Scripting For Radio & Video
Scripting For Radio & Video
Scripting For Radio & Video
3.0 INTRODUCTION
"The radio show demands a daily product whether you feelpersonally up to it or not.
Therefore inspiration is a moot word.
I usually get to the station at 5 a.m. for a 6 a.m. start. My first action is to throw apiece of
paper into the typewriter and get down the task. This is a non-negotiable action. Something
has to happen. Often I willfirst start without an idea, typing "Hello Frank, this is Ronald
Reagan calling from the Oval Ofice". Suddenly an idea! What ifFrank makes a comment
that he was looking forward to talking to the Chief executive? "Good'', says Ron, "I'll get
Mommy and put her on the phone. " Now I have a direction. Frank convincing Reagan that
he's the chief executive and not Nancy.
Sometimes a skit will take a direction based on a type that readsfunny, or a newspaper
heading stares at you from the desk and gives you the direction in which to go. The harsh
reality of this demanding exercise is 'good or bad - something has to happen.
With regard to inspiration, I have developed over the years an ability to remember those
sketchy but valuableflashes of brilliance - or so we think - that hit you any time of day or
night. Sometimes I will use the afternoon to then write and edit something without the strict
time constraints of the morning. That S a luxury.
Writing Scripts for Audio and
Video Programmes
I have come to the salty, unromantic conclusion that writing is tough, inspired or not. But
gritty determination and a developed self-discipline will get words on to paper ... "
Mike Cleary: Getting words on to paper ( 1 989).
This unit is about writing scripts. Writing scripts is an essential part of the
work in the agenda of a distance teacher, and on the face of it, may seem
daunting. This unit discusses the details regarding how one might go about
it. We outline style, formats and the purposes of the formats in relation to
audio and video programmes. The process of writing a script - including the
stages of developing a script - is the central point of discussion.
The units in the second block of this course dwelt on the scope of audio and
video programmes in the instructional design of the distance learning
system. The first unit of block 2 focussed on the pedagogical utility of
various media and the extent to which they may be used to achieve the
intended learning outcomes. In the first two units of this block you learnt
about the basic production process and the language of television. To
produce an audiolvideo programme, it is essential to have'a script. Having
said this, it is but natural for us to move on to one of the more practical
aspects of the media namely, writing for audio and the video programmes.
OBJECTIVES
At the end of this unit you should be able to
outline the purpose or focus of a typical script for an audiolvideo
programme;
distinguish between the various formats of programmes;
explain the purposes of the formats;
trace the various stages of development (in the process of writing a
script); and
develop your own script for a specific purpose.
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMES
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Before you proceed, pause for a moment and reflect on this.
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example. A university class concerned with the way in which films and
television present stereotypes of certain minorities might watch a film called
Geronimo Jones, which depicts in a moving way the emotional damage
caused by the stereotyping of native American Indians.
A third type is the programme that integrates education and entertainment.
Programmes such as Captain Kangaroo and Sesame Street have clear
educational objectives and Sesame Street, particularly, engages at times in
what might be called direct instruction in seeking to teach pre-school
children to recognize numbers and letters, but both programmes also include
segments obviously designed to entertain. The series Victory at Sea
provided viewers with knowledge of the naval history of World War I1 at
the same time that it gave them entertainment of the first order.
i Attaining these goals is not easy, of course, but defining them is. Educators,
on the other hand, must choose from a wide number of goals. They must ask
themselves whether they seek simply to add to a viewer's store of
knowledge, or whether they also want to promote understanding of an issue.
Perhaps they hope to develop a certain attitude or build a set of values. Their
goal may be the utilitarian one of teaching viewers a certain skill or showing
them how to carry out a particular process. They may be interested in
building tastes and appreciation of literature, drama, or music. Because the
attainment of these various objectives requires diverse approaches, writers .
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must know what their objectives are before they began planning the
program.
Sesame street, one of the most successful educational children's series ever
produced, provides an excellent example of care in defining objectives.
Before the first programme went on air, the Children's Television
Workshop, which produced the series, carried out a carefully planned
research effort. From this effort came a set of goals that outlined in specific
terms exactly what the programmes should try to accomplish. Chief among
these goals was teaching preschool children to recognize letters and
numbers. The Workshop went on to describe in precise detail the conditions
under which this recognition should take place. There were other goals also.
