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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class/5464732100198400/lesson/36affe9f301897f2fed1b0f0200aeba6?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:Review Your Blurb
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260526T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260526T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class/5464732100198400/lesson/36affe9f301897f2fed1b0f0200aeba6?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: 
Take a Look at your Blurb

Why you may ask? Because you'll need this to shine in your pitch package. If you've read/watched/listened to my free download on the 5 Myths of Selling your Book to Hollywood, you'll know that I dispelled the belief that you need a screenplay first before you approach a producer. We know that books are optioned all the time. We also know, because it's happened to me, that producers will sometimes request the author's input, even in co-writing the adaptation with the screenwriter. Whether or not this happens isn't necessarily of great importance. Adaptations run the gamut of being so true to the original material that fans of the books embrace the films with open arms all the way to the adaptation being wholly unrecognizable to anyone who'd read the book. Either way, the author makes money. And while for some authors it's more important to have some control over the story adaptation, for others it's simply another business revenue stream. And potentially...

https://www.learndesk.us/class/5464732100198400/lesson/36affe9f301897f2fed1b0f0200aeba6?ref=outlook-calendar
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SEQUENCE:3
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