{"id":3432,"date":"2011-01-27T16:49:45","date_gmt":"2011-01-27T16:49:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/\/?p=3432"},"modified":"2021-07-30T21:42:33","modified_gmt":"2021-07-30T21:42:33","slug":"skins-no-consequences","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/etbscreenwriting.com\/skins-no-consequences\/","title":{"rendered":"Skins: No Consequences"},"content":{"rendered":"
What a character wants<\/strong> is a clear and simple ego-driven goal. \u00a0 It is something he or she can physically have or obtain. \u00a0It is clear. \u00a0It is simple. It is concrete. \u00a0It is specific– The booze, the drugs, the girl, the party invitation. \u00a0The want is a finite object of a character\u2019s personal desire. \u00a0It is something tangible that would gratify or benefit a character personally and immediately.<\/p>\n What a character n<\/strong>eeds<\/strong> is an inner ache or yearning that a character is unaware of, denies, suppresses or ignores. \u00a0It is a deeper, more abstract or intangible basic human longing. \u00a0It is not physical or concrete. It is an emotional satisfaction that enriches the character more deeply– to be accepted for who you are, to be intimate with someone in a meaningful way, to find joy or to connect with someone in a true and authentic manner.<\/p>\n To embrace the need, a character must abandon specific selfish or self-centered goals and address more fundamental and far-reaching human concerns. Every great story ever told since the beginning of time is about the war between the things of the world (the satisfaction of the ego by obtaining worldly trophies, prizes or thrills) and the things of the heart, the soul and the spirit (the deeper satisfaction of embracing our essential humanity).<\/p>\n<\/a>Lots of controversy has been brewing around the new teen drama “Skins” on MTV. \u00a0I think the problem here is a lack of good storytelling. \u00a0The three crucial elements of any good story is 1) want, 2) need and 3) price. \u00a0Dramas that don’t work most often don’t attach a price to the choices a character makes. \u00a0Unless there is a cost, the action doesn’t feel urgent or compelling. \u00a0The higher the cost, the more intense the story and the emotional journey.<\/p>\n
<\/a>What is the cost of obtaining the want or object of desire? \u00a0What is the cost of embracing the need and living up to one\u2019s highest, truest, most authentic values? \u00a0Which price is a character willing to pay? \u00a0What is a character willing to sacrifice or surrender to obtain the want or embrace the need? \u00a0The tougher the choice is, the better the story. \u00a0If choices isn’t expensive– if there are no expensive consequences– a character’s actions seem episodic and gratuitous.<\/p>\n