If You Can't Answer These 6 Questions You Don't Have A Story - Glenn Gers

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Published 2021-06-22
The 6 Essential Questions For Screenwriting -    • Storytelling: 6 Essential Questions  
(More on this topic over on Glenn's YouTube channel)

Glenn Gers has been a full-time professional writer of movies and television for 25 years. His credits include theatrical features, no-budget indies, TV staff and episodes, original movies for cable and streaming, such as BROTHER'S KEEPER (2002), FRACTURE (2007), MAD MONEY (2008) and many more. He has won multiple festival prizes and an Emmy. He provides tips for writing on his Youtube channel Writing For Screens and offers script-consulting via his website Writingforscreens.com.

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All Comments (21)
  • The 6 essential questions 1. Who is it about? 2. What did they want? 3. Why can't they get it? 4. What did they do about it? 5. Why doesn't that work? 6. How does it end?
  • @DriveupLife22
    I tried writing a novel on a computer for years. Last year I bought a typewriter, and the 80k word manuscript came out in 4 months. Cannot stress enough that your process is your process. Write on a jungle gym, upside down, on a yellow legal notepad with a crayon. Just get it out.
  • @AnnaSeale
    Every character thinks they are the main character ... this was definitely a lightbulb moment for me! Thanks for sharing your tips and knowledge :)
  • @karak2113
    His excitement for writing is radiating off him, it’s really inspiring because although writing is difficult it’s the most rewarding experience
  • @pav-el4047
    Me, who has never written or thought of writing and just clicked on a recommended video: "Interesting"
  • @pantherman16
    David Cornwall, aka John le Carré simply stated: "'A Cat sat on a Mat' is not a story. 'A Cat sat on the Dogs Mat' is a story."
  • This cured my writer's block, wow. I applied it to every character in my story, making all of them protagonists of their own journeys, and I found it to be much easier for me to develop both character, plot AND theme all at once, rather than the atomized way I used to do. Thank you so much for the advice and the video.
  • @Cinnjerm24
    "The writing process is answering a series of questions?" It's wild to me how such a simple concept can totally dispel the mystery of writing creatively. I've struggled for years trying to find a way to pull ideas out of my head into something coherent, but I never could seem to develop a way of approaching the process that worked for me. Thanks for this video, it's already helped me a ton.
  • @TheSwartz
    I think Hollywood only asks one question now: "how do I piss off as many fans as possible?"
  • @polynomy8511
    "Would the reader be excited to read the next chapter?" Is my best writing question.
  • The "every character is their own main character" idea is very insightful! I've always had trouble making side characters interesting in my writing and now I know it's because I wrote them as tools and not people with their own intentions and conflicts.
  • @ajmittendorf
    1. Who is it about? 2. What does he/she want? 3. Why can't he/she get it? 4. What does he/she do about that? 5. Why doesn't that work? 6. How does it end?
  • I often follow the four David Mamet questions from the memo: 1) What does your hero want? (GOALS) 2) Who/What Stands in their Way? (OBSTACLES) 3) What happens if they don't get it? (STAKES) 4) Why Now? (TIME/SITUATION) You gotta think before you write
  • @YouGuessIGuess
    I wrote half of a novel while sitting in my car during breaks at work. It was surprisingly efficient--no one to distract me, music if I chose, and a limited amount of time to get as much written as possible before I had to clock back in.
  • His point about everyone finding their own process is SPOT ON. The thing I liked least about my creative writing courses in college (it was my major, so I had many) was that every instructor seemed to assert that THEIR process was THE process, and everything else was bound to fail. (Even Stephen King falls into this trap when he insists that writers should never outline a story. I love King's work, but even some of his novels would have benefitted from a bit more preplanning.) Learning your OWN process is the only way to go.
  • "Writing is a series of questions." I like that process. Asking questions about your character's goal, origins, mentality, action, non-action, social-climate, and so on. A great way to establish strong character writing for every moment & scene. 🤩
  • @BooneDavey
    The part after 1:12 just gave me a major perspective shift on approaching writing characters inside a world. "Every character thinks THEY'RE the main character." What a way to put it.
  • @pacificostudios
    I never thought of writing a front desk clerk as someone that thinks they are the main character, but we see these people written all the time as though they only exist to serve the needs of the customer.
  • @1xm_mx1
    He's absolutely right - it is a series of "aha!" moments, not a single one. There is always something missing that we didn't know about.