Don't [write, film/edit ... ] for free

CClub wrote on 5/29/2011, 7:45 AM
Interesting article on the ESPN website by a regular writer, Rick Reilly. It relates to most fields, videography in particular. I know that some editors here have done a significant amount of work and then have it accessible for free downloads. If you substitute "videography" for writing in his article below, it works:

Rick Reilly:
... If there's one thing new journalism graduates can to do help themselves it's to stop writing for free. It only cuts the bottom out of the market and cheapens the craft.

And now, a word from ... Samuel Johnson: "No man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for money."

A columnist in the L.A. Times agreed with me. Plenty of writers, paid and unpaid, didn't. But it's stirred up a small hornet's nest among those who blog for free and make millions for sites like The Huffington Post (which just sold for $315 million to AOL).

A recent poll by the Media Industries Project at UC-Santa Barbara found that 69 percent of HP's unpaid bloggers think they should be paid to write, and that 96 percent percent of them think their stuff is as good as or better than the work of the paid staffers.

The truth is, if you're writing your own blog for free just to get practice and a little exposure, that's fine. If you're in college and you're taking an unpaid internship at a website or newspaper, that's fine, as long as you're getting college credit.

But if you're writing constantly for a website or magazine that is selling ads and making money and you're getting nothing? You're a fool. Demand to be paid. If you can't find anybody willing to pay you to write, maybe it's time to try something else.

Comments

TheHappyFriar wrote on 5/29/2011, 12:22 PM
The world has to many writers with bad grammar that get paid: I'd rather read the free ones who don't complain they don't get paid enough for making my 5th graders papers look like advanced literary pieces.

I'd say ESPN has a problem that they're not understanding how to tackle (no pun intended): how to deal with a lack of passion for the work they do. People do something for free because of their passion. They'll get paid when someone can use that passion and wants to direct it. Passionless direction is what gets paid now a days.

I'd say fire (not lay off) all the staff writers & hire the ones who are wiring for free. They'd be more grateful for the work.

EDIT: you could replace "writer" with "videographer" if you wanted.
ushere wrote on 5/30/2011, 12:06 AM
brilliant - thanks nick - another one to print out and put on the students notice board!
Grazie wrote on 5/30/2011, 12:13 AM
Excellent Nick!

Grazie

crocdoc wrote on 5/30/2011, 1:24 AM
That's brilliant.
VidMus wrote on 5/30/2011, 6:38 AM
That picture does not take into acount that I work for the Church I go to for free as a way of paying my tithing and for the needed ministry.

There are too many assumptions in that poor work flow!
CClub wrote on 5/30/2011, 2:54 PM
Actually, that picture does have a slot for your work if you read it closely.

Although for most churches I attended [past tense], if they knew your plan was to do the video work in lieu of tithing, my experience is that they'd request the tithe first and then also the video work.