes showrunners: Jeff Astrof (Trial & Error), Marc Cherry (Desperate Housewives), Aaron Rahsaan Thomas (S.W.A.T.), Jenna Bans (Good Girls), and Joe Henderson (Lucifer), to name a few.

Every year, the Workshop selects up to eight participants out of more than 2,500 submissions and exposes them to Warner Bros. Television’s top writers and executives, all with the ultimate goal of earning them a staff position on a Warner Bros.-produced television show.

The Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop consists of three components, all geared towards preparing the writer for a successful career in television writing.

LECTURES

Weekly lectures feature guest speakers currently working in television and include a mix of showrunners, directors, actors and agents. Each seminar will teach a new skill essential for surviving and excelling in a writers’ room as a staff writer and beyond.

SIMULATED WRITERS’ ROOM

In the winter, the Workshop participants are divided into smaller groups for an intensive writing experience. Each participant will be required to complete a new spec script under the same deadlines typical for a show in production. How participants perform during this exercise will determine whether they will be supported for a possible staffing position on a Warner Bros. show. Yes, the stakes are that high!

STAFFING

Upon completion of the program, studio executives will help participants who pass the Writers’ Room obtain a staff position on a Warner Bros. Television show. We can’t guarantee you will get staffed, but we will get your material in front of the people who make the ultimate decisions – the showrunners.

The 2020-2021 Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop will run October 2020 – March 2021, with meetings on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, one evening a week from 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Full participation is mandatory.

DEADLINE: Extended to June 5, 2020 at 11:59pm PST

https://televisionworkshop.warnerbros.com/writers-workshop/program-details/

2021 WALT DISNEY TELEVISION WRITING PROGRAM

INFO: The primary goal is to staff Program Writers on Walt Disney Television (WDT) series as staff writers during the program year. Staffing is not guaranteed. The twelve-month program is tentatively set to begin in February 2021 and end in February of the following year. Please note, time frames are subject to change. For the first few months of the Program, writers participate in a professional development curriculum designed to better prepare them for staffing consideration, including developing, writing, and polishing at least one (1) original pilot script to be used as a staffing sample. The Program also provides engagement with executives, producers and literary representatives, designed to facilitate relationships that can prove invaluable in developing a television writing career. Additional past activities have included: workshops led by veteran television writers, producers and Program alumni and networking mixers with executives.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS: Applicants must be able to legally work in the United States and be at least twenty-one (21) years of age by December 1, 2020. Entertainment industry experience is not required but is strongly recommended. Those applying must fully complete an online application and submissions package, including uploading the following seven (7) items:

1) SCRIPT ONE: ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPT capturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on WDT. This will be the primary script for consideration of your application. It cannot be changed or replaced after submission. This sample must not have been submitted in a previous application.

2) EXHIBIT “A”: SCRIPT ONE SUMMARY FORM

3) SCRIPT TWO: SECONDARY ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPTcapturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on WDT. This sample may have been submitted in a previous application and will receive the same score as before.

4) EXHIBIT “B”: SCRIPT TWO SUMMARY FORM

5) RESUME (two pages or less) outlining chronological salaried employment (which may include entertainment and non-entertainment positions). Only list jobs or positions where compensation was received, with the exception of entertainment industry internships and full-time volunteer work at non-profits. Positions must have been held within the past 15 years. Please also list any courses or training you have taken to develop your craft as a writer. Please do not list undergraduate coursework.

6) STAFFING PITCH (no more than 250 words): “Pitch” yourself as a potential staff writer on a current series (broadcast, cable, or streaming) at WDT. Before completing this section, please make sure you have a solid command of the breadth of programming across WDT and Disney+, as well as the particular show you are pitching yourself for. In your pitch, please specify: 1) why you think you would be a good fit for the particular show you selected, 2) how you identify with that show (whether it’s through a character, series beat, series storyline, series location, premise, etc.), and 3) what you think you could add to this particular writers room. The pitch should address why you’re a fit, and not why you like the show or its impact.

7) PERSONAL ESSAY (no more than 500 words): a story from your life experience that conveys your unique perspective and/or multi-cultural sensibility.

SUBMISSION PERIOD: Extended to June 12, 2020

https://www.facebook.com/notes/walt-disney-television-creative-talent-development-inclusion-ctdi/application-instructions-2021-walt-disney-television-writing-program/3113764225309497/?fbclid=IwAR3958arG2iQpxuzZEVlfPvgugAa3oPwFlK0OuncFNeOIDomTLVg6hOxbJo

2021 TV Retreat & Fellowship Contest

CineStory Foundation

INFO: The 2021 TV retreat will be held on March 20 – 23, 2021 in the beautiful mountains of Idyllwild, California. Attendees receive three one-on-one, one and a half hour sessions with mentors. TV writers also will experience what it’s like to sit in a professional writers room run by an experienced mentor.  In addition, mentors and writers will gather for meals, drinks, screenings, and other special events.

