Do you realize how many Stephen King stories have been adapted into movies, TV mini-series, and TV series? IMDB.com lists 111 writing credits. That list includes such noteworthy movies as Carrie (1976), The Shining (1980), Stand by Me (1986), Misery (1990), The Shawshank Redemption (1994), and The Green Mile (1999).
So when I saw this Entertainment Weekly article — “Stephen King’s Screen Addiction” — I just had to check it out. Here in King’s own words, he talks about what he watches on all the screens in his life:
Can we talk — calmly, and without raising our voices — about screen addiction? I put it that way because no one is quicker to fall into a defensive crouch than a junkie. This is something I know from personal experience. Accusation breeds denial. I’m a social user, the addict says. Besides, I can quit anytime I want.But can you? Can I, for that matter?
I thought of this when I saw an article from UPI.com (yes, I read it on my computer) that claimed the average American adult spends 8.5 hours a day staring at various screens. The study was commissioned by the Nielsen Company. My initial reaction was classic addict-think: They can’t be talking about me; I don’t spend anywhere near that much time gaping at screens. At first, it seemed a reasonable conclusion. I don’t Twitter, I’m not on Facebook (unless someone else put me there), I’ve never shopped on Craigslist, and I’ve made exactly one eBay purchase (someone else did it for me, because I have no grasp of the protocol). I own a cell phone but don’t use it — I keep it in the car in case I break down in East Overshoe and need a tow. I think it takes pictures, but I have no idea how that function works, and I’ve never texted anyone in my life.
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So when I started to add up my daily screen time, I did so with confidence, and — Uncle Stevie admits it — a sense of superiority. That feeling soon melted away. For me, it breaks down like this: 3.5 hours a day writing in front of my desktop Mac; one hour a day writing and answering e-mails; one hour a day visiting my favorite websites (Drudge, Huffington Post, Daily Beast, Kos, EW, The Filthy Critic, The Smoking Gun, etc.); two hours a day watching TV (mostly stuff I’ve downloaded from iTunes or gawped at on Hulu). I’m below the Nielsen average, but still — seven and a half hours per day of computer-related activity? That’s a lot of voyeurism. Put another way, I’m spending almost half of each day’s consciousness right where I am now — with my face bathed in electro-light. It’s hard not to think of George Orwell’s Big Brother telescreens when you realize a thing like that.
First comment: King reads DailyKos! My favorite political website! Well, at least I’ve got something to talk with King about if we ever bump into each other at a Red Sox game or local cemetery.
Second comment: Honestly, I’m in front of a screen twice as much of the day as King. My ‘real’ job at Distillery Pictures, then at night writing, teaching, blogging, emailing, TV shows, movies…
How about you? Do you spend more or less time on screens than Stephen King?
Or me?
And if you haven’t read Stephen King’s book “On Writing”, it’s worth it. Here are a few of his bits of wisdom from the book:
Get the first draft done quickly…
I believe the first draft of a book — even a long one — should take no more than three months…Any longer and — for me, at least — the story begins to take on an odd foreign feel, like a dispatch from the Romanian Department of Public Affairs, or something broadcast on high-band shortwave duiring a period of severe sunspot activity.
On rewriting…
Write with the door closed, rewrite with the door open. Your stuff starts out being just for you, in other words, but then it goes out. Once you know what the story is and get it right — as right as you can, anyway — it belongs to anyone who wants to read it. Or criticize it.
What scares the master of fear…
The scariest moment is always just before you start.
Next time you’re facing FADE IN and sucking for air in your clenched chest, remember that even Stephen King gets scared.


I spend a lot of time in front of the screen, but at least I read a lot of good political blogs and then I read creative blogs. I like to spend half an hour reading a news website like BBC or the Guardian. But BLOGS are pretty much the only thing worth reading these days online.
I'm not wasting my time on Facebook or myspace. I only spend at least 10 minutes on both websites, checking e-mails, but that's it.
I'm so embarrassed. I'm not even going to tally my face-to-screen time for fear of dropping to my knees and weeping uncontrollably.
I, um, think I'm going out for a walk. Back later.
I'm trying to add it up, but I likely spend ten hours a day in front of my computer screen, easily.
I have my laptap close even when I'm watching TV.
Perhaps it's different for writers, I don't know.
I've read ON WRITING close to fifty times, and I reread it at least once a year … one of the best books are writing stories there is.
I'm going to follow Jeff's lead and not attempt a tally. Too much is my best guess. I like to think my screen time is of a higher quality than folks I know who go into withdrawal if they miss an episode of Dancing with the Stars, but I know I don't spend as much time working as I should.
About 12 hours a day for me on a workday — I work at DirecTV Sports, and all I do is read news, blogs and scripts all day while watching games before I go home and write for a couple of hours.
At least, that's what the classic pattern is — I just moved, and the process has slowed down a bit. I completely understand King's "foreign" comment.
The average is at last 12-15, or almost every single waking hour. If I am not asleep, I am in front of my computer, or I am at work, where I am standing in front of a wall of approximately 30 flat-screen TVs trying to sell someone on dynamic contrast ratio — 8 hours of that today. I got no writing done. I blame that one the neurotic female customer who needed to ask me every question I didn't know the answer to about a laptop were had on sale — 45 minutes…it was actually physically painful, and so mentally taxing that the rest of my day was spent in a stupor. She now will have the unfortunate gift of becoming immortalized as an all-too-real character in a screenplay I'm kind of maybe writing. So really, the moral to this story is not to work at Walmart. Stick to standing/sitting in front of your own computer screen, instead of someone else's. It'll probably make your feet hurt less, and you might just get something done.
It is quite depressing. 12 hours a day on a weekday. 8 hours a day monday thru friday at work. then 4 hours a night at least watching TV or writing…wow…that isn't even considering my iPhone…time to seek help…
Not even going to tally.. I sit in front of a computer at work all day, then I go home and do the same thing. I sadly get withdrawals when I'm away. Especially long weekends out of town, upon returning I will have a billion movies and shows I need to catch up on. I'm sure if i keep it up i'll need glasses in 5 years.