The nitty-gritty of debating what can be done with the tunes to make them work is fairly intense. But there are more relaxed moments, too, like when one of the contestants reveals that he was the lead singer for a Christian rock band, leading Tedder to wax nostalgic about the time he spent as a student at Oral Roberts University. Well, maybe you do, Shane. When the chorus hits, I want that to be the first time I hear that note. Needless to say, most of that nitty-gritty songwriting talk will land on the cutting room floor by the time this episode airs in June. But will it just be fellow songwriters watching?
Shane Lynch, bottom centre, with Boyzone. Shane, now 36, had struggled with reading and writing since childhood. He had managed to keep his condition hidden from all but a few close relatives and friends. At school in Dublin he was written off as lazy but as he grew up he began to suspect that there was a deeper reason for his problem. In a television documentary on Channel 5 on Monday he will be seen facing up to his inability to cope with words and finally being diagnosed with dyslexia.
When Shane Black talks about action, he makes explosion noises, like an excitable kid describing an episode of Thunderbirds. An explosion of blood! Glass shattering! Composed and thoughtful when he talks about the business side of filmmaking, Black becomes animated and passionate when talk turns to screenwriting, or the composition of action scenes, and it's Black's passion for writing and action - not to mention his trademark wit - that has made him one of the biggest names in Hollywood.
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