For more information about our TV retreats, please see our TV Contest page.

WHAT YOU COULD WIN

To attend the TV Retreat, writers must submit an original pilot episode in one of our TV contest divisions. Division winners and finalists will be invited to attend the retreat. Any remaining spots will be offered to category semifinalists and quarterfinalists.

One lucky writer will be chosen as the 2021 TV Fellow. This person will receive a cash prize, a 12-month mentorship with 2 Hollywood professionals, and more.

For more information about prizes, please see our TV Prizes page.

TV CONTEST DIVISIONS

We accept original TV pilot episodes in the following divisions:

  • Original Drama – 1 hour series

  • Original Comedy – 30 minute series

  • Original Sci-Fi or Fantasy – 1 hour series

  • Original Children’s/Family – 30 minute series

SUBMISSION FEE: $55

DEADLINE: June 14, 2020

https://cinestory.org/2021-tv-contest-open/

JAFTA / PORTER Screenwriting Fellowship

Jamaica Film & Television Association

INFO: JAFTA has collaborated with L.A.-based and Jamaican Screenwriter/Producer Aisha Porter-Christie (Orphan Black, Shadowhunters, Ransom) to develop a screenwriting developmental initiative focused on scripted Jamaican content for television pilots or web-series with international appeal.

The JAFTA/PSF initiative would be administered and executed by JAFTA with funding, mentorship and collaborative support from Ms. Porter-Christie. A grant of US$2000 (approx. J$250,000.00) would be awarded to a maximum of two selected screenwriters (US$1,000.00 each). Ms. Porter-Christie along with Producer/Screenwriter Jeremy Boxen (Orphan Black, Killjoys, Imposters) will be the mentors. At the end of the mentorship period and, on completion of a polished script, there will also be an opportunity for the projects to be pitched to L.A.-based Manager and Producer, Scott Stoops from Good Fear Content.

In the theme of ‘paying-it-forward’, on completion of their fellowship, selected awardees would be required to participate in at least one public-sharing session, one mentorship session and at least one-community outreach initiative to apply what they have learned and to pass on any knowledge or skill-sets to others in the Jamaican screenwriting and/or creative community.

DEADLINE: June 15, 2020

https://www.jaftaonline.com/jafta-psf-applications?fbclid=IwAR0JkuTtdZj6Iyi5RzIEHBJ5KvfwXV9LaVeew1EJpFiX82nKd5Oa808p2k0

TV / WEB SERIES -- MAY 2020

GLOBAL INCLUSION WRITERS MENTORING PROGRAM

ViacomCBS

INFO: In its 17 years, over 100 emerging diverse writers have graduated from the ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program. Over 80 careers have been launched. The goal of the program is to positively impact the presence of diverse writers throughout the industry.

There are many different paths writers can follow to get their first foothold in being hired in television. As part of its ongoing commitment to create additional access for writers of diverse backgrounds, ViacomCBS' Office of Global Inclusion has launched a different kind of writers program which highlights one of those paths. 

The focus of this eight-month program is on opening doors: providing opportunities to build relationships with network executives and showrunners; to support new and emerging writers in their efforts to improve their craft; and to develop the interpersonal skills necessary to break in and succeed. The Writers Mentoring Program is not employment and there is no monetary compensation. It is, instead, a structured program of career development, support, and personal access to executives and the decision-making processes, with the goal of preparing aspiring writers for later employment opportunities in television. 

Each participant will be teamed with a CBS network or studio executive with whom they will meet on a regular basis, to discuss their work, get creative feedback on their material and get advice and support in furthering their career. 

Once a week, participants will be invited to attend a small workshop-style meeting with various CBS showrunners and other industry professionals. Speakers include executive producers, agents, managers, development and current executives and showrunners. The purpose of these gatherings is for participants to gain a better understanding of how the business works from many different perspectives as well as creating the opportunity to make critical networking connections. 

Another important part of the program is the opportunity for each participant to spend time observing in a writers' room, as well as in the CBS current and/or development departments. Each participant will have help in creating a rigorous career action plan and there will be on-going support in evaluating and achieving those goals. Another important benefit of the program is the development of a close-knit peer support group that will sustain participants through the program and beyond. The ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program helps aspiring writers to understand the unwritten rules of breaking in and moving up. It is a combination of mentoring and networking opportunities. Program opportunities such as mentoring, workshops, and observing can be scheduled around participants' existing work commitments. 

In order for a participant to get the most out of the Program a meaningful commitment of time and effort are required. It has been found that in order to derive the greatest benefit from the program, participants should be available to: 

  1. Attend once a week (evening) workshops and,

  2. Attend meetings or observe in various situations for a minimum of five full days (not necessarily in sequence) over the course of the eight-month program. 