The programmes taught children to recognize and name parts of their body,
to discriminate among various visual forms, to distinguish one sound from
another, to understand size relationships, to classify and order objects, to
solve problems, and to recognize c,ausality. The programmes also presented
facts about the physical and social environment and encouraged meaningful
and satisfactory interaction with others. Children tuning into the television
set to watch Sesame Street may have been sceking entertainment. They were
undeutortedly entertained, but at the same time they benefited in a most
constructive way fiom programmes carefully designed to achieve certain
educational objectives.
In the same way, Fred Rogers, creator and producer of Mister Rogers '
Neighborhood, carefully defrned his goals before he wrote the script. One of
his objectives was to build attitudes that would help children feel good
about themselves and the world around them and cope with some of the
problems that concern them. Research carried out at a number of institutions
showed that the young viewers of the programme improved or developed
characteristics as obedience of rules, tolerance of delay, and persistence in
tasks.
Defining goals of an educational programme aimed at adults is just as
important as defining them for children's programmes. This task may be
somewhat easier on the adult level where it is assumed that basic attitudes
and values have already been formed. The emphasis is, therefore, usually on
transmitting information that will deepen understanding and widen
knowledge of a particular field or on providing instruction aimed at
developing or improving a skill.
Audio and Video Production (Part A)
program with an exciting segment taken from the body of the script. This
technique has two disadvantages, however: its artifice is too obvious for
some, and it may disorient the audience because it presents material out of
context. For this reason, some prefer a straight introduction that seeks to
stimulate interest by using such traditional devices as a striking statement, a
quotation, a reference to the familiar, a promise of the unusual, or a
recounting of a recent event. In addition to seizing attention, the
introduction should also indicate the programme's subject matter. It is
useful to remember that not everyone tuned in when your programme comes
on is going to be interested in watching it. You need to let potential viewers
know what the programme is about, recognizing that while some will say
"this is not for me", others will be attracted by the content you promise.
The body of the script
We emphasize again that your most important responsibility in writing an
educational script is to be clear. Only if you are clear can your viewers
understand what you are presenting. And only if they understand are they
likely to continue listening. Clarity, then, is essential if you are to hold
attention and sustain interest.
There are also other attributes that help to make educational programmes
hieresting. Many are those we associate with dramatic writing. Writers of
educational programmes, in fact, have often used a dramatic format in
presenting information, especially when the material is biographical or
historical. However, to employ a dramatic format and to attain many of the
qualities we associate with drama, just as suspense writers do, you should
try to develop expectations and even, to some degree, suspense in a gradual
way through the programme so that complete satisfaction does not come all
at once but is provided step by step. In some instances you can even include
a situation of conflict. The final revelation can, in a sense, provide a climax
to the programme. Thus, you should build an educational programme as you
would a drama, on a plane that rises in interest to the conclusion.
Special problems
Creating educational programmes for children confronts writers with a
number of unusual problems.
Writers must be keenly aware of the financial restraints under which they
operate. Limited resources create many problems to which there are no
ready answers. Writers must be ingenious in responding to them. They must
also be aware of the conditions under which the production of programmes
takes place. For example, in producing Mister Rogers 'Neighborhood, Mr.
Rogers, in addition to talking directly to children in his own person, also
provides the voices for many of the puppets who appear in a fantasy
segment called the Neighborhood of Make Believe. Mr. Rogers, who creates
most of the programmes, is well aware of this circumstance, of course, and
so are the others in the small group who write scripts. To help acquaint
possible new writers with the circumstances under which Mr. Rogers '
Neighborhood is produced, some guidelines were
Writing Scripts for Audio and
Video Programmes
Script formats
A script for an educational programme may be written out in full, or it may
only be semi-scripted i.e. partly scripted for presentation by a host or
narrator who speaks extemporaneously. The format for the fully scripted
programme often follows the pattern for the documentary. Another type of
format appears a little later in this chapter when we include a portion of a
Twentieth Century script to illustrate the narration used in an information
programme.
The ad-libbed or extemporaneous method is more common in .educational
broadcasting than it is in other kinds of programmes. The script format
below illustrates a common pattern for semiscripted'shows (See example 1).
