Have you ever had an idea for a project but just did not know where to start? Has not knowing how to proceed stopped you from working on creative projects? Then the ‘Spark Your Creativity’ panel at Comikaze is just for you. Here is a recap on the helpful and informative panel that was lead by accomplished female creators. Do not worry guys, this is for you as well.

 sparkimage

What made you a creator?

Emily Blake – She was tired of writing and having it go into the void, so she recommended making projects yourself.
Jenna Busch – She was tired of not being able to say the things she wanted to about feminism.
America Young – She was tired of seeing so much talent around her that was not working and decided “…let’s start making stuff.”
Miley Yamamoto – Added that for her, it was the diversity angle. There are so many roles for Asians that are all unnamed characters such as Nurse #1.

Tips to getting started.

Holly Payne – “…find your audience and target them.” You want to build a community because they will be the ones who support your project. Make sure to use social media. She concluded with saying, “Dedicate yourself completely and fully and to surround yourself with like-minded people.”
Jenna Busch – Gave the hard but important advice of, “Grow a thick skin.” She went on to say that if you have a vision to stick with it and she jokingly, but at the same time, seriously said, “Don’t read the comments.”
Melanie Recker – Find out what makes you tick and be true to what matters to you. Finding out what is most important to you can spark your creativity.
Emily Blake – Collaboration. She went on to say that if you don’t know about everything find others and work together. “Surround yourself with people who know what to do.” For example, if you do not know how to work a camera, you find a cinematographer.
Miley Yamamoto – Added that projects like the 48 Hour Film Festival are great because you can join a team and learn by hands on experience. If you want to do hosting, just start filming and upload to YouTube.
America Young – You will be there at the beginning, middle and end so you must love what you are working on.
Stephanie Pressman – Your first project doesn’t have to be good and then you will get better.
Jenna Busch – Don’t stare at a blank page. You can even just start writing a grocery list. Action leads to more action.
Holly Payne – First thing every morning write for 10 minutes. Just like you have to exercise your body, you need to exercise your mind.
Melanie Recker – Find a designer. Make friends with someone who will be able to communicate your vision.

Resources

Jenna Busch – Work on your twitter account to develop a social media presence. She added that she has gotten jobs through Twitter. Look at the work you like and why you like it, then communicate through twitter to ask questions.
Holly Payne – We have broader access than ever before. Find your audience and reach out to them. Communicate.
Kristen Nedopak – Get out in the world. We are always online and often stay in our own little space. Find people who do what you want and connect with them.
Miley Yamamoto – Google is your friend. You can find images to convey what you’re thinking. Do your homework. Those images can help inspire your team.
Heidi Cox – Bring on people who can add to your ideas.
Holly Payne – Make sure what you do is legal. With licensed products you have to check. Be careful not to steal ideas. Do your homework.
Stephanie Pressman – The companies that own those licensed products can sometimes help so make sure to do your homework.
Jenna Busch – Always worth asking.

Q&A

Was there ever a time you lost confidence in your work and what did you do about it?

Jenna Busch – Became involved in Gamergate when she started her project and received death threats. Then she read Felicia Day’s post about never giving up. Jenna suggested to look at what the project means to you, step away, and take a break. “If it feels like it’s time to give it up, you’ll know.”
Heidi Cox – Delete bad comments. If you have something to say, say it! If no one sees it, who cares? You got it out there.
America Young – People need to earn their opinion. If some troll with no credibility says something, ignore it. However, sometimes they may be right. If someone you respect gives you advice then you should listen to it.
Melanie Recker – Only listen to the really close people in your life.
Miley Yamamoto – Had a scary experience and it’s hard when you are threatened. It took her a long time to recover but she feels stronger now. Use a PO Box!

Copyright

Look into it because it could be public domain.
You cannot sell it if it is licensed but that doesn’t mean you can’t make it.
Do your research.
See if you can get an option. Ask because you never know. If you are passionate about a project, you can possibly get the rights for next to nothing. For example, Stephen King has sold the rights to some of his projects for only $1.

Resources

msinthebiz.com
Chicks Who Script (podcast)
onlinefilmschoolbootcamp.com
fiverr.com
tweepy.org
SAG Indie (free workshops once a month)

I hope the advice above inspires you. Also, all of the panelists encouraged communication with them. They all want to help you so you do not have to go through what they have. Reach out, make friends and start creating!

Most of us know Kristen Nedopak from The Skyrim Parodies, or as the host of ThinkHero TV, or the weekly series onScienceFiction.com. Or maybe as the Producer/Writer of Pucker, a series of irreverent indie comedy shorts. But last year Kristen decided she needed more to do, and founded The Geekie Awards, an award show for geeks, by geeks,  and she sat down with us last week at Comic Com to discuss her newest endeavor.

