WHAT'S YOUR SIGN?
Aimee’s “normal” life is ruined when she finds out that she’s a Love Goddess. Now, Aimee must have sex with a rotating cast of oddballs or else risk ruining the balance of love in the universe forever.
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Isobel BradburyWriter
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Project Type:Screenplay, Television Script
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Genres:Comedy, Off-beat, Magical realism, Supernatural, Raunchy, Sex
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Number of Pages:36
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Country of Origin:United States
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Language:English
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First-time Screenwriter:No
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Student Project:No
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Vancouver International Women in Film FestivalVancouver, British Columbia
January 31, 2021
Semi-Finalist -
Portland Comedy Film FestivalThe Dalles, OR
June 13, 2021
Finalist, Best Comedy Teleplay -
Women's Comedy Film Festival ChicagoChicago
June 10, 2021
Finalist, Best Comedy TV/Sitcom Screenplay -
ISA Comedy Genre Busting Screenplay Competition
July 21, 2021
Semi-Finalist -
Emerging Screenwriters - Genre Screenplay Competition
July 20, 2021
Semi-Finalist -
PAGE International Screenwriting Awards Competition
August 15, 2021
Semi-Finalist -
Austin Film FestivalAustin, TX
October 23, 2021
Semi-Finalist
Growing up the daughter of an artist and a software engineer, Isobel Bradbury developed her taste for contradiction at an early age. She wore combat boots to ballet class, proclaimed herself a skeptic of the supernatural while tattoo-ing a ghost on her ankle, and managed to be diagnosed with both chronic insomnia and narcolepsy at the same time (she’s particularly proud of this one). After transplanting her high-femme-spooky-Pacific-Northwest aesthetic to Los Angeles in 2016 to join the University of Southern California’s Writing for Screen and Television program, Isobel’s writing has continued to reflect her rebellious spirit. Her protagonists journey to discover their particular flavor of weird while re-defining family, finding unexpected romance, and learning to give the finger to fear. Like a sun burst on a rainy Seattle day, Isobel exposes the humor in dark situations, and the love in the midst of despair (and don’t worry, she still wears her combat boots in inappropriate situations).
Isobel writes stories about weirdos who want to be normal, normies who want to get weird, and what happens when you lock both these people in a room and throw away the key.