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Write a Short Story Every Day: Is that Even Possible Anymore?

<p>Ray Bradbury&&num;8217&semi;s philosophy of writing a short story each day will always hold true in terms of a writer wanting to explore his or her craft and creativity&period; However&comma; this philosophy was passed by over fifty years ago in the business of publishing and making money&period; Prior to the dawn of television in the 1950&&num;8217&semi;s&comma; short stories were a form of commercial or genre fiction in newspapers and magazines&comma; these made a great of money for the author&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Novels at the time were more or less thought of as a literary achievement in an author&&num;8217&semi;s career&period; Television came along and wiped out the imaginative feel of short stories&period; Its amazing visuals and relegated short stories to being a means of a writer learning his or her craft&period; A two decade transition period would pass before the publishing industry would hit its next wave&period; The wave of commercial bestsellers hitting bookstores in the 1970&&num;8217&semi;s and 1980&&num;8217&semi;s&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While writers still learned their chops by writing short stories&comma; Stephen King and Danielle Steele ushering in the era of novels becoming more commercial or genre based&period; During this era&comma; many could become best selling novelists with the ease of just one book&comma; as long as it was appealing enough for readers and the mass market&period; Yet this cycle would eventually subside as well in the 1990&&num;8217&semi;s with more writers taking an interest in screenwriting in film and television&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The rise of home video and cable television gave way to an increased margin of writers outside Los Angeles&comma; Chicago&comma; and New York trying their hand at writing film and television&comma; thus making six figures&period; The publishing industry responded by a more career oriented approach with new authors&period; An author would slowly build an audience one full length novel at a time in certain genre&period; Three novels in said genre would make an author a success&comma; while five would cement their career in that genre&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After this came DVD and the rise of The Internet&comma; along with the tragic events of September 11&comma; 2001&period; There were minor setbacks in film and television&comma; but they mostly kept things together&period; However&comma; it got the point where a new author was lucky to even have one novel out in bookstores&comma; much less an agent&comma; editor or small press publisher behind them&period; Many novelists and short story writers had to resort to self-publishing&comma; print on demand&comma; or eBooks&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For the next several years&comma; supply and demand for new screenwriters in film and television were at all time high&period; Despite an increased focus on computer animated films and reality shows&period; While bookstores were stocked with the novels of established bestsellers and veteran authors&period; This was until the Writer&&num;8217&semi;s Guild of America strike in late 2007&period; Then followed by the economic recession that started just a month before&comma; but has gotten worse in the last year or so&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It has now gotten to the point where feature films and networks television series are now using established in house writers&period; The only avenue with a huge profit margin for young writers are now cable dramas&period; HBO&comma; Showtime&comma; USA Network&comma; TNT&comma; and FX&period; Even AMC&period; However&comma; the new WGA agreement expires in May of next year&period; Another strike would bring cable dramas to their knees&comma; and then those would more or less be left with established in house writers also&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One question does have to be asked after the changes and cycles writers have gone through in this business&period; It is a situation where novelists and short story writers can be well known&comma; but not make a lot of money&period; While screenwriters for film and television are paid lots of money&comma; most of them are not households the way novelists and short story can be&comma; or least have been in the past&period; Everyone what a novel or short story is&comma; but who outside Los Angeles&comma; Chicago&comma; or New York even knows what a screenplay or a screenwriter is&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Another question that may be on a lot of people&&num;8217&semi;s minds related to the one above is&comma; has this business been hot shotted or overexposed in some way&quest; It sure appears this way&period; In the event of another strike or when cable dramas have run their course&comma; there are those who predict webisodes will have increased exposure amongst the mainstream and feature young talent&period; Also&comma; that they will be able to make more money on a small budget with shorter episodic or serialized content&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In such an event&comma; widespread popularity of webisodes might in fact be a step or two away from a possible return to short stories&period; While there is no guarantee such a thing will happen&comma; it would be quite interesting nonetheless&period; It would expose a lot of new talent to the marketplace&comma; and provide them with a more stable income than the current market&period; Will such a thing be able to happen at some point&quest; Who knows&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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