You will cote that the lines provide cues or reminders of content, which the
narrator then converts into a full exposition. The writer has written out the
roll cues for the films in full, however, to guide the director in inserting the
films into the programme at precisely the right moment.
Example 1
Format for Semlscdpted Show
VIDEO AUDIO
Concepts of green leaves as food factories:
CHART: DIAGRAM OF CYCLE 1) Oxygen - CO,
CYCLE 2) Water and nourishment up
from mots
SLIDE # I 3) Manufacture of chlorophyll
Role of chlorophyll in growth of vegetation
FILM: FILM ROLE CUE: Now suppose we take a
look at the inside of a green leaf and see for
ourselves how the little dots of chlorophyll
flow through the cells of the leaf substance.
FILM ENDS WITH SHOT OF PULSING
DOTS SLOWING DOWN TO A DEAD STOP
3.3.2 Techr~icaldevices
Some common techniques in this category are the following:
Alliteration: A device to achieve dramatic effect. This involves starting
several words with the same sound.
9 Repetition: The conscious repetition of certain words to enhance
dramatic impact, this device should be used judiciously.
Balance: When comparing things or dealing with ideas, this device
lends a certain kind of structure and symmetry to the writing.
Descriptive andfigurative language such as metaphors and similes are
used to convey visual richness to the writing.
attention of the viewers, keeps them active and hlly involved and
engrossed in the programme.
It may be mentioned that most of the above formats are used independently
as well as in combination with each other, depending on the choice of the
programme writer and producer. The choice of the format or a combination
of formats, however, again depends on the nature and objectives of the
specific subject matter and availability of time, budget and resources.
You have just read about some of the programme formats commonly used
by radio and television writers for presentation of their programmes. Now
answer the following questions.
Check Your Progress 3
Notes: a) Space is given below for your answers.
b) Check your answer with those provided at the end of this
Unit.
i) List the major programme formats described in this Unit
ii) State the important factors which determine the choice of a particular
programme format by a writer or a producer.
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3.4.2 Radio script format
Here are some general principles to follow when writing a radio script.
Divide the page into two columns: instructions on the left and dialogue
on the right.
Names of characters and directions for music, sound effects and so on
are all given in the left-hand column, double spaced and written in ALL
CAPS. Everything except dialogue is written in capitals and single
spaced.
Dialogue is written only in the right hand column. Dialogue is always
double spaced and written in upper and lower case (like typical prose).
This is to differentiate it from instructions. This means that the cost and
production crew can tell at a glance what is dialogue and what isn't.
Audio and Video Production (Part A)
3.4.4 Documentaries
It may be well to begin by conceding that the term "documentary" is not an
easy one to define. In the broadest sense, a documentary is any programme
or film based on "documents". Defined this way, it is a form directed toward
presenting a factual record about real people, things, and events, one that
sets out mainly to explore a subject rather than to entertain. Under this
definition, any material that simply dispenses information about historical or
biographical subjects without reference to current social problems would be
placed in the documentary category. It would even include material aimed
mainly at providing cultural information, such as programmes on
Michelangelo, Shakespeare, and the Louvre.
Media people do not usually call a programme a documentary simply
because it deals with facts. Their definition is narrower. In addition to
presenting information, to qualify as a documentary, a programme must take
the further step of trying to change people's attitudes with respect to an
important social or political issue of current significance. A documentary,
then, is defined as a factual programme that attempts to persuade.
In carrying out this persuasive purpose, the producers may pursue one of
several objectives: (1) Their goal may be to arouse public concern by
making audiences aware of the existence of a pressing social problem. One
of the most notable documentaries ever presented namely CBS's "Harvest
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Writing Scripts for Audio a ~ l d
Video Programmes
recent years, as docudrama. Programmes and films of this type may adhere
completely to the facts as they are known. The film A Night to Remember,
about the "Titanic's", sinking, is an example. In other instances, the facts
merely provide a springboard for the imagination of the writer who then
proceeds to embellish them by creating fictional events and characters to
mix with real events and people.
Many of the principles and techniques that apply in the writing of the
documentary apply also to the writing of other scripts that present factual
material. A requirement common to all these forms is to discover the facts.
What we say about canying out a programme of research and study in
preparation for the writing of a documentary applies also to the preparation
needed to write all of the other scripts based on facts. The documentary
must have an organizational structure that moves the audience in an orderly,
logical way from one idea to another and shows the relationships among
them. Informational and educational programmes must also have a well-
defined, logical structure.