Kristin Nedopak at the 2013 Geekie Awards.
Photo by Joe Lester

Q. What led you to create the Geekie Awards?

A. Actually, the best ideas come from things that don’t exist, right? And I’m a creator, I make Sci-Fi/Fantasy stuff, and coming to Comic Con–and I always say this to people–coming to Comic Con, you’re a geek, and you love everything here, but in the outside world, people don’t always take that seriously. They’re like, ‘What’s that costume? What are you doing?’ You know, I’ll go out in cosplay and people will look at me like I have three heads. And in the entertainment industry, we know that these multi-million dollars movie chains like Marvel, they’re huge, but the average everyday person is still like ‘Oh, it’s just fun, everyday entertainment. If something is going to win an Oscar, it’s going to be this drama.’ And I had been talking to agents and going to festivals–because I write and direct my own stuff–and I just kept getting this feedback, that it was such a weird niche, it was too geeky, they weren’t into that. And I would be getting awards, or nominated for awards, but it would only be for costume design. So, I was talking to my publicist, and I said, ‘they’re not really looking at the stories.’ And if this was a geek award, it would be about the story. And that’s kind of how I came up with it. I just, I wished there was something for geeks. And my publicist said, ‘Why don’t you make it?’ and that’s how the idea formed. Of course, it was a lot more work after that.

Q. And how long did it take, from idea to actual show?

A. Well, the show is in its second year, but it was around for a few years before, in development, sort of kicking it around. Trying to get a team involved.

Q. How many entries did you get for each? 

A. We had about 450 entries this year. Last year was about 250. So we basically doubled. Our top categories our Web Series and Podcasts, they’re huge, there’s a lot of material to go through. We’re still trying to reach the video game industry. But all of the entries, they all need to be seen. There’s such talent here.

(l-r) Stan Lee, Kristin Nedopak and Seth Green at the 2013 Geekie Awards
(l-r) Stan Lee, Kristen Nedopak and Seth Green at the 2013 Geekie Awards
Photo by Joe Lester

Q. You mentioned video games. Do you find a lot of resistance in that industry to these awards?

A. Well, I work in entertainment, but video games is kind of its own beast. I wouldn’t say there’s resistance from people in the industry as much as the developers were so burnt out trying to get into the industry that they just felt, ‘oh, this is another show that I’m not going to get into, and it’s just another thing that I don’t know if I have the confidence to do.’ And a lot of the feedback I got was like that. So we really worked hard to encourage those people to enter. And I think once they found out it was indie games, it made them feel like, ‘ok, this is for indie games, I’m not going to go up against Blizzard or Activision.’ It’s not about having millions and millions of dollars, it’s about making a really cool game. That was probably the biggest challenge.

Table-top games, now, they loved it!

Q. The Geekie Awards have a lot of categories…

A. I know! And we only have so much time on the show, and a lot of people ask me, ‘how do you fit all those podcasts or all those webseries into one category?’ But that’s what we do, we really try to give the award to the piece that is the best, of the best, of the best, of its category. We don’t do Best Actor or Best Screenplay, because we’re looking at them as a whole. But we do honors, so after the show we’ll hand out honors to things, like, if the music was exceptional, or if a film was the best sci-fi film, it’ll get an honor. So we do try to make everyone feel like they were awesome.

It’s one of those things, that if you’re good, you’re good, and people are going to see it.

Q. Let’s take podcasts, as an example. Podcasts can run the gamut from a talk show, to a radio play, to a game show. How do you pick the ‘best’ from such radically different formats?

A. That’s pretty much the most asked questions I get from my judges, especially a new judge. They come on board and they say ‘I don’t know how to do this, they’re all so different.’ And we tell them, don’t judge this by comparing it to anything else. Judge it individually. I have a scoring system, so it will be about, how is the production quality, how are the hosts, how is the voice over? And they take all of those pieces into consideration, and then it becomes the best of the best. And you’ll see, with the nominees, that it’s a really good mix. A lot of times, especially with the podcasts, it comes down to the entertainment value. Was I having fun? Was I entertained? Did I learn anything new?

For the films and series, it’s definitely about production and story. And if you’re good, you’re gonna get up there.

Last year, one of the nominees was a gameshow podcast, and it was so random, and they loved it, and that guy ended up using the nomination to get is show booked on a bigger channel. So it’s one of those things, that if you’re good, you’re good, and people are going to see it.

Kristin Nedopak hosting the 2013 Geekie Awards - Photo By Joe Lester
Kristen Nedopak hosting the 2013 Geekie Awards
Photo By Joe Lester

You can catch The Geekie Awards 2014 nominees here and the live show on August 17th, 2014 at the Avalon Hollywood. You can still purchase tickets here, or if Hollywood is just to far to get to (looking at you, South Bay), you can watch the live stream, including the live band pre-show, on the website.

Watch the promo below, and let us know if you’ll be tuning in and what you think in the comments!