“I drive for hours on the freeway. I’m not a germaphobe, but I take six showers a day to get a burst of energy. Especially if things are not going well, I get in the shower and get wet, and get into different clothes and try again. The shower and the car are the two big thinking places for me.” – Aaron Sorkin, writer of The Social Network, creator of The West Wing and other films and television shows.
Well said, Aaron. A little curious, yes, but well said.
This excerpt was taken from an interview in W magazine, and he was talking about the importance of first scenes, particularly his process for creating the first scene in The Social Network, for which he won the Golden Globe for best original screenplay on Sunday.
First scenes are crucial. If you’re a business writer, you probably call them opening paragraphs, but that doesn’t change their importance. They are the entryway to your writing and deserve the all time and attention you can give them.
But here’s the thing. You don’t have to write them first. In fact, you shouldn’t write them first. Do the best opening you can, and keep writing. Then go back to the opening and see if it has the power and grab it needs, and if it accurately sets up everything that follows. If it doesn’t, you have two options:
- Rewrite the opening.
- Read a couple of paragraphs in and see if your opening is actually lurking down there. That is a lesson I learned way back in college from the late Dr. Paul Snider and I still use it practically every day. He’d routinely lop off the opening paragraphs of our news stories, draw an arrow to the middle and tell us “This is where your story starts.”
Driving or showering to garner good ideas at this point is entirely up to you.

By the way, if you’re interested in screenwriting, you can download the screenplay of The Social Network from the movie’s site. For free. Thanks, Aaron.
Highway photo © Olaru Radian-Alexandru / PhotoXpress
Shower head photo © fotografiche.eu / PhotoXpress
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