Author’s note:
I promise I’ll get round to finishing The Clothes Sale at some point, but first it’s time for another idea I’ve had in mind for a long time!
PROLOGUE
In the closing decade of the 20th century, David Campbell launched an ongoing popular soap opera series called Sweetridge. In recent years, just 10 years after it started, it had seen a drastic fall in popularity owing to the perceived "sameness" and "lack of originality" in its plots. This is the story of the writing team specially hired to reverse the trend, the way they did it, and the success the show and its cast had for many more years to come.
CHAPTER 1: THE PROPOSAL
"So, James and Sarah, what is your proposal to save our show for us?" asked David, the longtime showrunner of Sweetridge, clearly a little bored of having done all these failed interviews with nothing to show for them, but desperately trying not to let it appear on his face.
Sarah started, "We were thinking: What about a strip poker episode—?"
"Done before," David replied, more than a little frustrated.
Unperturbed, she continued, "—broadcast live to the nation—"
"Still waiting for the revolutionary idea." His frustration was only rising now. How would he explain all this wasted effort to the producers‽
"—done entirely for real, and with an extra-special uncensored unedited copy of the full recording as an Easter egg on the DVD release?"
Now David’s curiosity was piqued. "Now there’s something very interesting. Could we get away with it, though?"
James took over the explanation: "We've provisionally run the idea past the publishing house, and they say that, as long as we’re OK with an 18 rating—which I’m sure we would be—, then there’s absolutely nothing wrong about any of it."
Now David was determined to make the idea work. "Well, then, here’s the list of all our current cast members and their recent plotlines. Get to work with writing your brilliant idea, and I’ll get on with writing the necessary contracts and all the other prep to get the whole thing working without issue!"