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I like to watch TV. Everyone knows this. (I even blog about it.) Sometimes I have an excuse to watch, like I had a hard day, or someone is over and wants to watch something with me. But sometimes I really don’t and should be reading a book or working on one of my two current works-in-progress instead. To make myself feel a tiny bit better, I sometimes put my writer’s cap on and at least think a little bit harder about what I’m watching.

Next time you find yourself watching TV when you’re supposed to be writing(of course you never procrastinate, right? right?) here are some questions to ask yourself:

1) Who is the main character of this scene? And why? Just like in books, TV shows often have a POV (point-of-view) character. Often, the main character is shown by using different camera angles (for example, if the character is sitting at a desk, many shots are shown from the angle of sitting at the desk) or even through voice-overs (which is a little clumsier, I think). For TV shows with multiple main characters, try to figure out why they chose to show the scene through a certain character’s eyes and pay attention to the POV shifts. Did switching POVs add to the plot or just complicate things?

2) Which character(s) do you like? What makes them successful characters?

Obviously you don’t want to copy a character exactly from a TV show (I think people would notice if your character was exactly the same as, say, Blair from Gossip Girl). But you’ll notice that often your favorite characters are the most multi-faceted characters on the show and sometimes this means your favorite character is the “bad guy”. The best thing about bad guys is that they’re allowed to do bad things, where “good guys” often don’t or can’t.

3) Which characters do you hate? Are you meant to hate them? Or are they unsuccessful characters?

Often, it’s the one-sided stereotype characters that I find boring, like the blonde ditz, or the overbearing mother-in-law, (or the one-sided mean girls on high school shows). There is sometimes a point to having these kinds of characters–they move the plot forward, or just add color to a scene, or, like the “Redshirt” characters in Star Trek, someone has to die…(okay maybe that’s not a great example).

4) Would this scene be better with or without a certain character?

This relates a lot to #3. That character you found annoying–did they really need to be there? And is there a character like that in your novel, a character that you could possibly eliminate? Once you’ve crafted and named a character, it’s really hard to let them go, but if they really don’t add anything, it’s best to let them go (again…like some of those Redshirt characters…) If it makes you feel better, maybe you can save them for the “deleted scenes” portion of your novel’s DVD? :)

So next time you’re watching your favorite guilty pleasure show (for me it’s the new Pretty Little Liars) try and think a little bit harder about what you’re watching and use what you’ve learned to inform your writing.

Next time: Questions about the Plot


I’ve had my Kindle 2 for more than a year now (purchased Feb 2009). So the big question is–how much have I actually used it?

Here are my stats (made easier by Goodreads–I might have to add a new bookshelf for e-books):

Books I actually purchased from the Amazon store: 5

Free books I downloaded from Amazon: 9 (all classics and one cookbook–I only actually ended up finishing one of them)

Books/audiobooks downloaded and finished reading from the library (this one is an estimate since I delete them afterward): 20! wow! — I shouldn’t admit this but most of them have been frivolous chick lit that I probably would not have read otherwise.

Number of books I’ve downloaded and deleted without finishing from the library: no idea. probably about 10-20.

The number of p-books (haha, my abbreviation for physical books. pretty sure this isn’t going to catch on) I’ve read since buying my kindle: 50 (!!) Most of these were pre-baby :P

How many of these p-books were actually purchased by me for myself (i.e. not for reading to my baby)?: 6. The rest were either gifts or borrowed from the friends/the library).

Things I like about my Kindle: light, easy to carry, very convenient, does not need charging often, one-handed reading (very useful while carrying the baby!!! My sister borrowed my kindle for her maternity leave–is this a potential untapped market?)

Things I don’t like about my Kindle: library doesn’t have enough good books, the fact that I have to use a hack to read books from the library, can’t lend books, no backlight (which means I have to keep the light on to read–not necessarily a good thing when trying to feed the baby in the middle of the night)

Things I really wish the Kindle had that the iPad has (important ones in bold): color screen (for reading graphic novels and admiring illustrations!), backlighting, touch screen

Things I’m glad the Kindle has that the iPad doesn’t: e-ink screen (very easy on the eyes), nice feeling keyboard, built-in/linked-to-text dictionary

Things I’m glad the Kindle doesn’t have that the iPad has: lots of other apps, fast wifi connection (I think this would be very distracting)

Do you have an e-reader? What are your stats?

© 2008-2024 by Amitha Jagannath Knight

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