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Writer unveils some mysteries about Murdoch

Longtime television scriptwriter Paul Aitken will present at Word on the Lake Writerssa国际传媒 Festival
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Scriptwriter for the popular Canadian television series, Murdoch Mysteries, Paul Aitken will return to the city in which he grew up as a presenter at this yearsa国际传媒檚 Word on the Lake Writerssa国际传媒 Festival, which takes place May 19 to 21 at the Prestige Harbourfront Resort and Okanagan College.-Image credit: Photo contributed.

There is no mystery as to why the sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteriessa国际传媒 television series grows its fan base every year.

Set in Toronto at the dawn of the 20th century, each one-hour drama explores the intriguing world of William Murdoch, a methodical and dashing detective who pioneers innovative forensic techniques to solve some of the citysa国际传媒檚 most gruesome murders.

Inspiration for each episode is born in a room where six scriptwriters toss ideas about, latching onto the ones that have the most general appeal.

One of the showsa国际传媒檚 successful scriptwriters is Salmon Arm Secondary 1976 grad Paul Aitken, who will be returning to the community in May as a presenter to the Word on the Lake Writerssa国际传媒橣estival.

sa国际传媒淲e call it the hive; different brains operating in the same space and talking freely generate ideas in other people,sa国际传媒 says Aitken, noting he rarely goes into a new season with episode plans. sa国际传媒淵ou get way more ideas from other people and way more solutions become apparent.sa国际传媒

Aitken says the hive gets episodes off to a good start, an integral part of the process as 18 episodes are written and filmed in six months.

Stoked with ideas from the collective sa国际传媒渂rain,sa国际传媒 scriptwriters break off to independently to write the scripts for their assigned episodes, very occasionally collaborating with another writer.

Research is key, a good measure of which is accomplished by searching the Web, often via Google and Wikepedia sa国际传媒 except for political information, which is often skewed by contributorssa国际传媒 own agendas and false information, Aitken says.

sa国际传媒淲e donsa国际传媒檛 have the resources to hire a lot of staff so we do our own research; itsa国际传媒檚 a fantastic way to waste time if you are disinclined to write,sa国际传媒 he laughs. sa国际传媒淵ou learn a lot of stuff you didnsa国际传媒檛 know and itsa国际传媒檚 a pleasurable activity in and of itself. Getting into embedded links is a great way to spend a chunk of your day.sa国际传媒

Writing less costly but more challenging sa国际传媒渂ottlesa国际传媒 episodes, which are shot in one location and have other constraints are very appealing to Aitken.

These are a little more dense because the story is all thatsa国际传媒檚 being sold sa国际传媒 no big scenes, no action scenes, no big sets, he says of the more complex characterization process that goes into writing a bottle episode.

The process, although more difficult, is much more satisfying when the manuscript is complete and ready for a return to the meeting room.

sa国际传媒淲e meet together to go over the scripts and wesa国际传媒檙e really mean with each other as we correct the manuscripts,sa国际传媒 Aitken says. sa国际传媒淧roduction (department) decides on whatsa国际传媒檚 filmable and whatsa国际传媒檚 not, how many people can be hired and film locations.sa国际传媒

Each episode has its own production limits, which vary on how difficult the plot is to break (figure out the plotting) and the type and complexity of the world in which the episode takes place.

Production for the new season of sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteriessa国际传媒 starts in the third week of May, so members of sa国际传媒渢he hivesa国际传媒 are now breaking stories for eight different episodes.

Aitkensa国际传媒檚 road to the series began when a friend with an in, got him an introduction and a great opportunity, he says of life after university.

After graduating from SASS, Aitken attended University of Victoria, where he followed a curriculum that included sa国际传媒渆verything and nothing.sa国际传媒

sa国际传媒淚t was, he says, a good way to spend his youth. Following university, Aitken moved to Toronto in 1986 to try his hand at writing for television.

