How To Write a Treatment

This was originally posted back in June 2005…but since I get asked this question a lot, and I am on a plane to Germany right now, I thought I’d share it with you again.

Bryon Stedman  asked me this question in a comment to another post:

I have a situation where a broadcast entity claims they want to hear my idea for a boxing series or made for TV movie. The characters belong to my family from a comic drawn by my father.

If a narrative is they way to go, what are the key points to include? Do I go as far as dialog and cameas shots and locations or simply text with main characters CAPITALIZED? Advice requested and appreciated.

A series treatment and a TV movie treatment are very different. A series treatment sells the characters and the franchise of the show…the relationships and format that will generate stories week after week. A TV movie treatment sells a story.

If the studio is already familiar with your Dad’s comic, I don’t know why they need you to come up with a series treatment…the strip itself sells that or they wouldn’t be interested in the first place.

A series treatment isn’t about telling a story…it’s about describing the characters, how they interact within the unique format of your show. Who are they? What do they do? And how will who they are and what they do generate 100 interesting stories?

For a TV movie treatment, you’re selling the characters and their story.  At this point, you’re trying to sell the broadstrokes…they can pay you to work out the rest. Write up a punchy over-view of what happens in the story, as if you were writing a review of a great movie (only minus the praise). You want to convey the style and tone of the movie. But don’t go into great detail. Keep it short, tight and punchy.And whatever you do, DON’T include camera shots or dialogue.

Don’t fixate on treatment format, because there isn’t one. Tell your story in the style that works best for you. Don’t worry about whether the character names are in capitals or not (it doesn’t matter). Concentrate on telling a strong story.

9 thoughts on “How To Write a Treatment”

  1. I and trying to write a treatment for a reality show if you have any suggestions and or a sample please forward it to me thank you myissher@yahoo.com
    360-772-5328
    i would like to also get on a writing team
    any leads will help

    Reply
  2. I have a great idea for a TV reality show for which I would like to write a TV treatment. Are there any examples or standard format for treatments that I can find to use as a guide.

    Reply
  3. i am so stuck about writing the treatment for my sitcom that i came up with. can anyone help me pleas…e-mail me if you have any suggestion

    Reply
  4. Thank you for this helpful information. I finished my screenplay and have to write the treatment. I already wrote the synopsis.
    BTW: According to another website, it was suggested that you write the treatment first to see if your story is marketable. What’s your opinion on this?

    Reply

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