Long-form, per-audience.
Each guide takes one kind of reader — a writer, a producer, a studio archivist, a developer building on top of the schema — and walks through how ScreenJSON fits the work they actually do.
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For screenwriters
ScreenJSON for Screenwriters
Why a working writer should care about treating their screenplay as structured data — and what that actually changes about the day-to-day of writing.
8 min read
Read guide
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For producers & line producers
ScreenJSON for Producers
How to use structured screenplay data to shorten breakdown time, run faster script reports, and replace spreadsheet archaeology with queries.
9 min read
Read guide
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For studios & archives
ScreenJSON for Studios & Archives
How to turn a back catalogue of FDX, FadeIn, and PDF screenplays into something a studio-scale content organisation can actually search, license, and exploit.
10 min read
Read guide
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For developers & platform teams
ScreenJSON for Developers
The developer's view of ScreenJSON. Schema shape, UUID discipline, language maps, where to hook in, and how the four tools compose into a pipeline.
11 min read
Read guide
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For AI & data teams
ScreenJSON for AI & Data Teams
Structured, retrieval-ready screenplay data. Pre-computed embeddings, passages, and summaries alongside the canonical document — without mutating it.
10 min read
Read guide
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For localisation teams
ScreenJSON for Localisation Teams
One file, every language. How ScreenJSON turns translation from a parallel-files problem into a first-class property of the document.
8 min read
Read guide
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For educators
ScreenJSON for Educators
A classroom-friendly way to teach screenplay structure, analyse canonical scripts, and run writing workshops on top of a format that students can actually inspect.
7 min read
Read guide
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For archivists & librarians
ScreenJSON for Archivists
Long-term preservation of screenplays as structured, open-schema documents. Migration strategies, metadata, and the case against accepting another decade of orphan FDX files.
8 min read
Read guide