He and his friend with the in were successful in pitching a script for sa国际传媒淭he Campbellssa国际传媒, a Scottish-Canadian television drama series, produced by Scottish Television and CTV from 1986 to 1990.

sa国际传媒淚tsa国际传媒檚 good money. Isa国际传媒檝e developed a craft of writing for TV so I enjoy that,sa国际传媒 he says of his ensuing successful career. sa国际传媒淲hen you do anything long enough, theresa国际传媒檚 pleasure in exercising a skill that yousa国际传媒檝e learned. Itsa国际传媒檚 also one of the few jobs where you necessarily have to do something different every time.sa国际传媒

As Murdoch Mysteries enters its 11th season, 150 episodes have aired to an increasingly larger fan base.

sa国际传媒淚 would say every person likes something different about the show; most are fans who love the history, so we all dig into the history,sa国际传媒 says Aitken, who has been writing for sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteriessa国际传媒 since 2007 and written somewhere between 32 and 35 episodes.

In between writing for sa国际传媒淭he Campbellssa国际传媒 and securing a long tenure with sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteries,sa国际传媒 Aitken says he bounced around from show to show, something scriptwriters do when they are not involved in a longtime project.

The show has hosted a few celebrities over the years, including Stephen Harper.

sa国际传媒淗e has been a fan, at least while he was prime minister, and his daughter wanted him to be on the show,sa国际传媒 says Aitken. sa国际传媒淗e pulled some strings so, yes, we wrote a part for him in 2004 and he appeared on screen.sa国际传媒

Aitken says the network is always looking for marketing value and having celebrities appear on the show tends to bring in larger audiences.

sa国际传媒淚tsa国际传媒檚 always a good quid pro quo to have people we know make appearances,sa国际传媒 he says noting former sa国际传媒淒ragonsa国际传媒 Arlene Dickinson of sa国际传媒淒ragonsa国际传媒檚 Densa国际传媒 fame, appeared on the show in a 2012 episode called sa国际传媒淚nvention Conventionsa国际传媒 as a possible investor,

An international component comes from the inclusion of actors from England, whose appearance on the program help UKTV sell the program.

sa国际传媒淎mazingly, the show does very well; every year it has been on, more people come to watch the show than leave the show,sa国际传媒 he says, pointing out most television programs have short lives and that even the ones that qualify as hits donsa国际传媒檛 usually make it past nine seasons. sa国际传媒淕oing into the second season, we thought we had picked all the low-hanging fruit and were asking ourselves where would we get new ideas.sa国际传媒

By the third year, everyone was feeling more comfortable and Aitken says he cansa国际传媒檛 see any reason not to keep churning out great stories for the showsa国际传媒檚 fans.

The only scriptwriter to have been with the show since its debut is Aitken. While others have left to start their own shows, or in the case of one very talented writer and sa国际传媒渞eally good guysa国际传媒 died, the hive is a relatively stable place.

sa国际传媒淕enerally people get on a show like this, they tend to stay. Itsa国际传媒檚 a very pleasurable way to spend your day sa国际传媒 in the company of people who are funny, bright and interesting, in a job where you make people laugh and come up with ideas,sa国际传媒 he says. sa国际传媒淪ometimes I get weary of the show and the stress it places, because when the machine is humming, we have to meet the need of that machine and itsa国际传媒檚 a constant stress.sa国际传媒

In his presentation to the Word on the Lake Writerssa国际传媒 Festival, Aitkensa国际传媒檚 goal is to actually create a writerssa国际传媒 room in which participants create an episode.

sa国际传媒淚 have never tried to break a mystery in a couple of hours; I donsa国际传媒檛 know how that will work,sa国际传媒 he laughs.

Aitken also plans to explain why certain decisions are made in the production of sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteriessa国际传媒 sa国际传媒 the kinds of things that have to be accomplished in a mystery that wouldnsa国际传媒檛 be done in another show.

sa国际传媒淭here are demands that are not in other shows, there are certain constraints in the form,sa国际传媒 he says. sa国际传媒淲e take more liberties than others and I will talk about what the process is for breaking a mystery and how we do it in the sa国际传媒淢urdoch Mysteries.sa国际传媒

Word on the Lake Writerssa国际传媒 Festival runs May 19 to 21 at the Prestige Harbourfront Resort and Okanagan College.

Sessions will include both skill development workshops and open forums with authors based on questions and answers in an intimate setting.

A Friday night sa国际传媒渃af茅 litsa国际传媒 will feature presenters reading from their published works and a gala banquet is always a popular part of the Saturday night program.

For more information or to register, go to wordonthelakewritersfestival.com.





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