The primary focus of the ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program is to provide access and opportunities for talented and motivated diverse writers. Aspiring diverse writers with a strong desire to write for CBS television series are encouraged to apply. 

DEADLINE: May 1, 2020

https://www.viacbs.com/writers-mentoring-program

RODDENBERRY IMPACT AWARDS

The Roddenberry Foundation

INFO: In light of the global spread of COVID-19, the logistics of everyday life have changed drastically for so many. During these difficult times, there is a desire to return to "normal." It is important to remember, however, that for many communities "normal" was not yet equal or equitable. As we come out of this pandemic — and we will — we will have the unique opportunity to create a world that is more diverse, more equitable and more inclusive. 

To accelerate this change, the Roddenberry Foundation in partnership with A Day of Unreasonable Conversation will grant ten $10K Roddenberry Impact Awards to ideas and projects that are making strides in one of the following areas: Inclusive Futures, Authentic Content Creation, and Increased Representation. Roddenberry Impact Awards will be granted to television content creators who are committed to - and have innovative ideas and approaches for - reimagining the processes for writing and telling stories that are more equitable and inclusive.

The awards were originally slated to be announced at A Day of Unreasonable Conversation in March 2020, but the event was postponed due to the global spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

The Roddenberry Impact Awards submissions will be judged by industry leaders who have driven significant change through their own storytelling and leadership in the business. The esteemed panel of judges includes Daniel Dae Kim, Gloria Calderón Kellett, Sara Gilbert, Jaime Dávila, Sameer Gardezi, and Tanya Saracho.

Applications and criteria can be found at The Roddenberry Foundation's prize website and A Day of Unreasonable Conversation’s website UnreasonableConversation.org. 

The awards are open for submission to all Writers Guild of America West, Writers Guild of America, East, Producers Guild of America, Directors Guild of America, and SAG-AFTRA members in active status. 

DEADLINE: May 1, 2020

https://www.unreasonableconversation.org/roddenberry-impact-award

2021 Walt Disney Television Writing Program

INFO: The primary goal is to staff Program Writers on Walt Disney Television (WDT) series as staff writers during the program year. Staffing is not guaranteed. The twelve-month program is tentatively set to begin in February 2021 and end in February of the following year. Please note, time frames are subject to change. For the first few months of the Program, writers participate in a professional development curriculum designed to better prepare them for staffing consideration, including developing, writing, and polishing at least one (1) original pilot script to be used as a staffing sample. The Program also provides engagement with executives, producers and literary representatives, designed to facilitate relationships that can prove invaluable in developing a television writing career. Additional past activities have included: workshops led by veteran television writers, producers and Program alumni and networking mixers with executives.

SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS: Applicants must be able to legally work in the United States and be at least twenty-one (21) years of age by December 1, 2020. Entertainment industry experience is not required but is strongly recommended. Those applying must fully complete an online application and submissions package, including uploading the following seven (7) items:

1) SCRIPT ONE: ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPT capturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on WDT. This will be the primary script for consideration of your application. It cannot be changed or replaced after submission. This sample must not have been submitted in a previous application.

2) EXHIBIT “A”: SCRIPT ONE SUMMARY FORM

3) SCRIPT TWO: SECONDARY ORIGINAL PILOT SCRIPTcapturing the writer’s unique tone, style and point of view. This sample must be live-action content; animation samples of any form are not accepted. This sample should tonally translate to the type of programming broadcast airing or streaming on WDT. This sample may have been submitted in a previous application and will receive the same score as before.

4) EXHIBIT “B”: SCRIPT TWO SUMMARY FORM

5) RESUME (two pages or less) outlining chronological salaried employment (which may include entertainment and non-entertainment positions). Only list jobs or positions where compensation was received, with the exception of entertainment industry internships and full-time volunteer work at non-profits. Positions must have been held within the past 15 years. Please also list any courses or training you have taken to develop your craft as a writer. Please do not list undergraduate coursework.

6) STAFFING PITCH (no more than 250 words): “Pitch” yourself as a potential staff writer on a current series (broadcast, cable, or streaming) at WDT. Before completing this section, please make sure you have a solid command of the breadth of programming across WDT and Disney+, as well as the particular show you are pitching yourself for. In your pitch, please specify: 1) why you think you would be a good fit for the particular show you selected, 2) how you identify with that show (whether it’s through a character, series beat, series storyline, series location, premise, etc.), and 3) what you think you could add to this particular writers room. The pitch should address why you’re a fit, and not why you like the show or its impact.

7) PERSONAL ESSAY (no more than 500 words): a story from your life experience that conveys your unique perspective and/or multi-cultural sensibility.

