Home | Login | Thursday, May 15, 2008
  Username Password Password? | Site Map | Screenwriting | Feedback   
COMPANY SEARCH
COMPANY DIRECTORY
NEW & UPDATED COMPANIES
PAST SCRIPT SALES
CONSULTANTS
CONTESTS
FILM FESTIVALS
FILM SCHOOLS
INTERNATIONAL
MAGAZINES & PAPERS
MISCELLANEOUS
ORGANIZATIONS
OSCAR SCRIBES
RESOURCES & REFERENCE
SCREENPLAYS ONLINE
SCREENPLAYS TO BUY
SCREENWRITING BOOKS
SCREENWRITING SOFTWARE
STAFF FAVORITES

WRITERS DATABASE

 


4screenwriters.com
 
New York Screenwriter
( July, 2001)

Need a P.I.M.P. for Your Script?

Even with an uncle or two in the business a writer has a tough time getting anyone in the industry to read a script. What one needs is someone in the trenches out there on the corner of Hollywood and Vine hawking scripts, a pimp, so to speak. "Our primary task is to circulate well-written scripts to film production companies," says Script P.I.M.P. co-founder, Chadwick Clough of his new online service. Script P.I.M.P. (Pipeline Into Motion Pictures) has a network of "johns", er, production companies in their database that regularly submit requests for new material specific to their needs.

What makes Script P.I.M.P. unique is that unlike other online script-submission services, they do not post hundreds of loglines of scripts only to rely on agents and producers to log on and search for material. Instead they go to the source and ask production companies and agents exactly what they are looking for and then supply suitable material. "They know we have well-written scripts and they also know that we present scripts that we think they might want, says Clough. "The reputation we have for circulating great material is something we take very seriously.

"We supply ideas, rich with potential throughout the entire coverage," he adds. The goal is to help writers come up with the best possible rewrite. "Our notes give writers the option to explore a new angle, a new sub plot, a new character."

Script P.I.M.P. was launched in June of 2000 and is currently working with 16 writers. "These writers have been contacted by agents and production companies," says Clough who reports that three writers have achieved some level of success, from representation by agencies to interest in their screenplays.



Register Here!