Jeff Lyons doesn't like the appellation of "GURU" - he considers his insights as basic understanding of story and how drama unfolds.
And he should know. He's studied his craft for years, applied it to many seminars, including a yearly event at the Producers Guild (PGA) and many, many events like the one we had on Saturday in Fountain Valley.
40+ rapt attendees absorbed Jeff's wisdom and knowledge on how to break a premise line (more than a log line, less than a synopsis) into components and tease out the story under the story.
In a word, he was fantastic.
Rather than cover the event in detail I will point you at the videos embeded in this article and Jeff's book "Anatomy of a Premise Line" available on Amazon (LINK TO BOOK ON AMAZON).
Our sincere thanks to a terrific student and teacher of story.
Video (also available after the jump) courtesy of one of our wonderful board members, the incomparable Rudy Garcia.
There's also gallery of photos up by another great board member, Robert Rollins: (LINK TO PHOTOS)



This wonderful movie, "Ideal Home," could not have come at a more symbolic time from a standpoint of the dialogue that is occurring in this country. I'm not going to stand up and say it's an important movie but it sorta is. Because it's about people, not stereotypes or labels, and we need so much more of this and less of that. We need to be reminded that no one category of men or women has an exclusive on love, relationships, anger, or pain.

I admit that I am a sucker for these shows. A body is found or a person is killed and a flawed detective has to solve the crime. Along the way will be surprises, twists, solid drama and a killer you probably could guess - well, maybe.
Mark Sevi is a professional screenwriter, screenwriting teacher (Irvine Vallley College) and the founder of the OC Screenwriters Association.
When I grow up I want to be The Kings. As in Robert King and Michelle King who were responsible for the incredible "The Good Wife" and "The Good Fight" which picks up after the main character of the "The Good Wife" (Julianna Margulies' Alicia Florrick) has left for other pastures.
What all that means (basically) is the original show is back but different. Between "Wife" and "Fight" the Kings did a short-lived political satire show "Brain Dead" which involved alien critters invading the brains of people in Washington and creating even more politically polarized parties. Hmmm. Truth is very much stranger that fiction.
I have been a comic book fan since childhood when my dad would take me and my sisters to the local drug store to peruse the offerings after church on Sunday; something I'm sure the priests would not have approved of.
I wonder at times if I would enjoy being a TV or movie critic. I do like finding gems and telling my friends and students about them. Shows that inspire me to be a better writer are always a treat. But then there's the other end of the spectrum so that would all be a wash I guess.
THE RANT
If you're doing it right as a writer, you're channeling the societal gestalt and the world in general in which you live both locally and globally. At this moment in time, you're observing the situations taking place societally, politically, culturally, internally, and also exploring the past as things become apparent to you. Movies and TV are reflections of our world but they also serve to show us truths from the past that cause us to explore further.
While her work is astounding in its detail and technical brilliance, we were equally amazed at her endless grace, good humor, and down-to-earth approaches in discussing her work.

Once upon a time, television was called a "vast wasteland." Granted, this was years before PBS and many groundbreaking dramas and comedies but the perception has remained. And, to be fair, for every brilliant series (like "Game of Thrones") there's double the amount of crap being foisted on the viewing public whether that viewing is online, streaming or on "traditional" TV or cable.