SUBMISSION PERIOD: May 4 - June 5, 2020

https://www.facebook.com/notes/walt-disney-television-creative-talent-development-inclusion-ctdi/application-instructions-2021-walt-disney-television-writing-program/3113764225309497/?fbclid=IwAR3958arG2iQpxuzZEVlfPvgugAa3oPwFlK0OuncFNeOIDomTLVg6hOxbJo

Writers on the Verge

NBCUniversal

INFO: Writers on the Verge is a program focused on polishing writers and readying them for a staff writer position on a television series. We are looking for writers who are “almost there” but need that final bit of preparation with their writing and personal presentation skills. We particularly encourage writers of diverse backgrounds to apply.

The program will consist of weekly evening classes at NBCUniversal in Universal City, CA. Once accepted, students must attend all classes and turn in all written assignments.

Classes concentrate on creating exceptional material to enhance their portfolio, and understanding the dynamics of pitching oneself in the television industry. Writers are given the chance to interact with industry players ranging from network executives to show runners to agents and receive valuable feedback on their work and pitch style. Writing assignments on a NBCUniversal television show may be available after successful completion of the program but are not a guarantee. Past participants have gone on to series including “The Blacklist,” “Indebted,” “Community”, “Council of Dads”, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”, “Lincoln Rhyme: Hunt for the Bone Collector”, “Chicago Fire” and “Parenthood.”

DEADLINE: May 10, 2020

http://www.nbcunitips.com/writers-on-the-verge/

Virtual TV Pilot Writing Workshop

@BenTheWritersRoom

INFO: @BenTheWritersRoom is an intimate 4-month, virtual TV pilot writing workshop for underrepresented writers of color and LGBTQ+ storytellers shepherded by writer, producer, and showrunner Ben Cory Jones. The goal of @BenTheWritersRoom is simple: to train and equip new writers with an expertly crafted script that not only meets current industry standards, but also serves as a viable calling card to forge their path as a professional writer.  

In the workshop, writers will learn how to clearly and articulately pitch a series concept, structure and write a pilot, give and receive notes in a virtual writers’ room setting, and how table reads operate. They will also gain insight into what it takes for a series to be developed, produced, and run from the ground up. Every other work session, Ben Cory will invite a guest Showrunner to join the session. During the last 30-45 minutes of the meeting they will to speak to the writers, offering personal and invaluable insight into the business and the craft of writing.

At the end of the program, a panel of showrunners will read and evaluate scripts. The script which garners the highest rating will receive a “live” table read where their words will be brought to life by celebrity actors and actresses before a room of industry leaders in Los Angeles.

Who can apply?

Writers of all genres (comedy, drama or dramedy) and formats (playwriters, web-series creators, reality TV writers/producers, etc.) are welcome to apply. Requirements that must be met are as follow:

  • Applicant must be a writer of color or an LGBTQ+ writer

  • Applicant must be over the age of 25

  • Applicant  must not have ever been paid or garnered profits as a professional writer in any capacity.

Application Materials:

  • A one-page bio (400 words max)

  •  A one paragraph synopsis of a pilot/series based in a real life experience. The writer must also specify the show type (half-hour, hour-long, comedy, drama or dramedy) and the ideal network for their concept.  (200 words max)

  • A one-page resume or CV

  • A link to one of the following: Instagram, Twitter, Facebook

  • Signed “Submission Agreement Form”

DEADLINE: May 20, 2020 at 5:00pm PST

https://benthewritersroom.com/

ABC DISCOVERS: TALENT SHOWCASE

ABC Discovers

iNFO: ABC Casting is seeking original scene submissions for our upcoming Talent Showcases. This is a one night event produced by the ABC Casting Department to showcase new talent to an invited industry audience. ABC has a long-standing commitment to promoting diversity in the entertainment industry through a variety of projects administered by the ABC Casting Department. The Talent Showcase offers an excellent opportunity for talent that might otherwise go unnoticed.

Since 2012, 64 new writers and 61 original scenes have been selected including 2011 NY Showcase Alum Jermaine Fowler who wrote and performed his original scene, Black Genie. Jermaine currently stars in the series Superior Donuts. In 2012, NY Showcase participant Andrew Law wrote and performed his original scene, Once We Go Black, went on to join Late Night with Seth Meyers as a staff writer, and currently writes on the series The Good Place. Selected writers will have an opportunity to meet with the Walt Disney Television’s Creative Talent Development & Inclusion Department.

Experience in writing for television, film, or theater is strongly recommended, but not required. Those submitting must provide a completed application package adhering to the guidelines listed below

DEADLINE: May 31, 2020

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1DFtRMUBmtb4h6G3SxBJfeP-iuK-F7Woe/view?fbclid=IwAR0GzfLJr2iVDLNA2dhDpwS6zj74m8TbIkFRkriL99s8p7BnYLMoZpQJRF8

Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop

INFO: For over 40 years, the Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop has been the premier writing program for new writers looking to start and further their career in the world of television. The list of graduates who have gone on to do great things is long and includes showrunners: Jeff Astrof (Trial & Error), Marc Cherry (Desperate Housewives), Aaron Rahsaan Thomas (S.W.A.T.), Jenna Bans (Good Girls), and Joe Henderson (Lucifer), to name a few.