An examination of this outline demonstrates that "Trip to Nowhere"
contains ideas that should arouse concern about drug use among children.
Moreover, these ideas fall naturally into the categories one looks for in an
outline - clearly stated main points buttressed by subordinate ideas that
prove and support them. It is obvious that this programme was well
organized and its strong, logical structure contributed substantially to its
effectiveness..
However, it is not enough merely to develop persuasive points and arrange
them in the orderly pattern represented by an outline. "Trip to Nowhere" if
presented just as the ideas occur in the outline would have been rigid in
style and unvaried in approach and would have failed to develop its full
potential. The producer must take the ideas in the outline and devise a way
of presenting them that will accomplish a number of objectives: to seize and
hold the attention of the audience; to make the points strikingly clear; to
invest the ideas with an emotional charge powefil enough to change
attitudes and move people to action.
NBC's 'Trip to Nowhere' is an outstanding example of a documentary.
Narrated by Edwin Newman, it deals with the problem of drug use by high
school students. A good method to ascertain the effectiveness of a
documentary is to check whether it has a strong structural outline.
As you can see, this programme (i.e. Trip to Nowhere) falls readily into a
logical pattern.
Writing Scripts for Audio and
Video Programmes
"Trlp to Nowhere"
Produced by NBC
Narrated by Edwln Newrnan
I Purpose: To arouse concern about drug use among school children. I
Central Idea: Though the use of drugs among school children is widespread and dangerous, steps can
be taken to alleviate the problem.
The Problem:
A) They include the poor and sufferers form discrimination such as blacks and chicanos.
6) They include affluent middleclass students.
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2)
Some school leaders use drugs.
I 6) They can be obtained in schools where every child is approached by a drug pusher at
one time or another. 1
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C) They can be obtained at parks and music festivals.
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Ill) Children use drugs In an attempt to escape various types of problems.
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1 A) They try to escape faulty home relationships. I
B) They try to escape what they see as a betrayal by society.
C) They try to escape insecurity.
6) The law creates problems by requiring that minors treated by doctors for drug use be
reported to legal authorities.
II) There are a number of possibleTapproachesto the use of drugs among school children.
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ii) Briefly describe the formats of audio and video scripts.
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Writing Scriptsfor Audio and
Video Programmes
3.5 Scriptwriting
The script is the basic building block of any successful production -
whether in theatre, radio, film or videotape. It is a carefully devised
blueprint, which charts out instructions for actors, directors and technicians.
Scriptwriting for television is largely a co-operative activity. It may be seen
as a sort of dialogue between the scriptwriter, producer and other members
of the production team. This dialogue is mainly a collaborative activity,
which begins with the programme idea finally produced.
To put it differently, video or television scripts are evolved step by step.
Creativity, imagination and co-operative efforts are the key words in the
scripting process. Television scriptwriting may be seen as a process
consisting of a series of steps or processes, which do not necessarily operate
sequentially or separately fiom one another. In fact, these steps or processes
operate together and often overlap. But the basic pattern of the scripting
process remains almost the same and TV scriptwriters, whether consciously
or unconsciously, go through certain stages in one way or the other. These
stages are as given below:
Programme idea
Programme outlinehrief
Programme research
Message planninglprogramme design
Programme structure and visual treatment
Story board making
Draft-script
Final-script
STORY BOARD
Visual Spoken Words (Commentary, Diagrams,
Music, Sound Effects, Noise, etc.)
1) Media content
i) Self contained TV
ii) TV as part of a multi-media package
3) Learner's characteristics
i) Age, knowledge, commitment, culture, conditions
3) Teaching objectives
i) Affective
ii) Motivational
iii)Experiential
iv) Cognitive
4) Format and style
i) Studio/locatiodmixed
ii) Presenter in visiodout of vision
iii)Documentry/Docu-drama
iv)Demonstratiodillustrated lecture1 case-study.
5) Outline of the content
eg
Audio and Video Production (Part A)
2. Please give your reactions to the following items based on your reading of the block:
Language
and Sgle
Illustrations Used 0 0 0
(diagrams, tables,
etc.)
Conceptual q 0 0 0
Clarily
Feedback to CYP q n o 0
Questions
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