One of the oddest projects in recent memory was the SCREAM TV show on MTV which was separate from the movies, but offered a new take on the visceral thrills and chills of the films. While boasting a great cast and a compelling mythology, the show suffered from executive interference with the MTV network constantly trying to change who would be revealed as the killer even after the creators had already changed it as asked.
The second season saw new showrunners come in after the original team got fed up with MTV. The second season ended on a series of cliffhangers... and the third season had yet another new creative team with a completely different cast and story that was unrelated to the first two seasons entirely, leaving that narrative incomplete and abandoned.
Recently, a YouTuber named Nathan Banks who makes the BEYOND THE MASK video essays about the SCREAM movies announced that he had been in contact with the original showrunners and Paramount and had been given permission to write a conclusion to the TV show in the form of a novel, LAKEWOOD: A SCREAM STORY, published first as individual chapters on his Patreon and then as a Kindle ebook on September 2, 2024. While I didn't subscribe to his Patreon, the ebook was only $8 USD, so I pre-ordered it on Amazon.
I was highly aware, though: there has been no official announcement from Paramount TV or Spyglass Media about a SCREAM novel. There has been no corroboration that this Nathan Banks has a publisher or any licensing arrangement with Paramount TV or Spyglass to release a novel featuring the SCREAM TV series characters. The SCREAM franchise logo on the movies and TV show is clearly not on the book cover.
Banks implied in his YouTube video that it was a licensed product in his claim that he'd been in contact with "Paramount" and the "showrunners" about his ebook, but studios generally don't license media tie-ins to be published on private Patreon pages before an ebook release. Studios don't generally approach individual authors, but instead license the property to a book publisher that chooses the author.
In addition, Banks tweeted photos of the print version of the book on his Twitter. He photographed the first two pages. https://x.com/BeyondTheMask8/status/181 … 96/photo/1
I took a look and... Banks does not know how to use commas and periods for dialogue. In English, the convention is that a sentence of dialogue with an attribution tag at the end uses a comma before the closing quotation mark. "I learned about this book," said Ib.
However, Banks alternates between no comma or using a period before the closing quotation mark. ("I learned about this book" said Ib.) ("I learned about this book." said Ib.) This tells me that Banks' grasp of basic English punctuation is confused and applied randomly or not at all. I also noticed that he arbitrarily switched from past to present tense and back.
There's a passage on the second page where Banks addresses the reader to say, "There was a lot Gina could tell you about Aubrey." This direct address to the reader breaks the fourth wall and while not incorrect, is generally avoided in professional prose because it reminds the reader that they are reading a story instead of keeping them immersed in the fiction.
The first two pages have the Audrey character getting a phone call from a girlfriend, Gina, and the dialogue from Gina is: "I'm about to sort out the pizza, can you send me your order before I pick it up?"
Aubrey replies, "Erm, sure. I'll text it through to you now."
This is stilted and unnatural. In American parlance, people "order" pizza, they do not "sort out" pizza. They do not ask people to "send me your order"; they ask what toppings the person wants ("What toppings?" or "What do you want on it?") Americans do not "text it through to you", they "text you". Furthermore, given that Gina and Aubrey are on the phone, there is no need for Aubrey to text anything; a list of toppings is easily conveyed verbally.
It's pretty obvious from these two pages: Nathan Banks is not an American. Banks is English, and he does not have a firm grasp of the American dialect. Nathan Banks is also not particularly skilled in the basics of narrative perspective, tense, human interaction in fictional terms, or how to use quotation marks, periods and commas.
This is just on the first two pages.
Banks is trying to imply that his SCREAM novel is a licensed media tie in; I'm reasonably sure studios and publishers prefer to have their tie-ins written by people with at least a basic aptitude for the written word in the English language. I'm also pretty sure that, for American properties, they would like their hired writers to be able to write Americans in a passably convincing fashion.
I think it's pretty absurd for someone to claim to be a licensed media tie-in novelist when they can't even convincingly render how someone orders a pizza.
Look, I'm far from perfect. My SLIDERS REBORN scripts featured Canadian spellings that Slider_Quinn21 had to strip out. I mistakenly thought you could buy road salt in San Francisco. There were typos. However, I do know how to write prose and dialogue in English and my errors were individual instances. In Banks' case, I've only looked at the first two pages and each page has had least three errors that, in totality, make the whole thing look slapdash to the point of being unpublishable for any professional publisher.
But yes, I pre-ordered the book. It's $8. I wonder if Amazon will ever actually charge me because this is unlicensed fan fiction being sold for money, it's not under a Kindle Worlds license, and I really do not see how that can be legal.