Every year, the Workshop selects up to eight participants out of more than 2,500 submissions and exposes them to Warner Bros. Television’s top writers and executives, all with the ultimate goal of earning them a staff position on a Warner Bros.-produced television show.

The Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop consists of three components, all geared towards preparing the writer for a successful career in television writing.

LECTURES: Weekly lectures feature guest speakers currently working in television and include a mix of showrunners, directors, actors and agents. Each seminar will teach a new skill essential for surviving and excelling in a writers’ room as a staff writer and beyond.

SIMULATED WRITERS’ ROOM: In the winter, the Workshop participants are divided into smaller groups for an intensive writing experience. Each participant will be required to complete a new spec script under the same deadlines typical for a show in production. How participants perform during this exercise will determine whether they will be supported for a possible staffing position on a Warner Bros. show. Yes, the stakes are that high!

STAFFING: Upon completion of the program, studio executives will help participants who pass the Writers’ Room obtain a staff position on a Warner Bros. Television show. We can’t guarantee you will get staffed, but we will get your material in front of the people who make the ultimate decisions – the showrunners.

The 2020-2021 Warner Bros. Television Writers’ Workshop will run October 2020 – March 2021, with meetings on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, one evening a week from 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Full participation is mandatory.

DEADLINE: May 31, 2020

https://televisionworkshop.warnerbros.com/writers-workshop/

TV PILOT CONTEST

Shore Scripts

INFO: WE HAVE HELPED LAUNCH THE CAREERS OF NUMEROUS WRITERS THROUGH OUR TV PILOT CONTEST. THIS INCLUDES DEALS WITH SONY, YOUTUBE, CBS, QUIBI & HULU. 

OUR TV PILOT CONTEST IS SPLIT INTO 1/2 & 1HR CATEGORIES.

WE ACCEPT ALL GENRES. IT DOESN’T MATTER IF YOU HAVE A BIG BUDGET EPIC OR CONTAINED DRAMA, EACH TV PILOT IS JUDGED EQUALLY. WE, AND OUR ROSTER OF OVER 150 OF THE MOST RESPECTED FILMMAKERS IN THE INDUSTRY, ARE LOOKING FOR WRITERS WITH ORIGINAL VOICES. 

DEADLINES & FEES:

  • Early: May 31, 2020 (1 hr $45 / 1/2 hr $40)

  • Regular: July 31, 2020 (1 hr $55 / 1/2 hr $50)

  • Late: August 31, 2020 (1 hr $65 / 1/2 hr $60)

https://www.shorescripts.com/tv/

HBOAccess Writing Fellowship

INFO: The HBOAccess Writing Fellowship is designed to give emerging, diverse writers the opportunity to develop a half-hour or hour script suitable for HBO or Cinemax.

The program will select up to 8 diverse writers or teams to take part in a series of master classes held over one week in August at the HBO campus in Santa Monica. Classes will consist of discussions with HBO executives and showrunners and will focus on the craft of writing including structure, story, and character as well as the business aspects of securing an agent and effective networking.

Each participant will then be paired with an HBO or Cinemax development executive who will serve as his/her mentor over the course of 10 months. Mentoring can be done remotely or in person pending whichever is logistically feasible. In addition, we will hold monthly group meetings during which projects will continue to be work-shopped. At the end of the program, HBO will hold a reception for industry professionals where the writers will be introduced to the entertainment community.

What is the submission process?
The submission portal will open on FilmFreeway on Wednesday, February 6, 2019 at 9am PST/12pm noon EST. The submission portal will close on Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 9am PST/12pm noon EST.

Candidates are required to supply the following through the FilmFreeway portal:
• Resume or Bio
• A sample of your work (see below for types of scripts accepted)
• Answer to 2 short essay questions
• Agreement of terms and conditions

Will waivers be offered and accepted?
No late submissions will be accepted. No waivers will be offered.

What kind of material should I submit?
Submissions can be one of the following:
* An original scripted 1/2 hour comedy pilot
* An original 1 hour drama pilot
* A full length play
* 3 scripts for the same webseries
* A feature film screenplay

No specs of existing shows, short stories, novels, graphic novels, or blogs will be accepted.

Who is eligible to apply?
Any diverse writer, 21 or over, who meets our application requirements.

I am not 21 now, but what if I turn 21 by the time the program begins?
Feel free to apply if you are over 21 by the time the program starts in June.

What is the fellowship’s definition of diversity?
For the purposes of the HBOACCESS program, diversity is defined as those who identify their heritage as any of the following:
* Asian Pacific Islander
* Sub-Continent Asian
* Black
* LatinX or Hispanic
* Native American or Indigenous
* Middle Eastern
* Any and all People with Disabilities
* Those who identify as female
* Those who identify as transgender

How about LGBTQ?
If you also consider yourself to be a female or a person of color, then yes, feel free to apply.

