„Very
few writers are motivated solely by the desire for recognition. It is
lovely if it happens, but it cannot be the reason we sit down every
day to stare at a screen and be immersed for hours in the soup of our
thoughts. Most of us are motivated by the power of an idea, an image,
a character, a world, a moral conundrum. This engages our imagination
so deeply that we are willing to stay with it for the years it may
take to find its most artful expression. (...) The
completion of a novel brings an end to the creative relationship we
have with our idea, but publication gives it a chance to be sustained
in the imagination of readers. This is what fuels a fiction writer:
the ongoing life of the ideas we love. The saddest thing about a book
failing to reach an audience is not the wound to the ego, but the
ending of the conversation. (...) Don’t underrate being underrated.”
vineri, 29 noiembrie 2019
duminică, 27 octombrie 2019
Christopher McQuarrie says:
”Stop
thinking about the business as something to “break into” and
starting thinking of yourself as a business to be acquired. Your job
is to create, improve and demonstrate your value.”
joi, 6 iunie 2019
Negative voices, negative people
"All
the negative voices, all the negative people that you meet do not
think that they are negative on creative people. They think they are
helping you. They are doing it out of a genuine sense of concern and
care. They think they are helping you avoid pain and disappointment
and humiliation, and [actually] all they're doing is stifling you.” (Patton Oswalt)
sâmbătă, 18 mai 2019
Amanda Palmer's inspiration receiver
"As an artist, I've unwittingly prioritized my life to keep the inspiration-receiver in my head tuned to a clear frequency. This both braces me to receive brilliant and clever ideas at any moment and makes me an impractical idiot who admires the beauty, poetry, and irony of the piano about to fall on my head instead of getting out of the damn way.
The songwriter in me struggles like mad when meditating. The rules of my conditioned art-mind say that nothing must stand in the way of a developing idea. When inspiration calls, follow. If I should be struggling with anything in my life, it should be taking that impossibly disciplined step from thought to pen to paper, from seed to full song.
The songwriter in me struggles like mad when meditating. The rules of my conditioned art-mind say that nothing must stand in the way of a developing idea. When inspiration calls, follow. If I should be struggling with anything in my life, it should be taking that impossibly disciplined step from thought to pen to paper, from seed to full song.
I watch this mental boxing match take place with interest. In one corner sits a meditator, who calmly suggests that good ideas will linger if they are worthwhile. And so what if they don't? The songs are not happening; only sitting is happening. In the other corner paces the crazed composer with the mind specifically cultivated to jump from image to word to melody in an effort to create a work of art that will move her fellow humans.
(...)
The best songs come like this, the melody and the words landing on the brain's sunlit kitchen table like a singing telegram, a complete and precise little package of information. In that telegram is encoded the entire blueprint for the verses and chorus, a musical strand of DNA. I cannot recognize the words, the length, or even the subject of the song, but I can detect something about how the song will feel when finished. I've always suspected that this glimpse of the whole from the part offers an excellent metaphor for life and death."
joi, 16 mai 2019
"It's not a meritocracy..."
"It's
not a meritocracy, you learn that very quickly. It's a business.
It's
really a business. And the most talented people don't always get to do
the things that they should get to do." (Sarah Paulson)
miercuri, 8 mai 2019
Shonda Rhimes' hum
"The hum is the electricity that comes from being excited by life." (Shonda Rhimes' TED talk)
marți, 7 mai 2019
miercuri, 24 aprilie 2019
Josh Locy on facing obstacles
"Every stage of [filmmaking] is a new challenge and a fresh experience, even from the beginning of getting people to read the script. That's hard. Getting them to read and understand it, that's hard. Getting them to see the vision of the film is hard. Then you go to finding a location, having the guy bail on you the day before, that's hard. Having people who you want to be in the movie who don't want to be in the movie, that's hard. The sun's dropping in the sky. That's hard. Everything is hard, but it's all rewarding. Everything is worth it. You have to just find new ways to solve old problems, and you have to keep pushing. No one's going to make your movie for you. You're the only one who has that spark. It starts with a spark that turns into a flame. You're the only one that has it. You've got to push." (NoFilmSchool interview on his film "Hunter-Gatherer")
miercuri, 3 aprilie 2019
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