I recently heard an interview* with Parks and Rec co-creator Michael Schur (also a writer for The Office, creator of The Good Place, and co-creator of Brooklyn Nine Nine) where he talks about the list of ideas-in-waiting he keeps on set for those moments when a show runs short or a scene needs a quick drop-in joke. He calls this list his “Candy Bag.” *Note: the mention is at the 47:30 mark.
I think this is brilliant, because A) Who doesn’t love candy? and B) It’s a great way to reframe all those random snippets writers have floating around. It might be a scene or infodump that was cut for space, or a joke that wasn’t working in its current context. Now, instead of feeling bad about deleting scenes or “killing your darlings,” you can simply think of it as adding to your Candy Bag.
So, in the spirit of Parks and Rec, I present to you my own Candy Bag for this blog, culled from three years of various notebooks, journals and sticky notes. (Unexpected benefit, my desk is now much cleaner!):
Paralyzed by information
DIY MFA/Learning how to write on the cheap
I was #todayyearsold when…
TBT: Best/Worst/Weirdest jobs I’ve ever had
Top 5 Jobs (ala High Fidelity)
“It’s open seating at the low bar”
Two Truths and a Lie
TBT: Celebrity birthdays
The life of a defluencer
Nightmares I had while querying
Ode to the Sticky Note
Organizing my writing desk
Things I need to do, but am pretending I don’t -or- Why “saving” is not the same as reading/learning/doing
Casting movie versions of my books
Arriving fashionably late to a career
What kind of writer am I?
Happyish Ever After
Nanowrimo FOMO
Day in the life
TBT: Movies of the 80s
Hallmark movie reviews
What do you think? Would a Candy Bag help you in your writing? Which ‘piece’ of candy would you most like to see in a future newsletter? Drop me a line and let me know!