DEADLINE: June 5, 2020

https://filmfreeway.com/HBO?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI2Inb7Lap5wIVhZ-zCh0WIwTtEAAYASAAEgLjT_D_BwE

TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- APRIL 2020

2020 Late Night Writers Workshop

NBCUniversal

INFO: The NBC Late Night Writers Workshop is a multi-day program focused on exposing talented sketch and comedy writers to NBCUniversal’s late night & alternative line-up and readying them for a staff writer position. We are looking for writers who are “almost there,” but need that final bit of preparation and exposure to key industry players. We particularly encourage female writers and those of diverse backgrounds to apply. The selected writers will create new sketch material and gain insight into the dynamics of a late night writers’ room. Participants are given the chance to interact with key writers and producers from across NBCUniversal’s late night and alternative shows, as well as receive feedback on their material.  

Your sketch packet should consist of four elements:

  • 1 - 1.5 pages of topical monologue jokes. If you think it helps us, please indicate which host’s voice you have in mind (can be, but does not have to be, an NBC host). Topical news jokes and pop culture jokes should make up the bulk of your material.

  • 2-3 refillable late night desk bits. These can be ideas for elements like Jimmy Fallon’s “Thank You Notes,” pre-taped correspondent bits like, “Jokes Seth Can’t Tell,” or multimedia bits. For this portion, please provide descriptions of the bits with examples and not scripts.

  • 2-3 viral content ideas.  These should be ideas like James Corden's "Carpool Karaoke."  The idea here is to create a segment with mass appeal that could generate a viral response.  

  • 2 SNL-style sketches that are 3-5 pages each. One sketch should be a topical sketch.  The other should be a weekend update original character (i.e. Bobby Moynihan's Drunk Uncle.)

DEADLINE: April 5, 2020 at 11:59pm PST

https://nbcunitips.submittable.com/submit/162921/2020-late-night-writers-workshop?fbclid=IwAR22YyhwioPYoUExJTXPQj9fIpzLxDJC9ppr8NJ6NfN7pvbhBrS-1W1Ccks

DIVERSE VOICES 2020 SCREENWRITING LAB

We Screenplay

INFO: Diverse Voices is a screenplay contest and lab that strives to encourage stories that are told from perspectives that are often underrepresented in Hollywood today. This includes writers of color, women writers, writers with disabilities, writers over 40, writers in the LGBTQ+ community, and any other voices that have historically been ignored by Hollywood.

The Diverse Voices competition includes an in-person Screenwriting Lab experience in Los Angeles. The selected winners will be flown out to LA for mentorship, meetings, and hands on development with industry executives, professional writers, WeScreenplay’s team, and each other.

DEADLINE & FEE: April 15, 2020 ($79.99)

https://www.wescreenplay.com/diverse-voices/

PROJECT CRE8

BET / Tracy Yvonne Productions

INFO: BET is on a nationwide search for the next great comedy television show. One winner will have their script purchased for $25,000 and will further develop the show with Tracy Oliver's Tracy Yvonne Productions for series consideration at BET.

ROUND ONE:

  • January 26, 2020 – Submissions Open 

  • April 18, 2020 – Submissions Close

  • Mid-May 2020 - Top Thirty (30) submissions announced

  • After the first round of judging, only the Top Thirty (30) submissions will advance to Round Two.

ROUND TWO

  • The Top 30 writers will be given seven days to submit a series treatment of up to five pages.

  • BET and Tracy Yvonne Productions will judge the screenplays and treatments, narrowing down the Top Thirty submissions to the Top Five for the Final Round.

FINAL ROUND

  • The Top Five finalists pitch their concept to panel of successful TV producers, writers and executives.

WINNER ANNOUNCED

  • In Spring 2020 a winner will be announced!

DEADLINE: Extended to April 18, 2020

https://www.bet.com/cre8/2020/contest.html

BBC Writersroom Script Room COMEDY 2020

INFO: BBC Writersroom's annual window for unsolicited comedy scripts (TV, film, radio, stage or online) is currently open. We look for what the script tells us about the writer. We see all scripts as a calling card to showcase a writer’s talent, ability and sense of humour. 

We are especially looking for distinctive voices - and scripts that express those voices. We do not look for more of the same – we look for the writer’s ability to pull an audience into a world and hold them in it. It’s not necessarily about finding precincts or situations that have ‘never been done before’ but having an original take on stories that have the potential to have wide breadth of appeal. 

Characters who are well rounded and consistent and who drive the comedy rather than serve it. A sense of storytelling ability - handling of pace, climax, mood. 

