As an example, I am a counselor. I’m also a writer. If I
could be a kid in a candy store of careers, I would go back to the 1970s and
80s when a TV show called M*A*S*H was
running. This comedy/drama took place during the Korean War and it depicted the
people serving in a Mobile
Army Surgical
Hospital . These people tried
heroically and tragically to save lives in the midst of war. Hawkeye was a
skilled surgeon with a piercing wit and a heart as big as his ego. Trapper John
and then BJ were Hawkeye’s sidekicks in crime, doing anything and everything to
antagonize the bumbling Frank Burns, then the more cultured Charles Emerson
Winchester III. “Hot Lips” started as Frank’s illicit soiree away from his
wife, but over the course of the show, she evolved to become a strong, yet compassionate
head nurse. Radar was a naïve corporal who kept the whole operation running.
Klinger dressed as a woman to try (unsuccessfully) to get booted out of the military. Colonel
Blake was a fisherman in disguise as a leader. And Colonel Potter was an old-school
military man who kept his camp loose and efficient at the same time.
Over the course of watching this show, these characters,
fictional people, became real to me. The actors brought these characters to
life but what amazes me is how the writers created these characters. They took
a concept with outlines and scripts and fashioned a world that was as real to
me as the friends I went to school with. I came to care about the people in this show and I watched because I cared. That’s the power of good writing.
To be in a team of people working together to create
something they believe in: a TV show such as M*A*S*H, The Wonder Years,
or Smallville, a motion picture such
as Kramer Vs Kramer, Dead Poet’s Society,
or Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan,
a book such as Clan of the Cave Bear,
Catcher in the Rye or The Glass
Castle. To tell a heroic or worthwhile story. To entertain and shine a
light on the problems that plague us. To give us hope that the struggle is
worth it. That’s what writers do. That’s the candy I would choose.
No comments:
Post a Comment