
Design Better Paul Dichter: Stranger Things writer on why the writers’ room isn’t so different from the design studio
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Apr 22, 2026 Paul Dichter, head writer and co-executive producer on Stranger Things, shares behind-the-scenes life in a writers' room. He talks about daily collaboration, using whiteboards and maps to solve visual storytelling, and the discipline of subtle 80s nostalgia. He also explores team roles, creative conflict, and how structure maps onto design-like processes.
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Make Every Scene Have An Engine
- Every scene needs an engine and meaningful change must register at every level of story.
- The writers focused on character desires and change rather than nostalgia or props, ensuring stakes and shifts are felt.
From Waiting Tables To Stranger Things Writer
- Paul Dichter moved from waiting tables in LA to the Stranger Things writers' room after being hired as a writers' assistant and later promoted to staff writer and episode co-writer.
- He read an early Duffer script as a friend, sent them a script, and was offered assistant work the Monday after working the restaurant the Friday before.
TV Writing Is Mostly Collaborative Room Work
- 95% of TV writing is collaborative discussion at the table, not lone typing at a desk.
- For Stranger Things that meant six people around whiteboards and debates shaping season, episode, and scene arcs over months.