We want to see the best possible draft you can achieve. We are not looking for early/first/rough drafts of scripts. Only submit to the Script Room when your script is ready, even if it means waiting for a later Script Room submission window. 

We are looking to unearth the treasures, the page-turners, the new perspectives, the engaging dialogue and the surprising character creations. 

We want to find that special, funny something that makes us want to read more. 

Before considering making a submission, you will need to read the following information carefully. Submissions which do not meet the criteria or are in breach of the terms and conditions will be subject to disqualification without discussion.

DEADLINE: April 20, 2020

https://www.bbc.co.uk/writersroom/opportunities/script-room

Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program

ViacomCBS

INFO: In its 17 years, over 100 emerging diverse writers have graduated from the ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program. Over 80 careers have been launched. The goal of the program is to positively impact the presence of diverse writers throughout the industry.

There are many different paths writers can follow to get their first foothold in being hired in television. As part of its ongoing commitment to create additional access for writers of diverse backgrounds, ViacomCBS' Office of Global Inclusion has launched a different kind of writers program which highlights one of those paths. 

The focus of this eight-month program is on opening doors: providing opportunities to build relationships with network executives and showrunners; to support new and emerging writers in their efforts to improve their craft; and to develop the interpersonal skills necessary to break in and succeed. The Writers Mentoring Program is not employment and there is no monetary compensation. It is, instead, a structured program of career development, support, and personal access to executives and the decision-making processes, with the goal of preparing aspiring writers for later employment opportunities in television. 

Each participant will be teamed with a CBS network or studio executive with whom they will meet on a regular basis, to discuss their work, get creative feedback on their material and get advice and support in furthering their career. 

Once a week, participants will be invited to attend a small workshop-style meeting with various CBS showrunners and other industry professionals. Speakers include executive producers, agents, managers, development and current executives and showrunners. The purpose of these gatherings is for participants to gain a better understanding of how the business works from many different perspectives as well as creating the opportunity to make critical networking connections. 

Another important part of the program is the opportunity for each participant to spend time observing in a writers' room, as well as in the CBS current and/or development departments. Each participant will have help in creating a rigorous career action plan and there will be on-going support in evaluating and achieving those goals. Another important benefit of the program is the development of a close-knit peer support group that will sustain participants through the program and beyond. The ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program helps aspiring writers to understand the unwritten rules of breaking in and moving up. It is a combination of mentoring and networking opportunities. Program opportunities such as mentoring, workshops, and observing can be scheduled around participants' existing work commitments. 

In order for a participant to get the most out of the Program a meaningful commitment of time and effort are required. It has been found that in order to derive the greatest benefit from the program, participants should be available to: 

  1. Attend once a week (evening) workshops and,

  2. Attend meetings or observe in various situations for a minimum of five full days (not necessarily in sequence) over the course of the eight-month program. 

The primary focus of the ViacomCBS Global Inclusion Writers Mentoring Program is to provide access and opportunities for talented and motivated diverse writers. Aspiring diverse writers with a strong desire to write for CBS television series are encouraged to apply. 

DEADLINE: May 1, 2020

https://www.viacbs.com/writers-mentoring-program

Roddenberry Impact Awards

The Roddenberry Foundation

INFO: In light of the global spread of COVID-19, the logistics of everyday life have changed drastically for so many. During these difficult times, there is a desire to return to "normal." It is important to remember, however, that for many communities "normal" was not yet equal or equitable. As we come out of this pandemic — and we will — we will have the unique opportunity to create a world that is more diverse, more equitable and more inclusive. 

To accelerate this change, the Roddenberry Foundation in partnership with A Day of Unreasonable Conversation will grant ten $10K Roddenberry Impact Awards to ideas and projects that are making strides in one of the following areas: Inclusive Futures, Authentic Content Creation, and Increased Representation. Roddenberry Impact Awards will be granted to television content creators who are committed to - and have innovative ideas and approaches for - reimagining the processes for writing and telling stories that are more equitable and inclusive.

The awards were originally slated to be announced at A Day of Unreasonable Conversation in March 2020, but the event was postponed due to the global spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19).

The Roddenberry Impact Awards submissions will be judged by industry leaders who have driven significant change through their own storytelling and leadership in the business. The esteemed panel of judges includes Daniel Dae Kim, Gloria Calderón Kellett, Sara Gilbert, Jaime Dávila, Sameer Gardezi, and Tanya Saracho.

The Award application period is open as of April 6th, 2020, and closes May 1, 2020 at 5pm PT. Following review by the judges, winners will be announced on May 26, 2020. Applications and criteria can be found at The Roddenberry Foundation's prize website and A Day of Unreasonable Conversation’s website UnreasonableConversation.org. 

The awards are open for submission to all Writers Guild of America West, Writers Guild of America, East, Producers Guild of America, Directors Guild of America, and SAG-AFTRA members in active status. 

