Making TV Pilots: 5 Practical Tips You Can Use

We just came off of an exhilarating – and exhausting – weekend shooting a cable network pilot for a huge, formatted TV show. In our sleep-deprived, semi-delirious state, it occurred to us this is the perfect time to discuss something we’re asked about often: making TV pilots. Rather than just blathering on (we did mention we’re a little loopy, right?) we’ve put together a list of 5 practical tips to both explore how TV pilots work, and help you when you’re out making TV pilots for yourself.   Making TV Pilots: Part Art, Part Science, All Sweat   Once you’ve been in the TV business for a while, getting the greenlight to make a TV pilot is cause for huge celebration…and reason for total terror. We’ve learned that, like hopping on a roller coaster, it’s best if you throw your hands up, scream real loud, and try hard to enjoy the ride. Aside from that little nugget, we’ve got five real tips that are actually practical and useful. These five tips will help you when making TV pilots of your own.   Keep in mind that, in general, making a TV pilot is one of the most demanding things you can undertake. There are hundreds (thousands?) of things that can go wrong, endless decisions to make, and deadlines that are both unrealistic and unchangeable. Some of what we cover today: * The Golden Rule (not what you think) * TV networks, execs, and TV pilots – what you need to know * The art of flexibility (and knowing when not to flex) * Ensuring you staff properly, and why hiring can be counter-intuitive * Where to draw inspiration — and find cautionary tales — for your TV pilot * What socks and underwear have to do what any of this * What turns Biagio into a curmudgeon NOW… press that giant red “PLAY” button above and rock the house when making TV pilots. Transcript Coming Soon! Helpful and Related Links: Should You Film Your Own TV Pilot? Pros and Cons. Think twice, three times, ten times — before you put a dime into your own TV pilot. When to do it, and when not to do it. Further explanation as we discuss 3 Reasons You Should Not Film Your Own TV Pilot. On the flip side, we talked about 3 Reasons You Should Film Your Own TV Pilot. If you’re REALLY sure you want to set about making TV pilots on your own, here are 5 Rules For the Hands-On Producer Filming Their Own TV Pilot. Don’t Miss What Goes in a Pitch Tape? Should You Make One? and Sizzle Reels: Budgets, Investors, and More. Seven Weird Tips to Survive Production – don’t go out to shoot anything without this list! Why we’re editing on Adobe Premiere. Scary things about producing TV shows including working with TV Network Executives. Looking to pitch an unscripted TV series or reality show? This

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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.