
You’ve probably noticed the rise of vertical storytelling — those short, addictive, scroll-stopping videos made for your phone. From TikTok and Instagram Reels to YouTube Shorts and ReelShort, the entertainment world is turning its cameras upright.
Producers are now searching for writers who understand how to craft these compact, emotionally charged stories — a new frontier where the smallest screen can reach the biggest audience.
What Is a Vertical?
A vertical is a micro-drama — a bite-sized series designed for scrolling, bingeing, and tapping “next.” Episodes are just 2–3 minutes long, but add up to a complete 30, 45, or even 90-minute story.
Format: 9:16 screen (like TikTok or Reels)
Episodes: 2–3 minutes each, built on intrigue and cliffhangers
Season: 20 to 100+ episodes
Style: Hook-driven, character-focused, and intimate
Example:
Imagine a rom-com. Episode 1 opens with a woman running late, diving into an elevator. Inside, a man holds her missing wallet. Their eyes meet—ding—the doors open, and he’s gone. You’re already swiping for Episode 2.
Why Producers Want Verticals
Vertical platforms like ReelShort and DramaBox have exploded, earning millions of views and attracting Hollywood investment.
They work because:
- Audiences crave fast entertainment: scroll, tap, binge.
- Stories fit real life: two minutes at a time.
- Cliffhangers drive sales: early episodes hook viewers before paywalls.
- Mini-arcs build bingeability: every episode delivers its own satisfaction and suspense.
How to Write a Vertical
1. Start Hot
No exposition. Drop straight into conflict.
Example: Instead of “It was a sunny day,” try: “You have ten minutes before everything blows up.”
2. One Beat per Episode
Each short episode needs a single emotional turn or surprise.
Example: She’s about to say yes to the proposal—then a text flashes: “Don’t trust him.”
3. Keep It Close
Vertical loves intimacy. Faces, hands, whispers.
Example: A whole thriller unfolding in a hallway, every knock changing the story.
4. End on a Button
Every scene must end on a cliffhanger or emotional jolt.
Revelation: “The baby isn’t yours.”
Reversal: The ally pulls a gun.
Deadline: Timer hits zero.
5. Build a Simple Engine
One clear goal fuels 20–100 episodes:
- A want (get the guy, win the case)
- Constant obstacles
- A ticking clock
- An open question
Example: A woman hunts her sister’s killer. Every clue brings her closer — and deeper into danger.
🔥 Genres Producers Want Right Now
| Genre | Why It Works | Quick Example |
|---|---|---|
| Drama | Emotional, intimate stakes | A woman learns her fiancé is secretly engaged to her sister. |
| Rom-Com | Fast chemistry and humor | Two neighbors keep swiping past each other on dating apps. |
| Thriller / Crime | High stakes, constant reveals | A teen gets anonymous texts about a hidden crime. |
| Horror | Claustrophobic tension | Every night at 3:07 a.m., the same door creaks open. |
| Fantasy / Supernatural | Visual magic, small scale | A man can stop time for 60 seconds — and someone else knows. |
| Young Adult | Social dynamics and drama | Teens fake relationships for clout until real feelings emerge. |
Quick Checklist Before You Write
- Story runs 30–90 minutes in 2–3 minute chapters
- Every episode ends with a cliffhanger
- Each mini-arc is self-contained yet builds forward
- Keep framing tight (faces, hands, emotional beats)
- Premise is simple, repeatable, and fueled by desire
Final Word
Verticals reward clarity, speed, and bold choices. They’re stories that move like music — short, emotional, and built to loop.
If you can hook fast, burn hot, and end on a gasp, producers are ready for you.
The next big show might not hit Netflix… it might hit your For You Page.