Re:Religion on B5

 Posted on 3/7/1996 by Jms at B5 to AOL


We hope to have Harlan's script for next season.

"I hope that perhaps you have done some searching in areas of your faith as a
result of that episode."

No. Don't see any reason to do so. I wasn't *exposed* to that episode, I
*wrote* it, the same way I'd write a convincing show about Minbari...I don't
have to believe they exist to write convincingly about them.

I keep being astounded that others are astounded that an atheist can write
well about religion without being religious. Writing is writing. Characters
is characters. Either you're honest as a writer, or you ain't; either you're
telling a story, or you're using the medium for propaganda.

jms



Re:Religion on B5

 Posted on 3/9/1996 by Jms at B5 to AOL


I've always been a writer. Even when I was just a kid, I was "preparing,"
always checking out different kinds of writing instruments, collecting the
artifacts of writing...took 3 years of typing in high school until I got to
120 wpm...but I didn't start writing until mid-high school, when I finally
decided I had read enough, thought enough about it, and was *ready*.

That day, I started writing finally. I wrote a story I placed with the
school magazine done out of one of the writing classes. The next thing I
wrote ended up in a small outside magazine. Then I began writing and placing
articles and plays and stories....

I took some writing classes in college, but the only ones of value were the
workshops, not the ones where you're taught to write the way the teacher
*wants* you to write. The whole theory of writing is to find your unique
voice; if you surrender that by writing the way somebody else writes, you've
sacrificed the only commodity you had to offer: your unique vision of the
world. In any event, as stated, I was writing and selling long before I took
my first writing class.

Since 1971, I have written 5-10 pages per day (the last 12+ years generally
10 or better) every day of the week, 52 weeks a year, except for my birthday,
christmas, new year's, and my spouse's birthday. On my first trip to
England, I swore I wouldn't write, I'd take some time off; I ended up
sneak-buying a small notepad and, by the time I got back, had outlined my
first novel, later published by Dutton.

I've written over 500 published articles, dozens of published short stories,
12 produced plays, a number of songs recorded here and there (including two
for a prime time ABC special), 2 published novels, 1 published anthology, a
number of screenplays (some made as TV stuff, some not produced), and 145+
produced TV scripts, among other stuff.

I write all the time. It's not what I do, it's what I *am*.

jms