Getting notes on your script can be difficult, especially if you're a new writer with no contacts or no access to an industry networking setting. In LA or at a film festival, you might pitch your logline and get an automatic, "Send it to me." (And you'd better heckin' send it.) The person might read it, or you might never hear from them again. C'est la vie.Or you can hope someone in your network has time to read your 110-page horror screenplay. If you have that, great, but you have to actually know some people first so you can ask them. And then maybe you do a rewrite, and you don't want to bug the same readers again. Who do you go to?If you don't have friends or industry contacts, you might resort to broadcasting your logline on X or Reddit and accepting any offers to read from strangers on the internet. I've done that and made friends that way. But sometimes the feedback is... let's say, not exactly what you're looking for.Enter StoryPeer, an online platform meant to bridge that gap. It's made for screenwriters by a screenwriter, so it's a little more niche than social media. You have to sign up, not everyone can see your logline, and you can request specific readers.Puttering around YouTube today, I found this video from a fellow screenwriter talking about the platform. - YouTube www.youtube.com How Does StoryPeer Work?When I signed up for the platform, I was automatically given seven tokens and...
Published By: NoFilmSchool - Yesterday