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7 February 2011
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Interviews | Rebecca Rand Kirshner
Reading and writing

Picture How did you become a Buffy writer?

Well, I have always written things and I graduated from college not knowing what I was going to do. I knew I wanted to either write or paint or act or be a fashion designer. [I thought] "Writing is what I get good grades at, so let�s start with that". Then [I thought] "I wish I could write and not be horribly poor, so maybe TV, where they pay salaries."

Also, as a writer, I thought something on TV has is a real structure to it, and something that I thought separated dilettantes from real writers was writing with a purpose or with a structure. I told myself it was like [the way] people used to write for newspapers - to learn how to write without being precious. Now I think people can use TV as that and it�s a really modern medium.

So, I came out to Hollywood and was a script reader. Only a few years ago I got my first job, on [the series] Freaks and Geeks. It was just starting out, so they were willing to take new writers. I loved it there and had a great time, but then it got cancelled. I was horribly depressed for about five minutes, thinking I would never work in a place as good as that. There are so few shows that I really like.

Well, one of them is Buffy, [and I was told] "Okay you can have a job at Buffy", so life is good again and depression is postponed a little while. I�m still a rookie writer in a way. I�m now being groomed for greatness.



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Buffy the Vampire Slayer in the UK on BBC 2. Buffy the Vampire Slayer copyright Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.


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