So to answer the question of registering a work based on and including the Trek universe, no. Just no. If you want to own a copyright or a trademark on a story or characters, be creative and invent new stuff.
What the fuck are you talking about, dude?Nice selective quoting there my friend.
That's rather pedantic (not to mention, something completely tangential). In any case, unpaid interns are not considered professionals, as they, by definition, are not employees (and nor are they contractors).As for: "No. Amateur means unpaid...." - many a professional internship program across a variety of disciplines would disprove that definition.
Nothing. Because an idea is pretty worthless. It's the execution. Van Gogh and Rembrandt might have the same idea, the same concept for a painting, but, it's the execution that is special and unique. That's what's copyrightable.I understand about copyright protecting the script but what protects the concept?
"Journey to the center of the earth"
"US President from planet Nine"
"I married a Zeta"
In my humble opinion concepts are a great deal more important than scripts. I'm not sure why I see so many concepts copied.
I think the key here is that Gerrold's book is not easily confused with an actual Dr. Seuss work. Combine that with the fact that it won't likely sell more than an initial printing, if that many.
We'll have to agree to disagree on this.I entirely disagree. Concepts are less important than the scripts. A great idea can be fucked by a terrible script. A bad idea might actually be the basis of a great scrip--not often, but, it's possible.
You could have a great concept inside a low budget highly cut up and edited fan film.
Those are far and few between while and correct me if I'm wrong you'll find a lot more script writers to build a high budget story around it.
This totally devalues what good writers contribute.In my humble opinion concepts are a great deal more important than scripts. I'm not sure why I see so many concepts copied.
perhaps an over generalization of the industry.This totally devalues what good writers contribute.
I could tell you the concept for the pilot I wrote. I came up with in in about 15 minutes when I was driving one day and thought, "They always say 'write what you know,' so what do I know?" Actually turning that into a (hopefully) commercially viable pilot script was easily 1,000x harder.
@dmac, it's funny that you mention The Simpsons because it is the most generic concept imaginable: a family comedy. It's the writing that makes that show, not the concept. Cheers is workplace comedy, with the only thing differentiating it from so many others like it that the customers are regulars so you get the interaction between them, so, again, it's largely the writing that makes it pop. M*A*S*H is a very odd sort of workplace comedy being how unusual the workplace is, but it's an adaptation of a movie adapted from a book, so the concept is sort of built up.
As bad as the show was, one really unique concept was Gilligan's Island, because Sherwood Schwartz wanted to do a comedy with people from different walks of life interacting, but he needed to think of a scenario that would level the playing field so no one had the advantages of money or power or social standing, and stranding this mixed group on a desert island did just that. The show almost didn't sell, and the pilot was submitted to CBS several times and each time rejected until Schwartz went in an edited it the way he wanted to.
The concept will, at best, get you a development deal. It's the script and the execution that make or break the concept. As a producer said to me a while back, "Nothing sells like a script."
It's helpful to hash this out with you folks.it's funny that you mention The Simpsons because it is the most generic concept imaginable: a family comedy.
Sorry to go back to this, but IMO involving any kind of professional anything in a fan film seems like a really bad idea at this point. Even if the person submitting the scrip technically isn't a profession, submitting the script to a group like the WGA is kinda getting close to being professional without actually being professional.No. Amateur means unpaid. There is no professional status implied of a non-guild member who simply forks over the registration fee. The test for whether a person is an amateur or professional is whether they have been paid for their work.
Then don't do it. I'm not here to give other people advice. Except that I'll say that, if you don't feel comfortable doing something, then don't do it.Sorry to go back to this, but IMO involving any kind of professional anything in a fan film seems like a really bad idea at this point. Even if the person submitting the scrip technically isn't a profession, submitting the script to a group like the WGA is kinda getting close to being professional without actually being professional.
I'm really not expecting that to happen, for the reasons already stated. I also have to wonder whether the guild would be happy, if a signatory were to stipulate that certain films could be made but scripts for said films could not be registered with the guild. It would be such a pointless restriction.
Who said anything about stepping into a copyright dispute?I suspect the Guild wouldn't want to step into a copyright dispute.
If it's all make believe why do theoretical physics matter? Color me confused.Space Adventure is easy to write because I've followed theoretical physics from a young age, space is vast and it's all make believe anyway.
Do you mean Zicree's Space Command?It also won't go where others have attempted to go before, in the sense of Star Command or others that attempted such an epic beginning, it never got off the ground.
If it's all make believe why do theoretical physics matter? Color me confused.
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