DEADLINE: May 1, 2020

https://www.unreasonableconversation.org/roddenberry-impact-award

TV / DIGITAL SERIES -- MARCH 2020

CREATIVE RESIDENCY

Millay Colony for the Arts

INFO: The Millay Colony for the Arts is one of the oldest  multidisciplinary artist residencies in the world.  Since its inception by Norma Millay in 1973, we have invited thousands of writers, poets, visual artists, screenwriters, playwrights, filmmakers and composers to come to Steepletop, the estate of Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and activist Edna St. Vincent Millay to reflect, refuel and create in quiet solitude. Most residencies are month-long but we do offer shorter stays several times a year, especially to accommodate the special needs of parent creators.

In addition, we partner with local and regional schools and other organizations for unique and compelling public programs and community outreach initiatives.

The seven-acre Colony is located in the Hudson Valley in the foothills of the Berkshires. The Millay Society, our neighbor, oversees Millay’s house and gardens.  There are designated trails for hiking and bicycling as well as nearby lakes, rivers and streams.  In the summer, wild blueberries and other delicacies abound, while in the winter, there is excellent crosscountry skiing.  Nearby Harvey Mountain State Forest draws visitors year-round.  We are within 30 minutes of Chatham, New York and Great Barrington, Massachusetts.  Other attractions include The Mount, Tanglewood, Norman Rockwell Museum, Chesterwood, MassMOCA, Naumkeag, Jacobs Pillow, PS21, the Columbia County Film Festival and Berkshire Shakespeare & Company.  

We provide groceries and Chef Donna cooks delicious family-style dinners weeknights.  We accommodate all dietary restrictions; we also have a bbq grill and firepit (burgers and s’mores anyone?).

Our beloved historic Barn (built from a Sears-Roebuck kit in 1926) features four private bedrooms and studios.  The Main Building (fully ADA-accessible) features 3 private bedrooms and 2 studios, as well as shared living/dining/kitchen space. In addition, the Main Building houses the Nancy Graves Memorial Library, a Yamaha U1 upright piano and the Martha Dupee Darkroom.  Other amenities include washer/dryer, WiFI, printer/computer/copier/fax. 

DEADLINE: March 1, 2020

https://millaycolony.submittable.com/submit

PROJECT CRE8

BET / Tracy Yvonne Productions

INFO: BET is on a nationwide search for the next great comedy television show. One winner will have their script purchased for $25,000 and will further develop the show with Tracy Oliver's Tracy Yvonne Productions for series consideration at BET.

ROUND ONE:

  • January 26, 2020 – Submissions Open 

  • March 7, 2020 – Submissions Close

  • Mid-March 2020 - Top Thirty (30) submissions announced

  • After the first round of judging, only the Top Thirty (30) submissions will advance to Round Two.

ROUND TWO

  • The Top 30 writers will be given seven days to submit a series treatment of up to five pages.

  • BET and Tracy Yvonne Productions will judge the screenplays and treatments, narrowing down the Top Thirty submissions to the Top Five for the Final Round.

FINAL ROUND

  • The Top Five finalists pitch their concept to panel of successful TV producers, writers and executives.

WINNER ANNOUNCED

  • In Spring 2020 a winner will be announced!

DEADLINE: March 7, 2020

https://www.bet.com/cre8/2020/contest.html

EPISODIC LAB

The Sundance Institute

INFO: The Sundance Institute Episodic Lab is a six-day program at the Sundance Mountain Resort in Utah that offers writers the opportunity to workshop an original pilot script, while developing their writing and pitching skills. Working with accomplished show runners, non-writing creative producers, and executives, the Fellows participate in one-on-one story meetings, pitching sessions, and simulated writers’ rooms, which together provide creative and strategic keys to success.

Dates: October 8–October 13, 2020

Size of Lab: 10 projects each Lab

Location: Sundance Mountain Resort, Utah

Eligibility:

  • Applicants must be 18 years of age or older at time of application.

  • The project must be the applicant’s original creation or adapted from optioned source material.

  • The project must be written in the English language.

  • The project must be new: not previously submitted to Sundance Institute, not already produced, not already sold to a third party, and not distributed online or otherwise.

  • Applicants cannot have sold an episodic project (pilot or pitch) to a studio or network in the past that has been shot.

  • The project shall not infringe the copyright or any other proprietary right of another individual or entity. The creator/applicant is responsible for all rights pertaining to the project.

Application ProcessThere are two rounds in the application process: in Round One, applicants are required to submit the first five pages of an original pilot script, their bio, a series logline, a series overview, their personal statement, a thematic statement, and (optional) links to samples of previous work, along with a $40 nonrefundable processing fee. If selected for Round Two, applicants are notified by email and have two weeks to submit their full pilot script. For further details on what the application process entails, please see our FAQ section below.

DEADLINE: March 11, 2020

http://www.sundance.org/programs/episodic-storytelling