Great Reality TV Worlds Have These 4 Qualities

Reality TV worlds and documentary locations need to be populated with amazing characters. However, sometimes, those characters are not enough to sell a show. That’s when the show’s world or setting becomes hugely important. Why? Sometimes, Reality TV Worlds or Documentary Settings are Bigger Than Their Characters In episode 6, we told you how to spot great characters for your reality tv shows. But sometimes, great reality TV worlds make all the difference. The world you discover can be a project’s real star. Again, you can’t have a great show without loud, fun, interesting documentary or reality tv characters. But sometimes those characters, no matter how colorful, are just not enough to justify a whole television show. When Are Reality TV Worlds or Documentary Settings Enough to Make a Great Show? This week’s episode goes into great detail on why hits like “Hillbilly Handfishin'” “Deadliest Catch” and even the slew of current dress shopping shows ala “Say Yes to the Dress” rely on the world they are set in to carry the show. How do you if you’ve found such a world? 4 Qualities of Great Reality TV Worlds If you haven’t already hit the giant “Play” button at the top of this post, consider doing so now, before reading the spoiler below. We’re able to go into much greater detail in the podcast on many points related to reality TV worlds and documentary settings. Later, what’s inside the spoiler can serve as a handy reminder of this episode’s big points, and add a few handy clarifications: [spoiler] The 4 qualities are: * Reality TV World or Documentary Setting is Visual * Reality TV World or Doc Setting Feels Like a Discovery * Reality TV World or Location Itself Can Cause Drama * Reality TV World or Documentary Setting Fits Somewhere on the TV Landscape Visual Film and television are visual mediums. Yet, often times we’re pitched shows that take place in run of the mill office settings or plain-jane suburban homes. Those worlds won’t sell. You want reality TV worlds and documentary settings that leap off the screen no matter which way you point the camera. Tight, cramped quarters, run of the mill office buildings, or anything that feels too “normal” should be red flags. Feels Like a Discovery Before “Swamp People” hit, most people had no idea what gator hunting season was, or that such a thing even occurred in the United States. Until “Pregnant in Heels” started airing on Bravo, I had no idea some people pay to have their kid’s name test marketed. These are worlds which feel like discoveries. They have a great “who knew” factor to them. Keep you eyes open for reality TV worlds and documentary settings right in your back yard that may feel like a discovery to most people. Those worlds could be the star of your next hit show. Can Cause Drama Can the world itself create drama? Most obvious example: Nature. The Bering Sea on “Deadliest Catch” or the weather on “Storm Chasers.” At any moment mother nature can rear her ferocious head and cause instant drama. On the other hand, dress shopping shows like “Say Yes to the Dress” cause a different kind of drama. The dress shop becomes a “pressure cooker” that brings wedding dr...

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*Named "New and Noteworthy" across all podcasts, as well as TV & Film, Arts, and Education. Subscribe now. Ready to create, pitch, and sell documentary series, unscripted TV shows or reality series and specials? From creating pitch tapes to meeting with TV networks, developing your ideas to discovering reality TV stars, this podcast features tips on working in unscripted film and television that you won't find anywhere else. Get top-industry secrets and even pitch your shows to Award-Winning Documentary Filmmakers and Unscripted Television Producers Joke Fincioen and Biagio Messina. Recently, the duo have helped both new and experienced producers bring projects to television on MTV, BIOGRAPHY CHANNEL, INVESTIGATION DISCOVERY, A&E, and CNN/HLN. Your show could be next. Subscribe now. ABOUT JOKE AND BIAGIO: With over a decade of experience in unscripted film and television, this married couple has made TV shows, specials, and pilots for CNN, HLN, A&E, The CW, Biography Channel, NBC, CBS, Discovery, Investigation Discovery, Discovery+, E!, IFC, Logo, Oxygen, Style Network, VH1 and MTV. Their feature length documentary DYING TO DO LETTERMAN played in theaters across America, was invited by the International Documentary Association to qualify for Academy Award® consideration, and named “New and Noteworthy” on iTunes alongside The Dark Knight Rises, Brave, and Beasts of the Southern Wild. Subscribers to this podcast will learn the secrets of the Unscripted TV and Film worlds, and how to apply them toward career success. Subscribe today.