Archive for the ‘Freelancing’ Category

Why Writers Need to Strike

November 15, 2007

Want to live the opulent life of a paid writer? Unless you also self-publish you are subject to the whims and contracts dictated by the publisher–and that might mean you don’t make much green.

RJLight–a writer who looks really unhappy in this picture–tells us why in a new post titled: Jobs for Writers. It’s a funny, thoughtful piece you should read.

Writing is an up/down business with times of plenty and times of want. A good writer who runs his/her business well (you did send a new query today, right?) can make a good income. But most writers do not.

Case in point: Hollywood writers (who just happen to be on strike.)

This Newsweek article points out the problem well:

The residual has been established practice since 1960, when the Writers Guild first went on strike for it. Before that no one was given residuals. The writers of the imperishably entertaining “I Love Lucy,” a show that has run without stop, making hundreds of millions of dollars for its owners, have never received royalties for that work. Nor have the writers of that other masterpiece of ’50s home life, “The Honeymooners.” The networks argued then that there was no precedent for it, that the medium was too new. To the studios the idea of equitable payment for writers always seems new.

But peace was made, after the sacrifices of the dedicated people in that strike, and a formula was set that worked for a long time. When video came into being, a new accommodation was made, allowing a small residual for tapes and then DVDs. I am not being hyperbolic when I say “small.” For a DVD sold for $19.99, we are paid 4 cents. To put that in perspective, that means that to pay for one tank of gas, a writer needs to sell 1,500 DVDs. To put it another way, it’s a penny less than if we returned an empty can of Coke.

How to Write Gooder

October 15, 2007

Non-Fiction Book Ideas on Marriage/Sex

September 28, 2007

I am in the process of starting a new commercial site on marriage and I have found in the past the best way to write a book is to outline a book with a killer premise then outline each chapter and sub-chapter, then make each sub-chapter an article (or blog post.)

So I am again asking you, my blog friends, to help me choose the most compelling book themes from the ones below. In your comments list the numbers of the top 2 title choices you like as well as any ideas to improve them.

Thanks in advance:

  1. Charisma - How to be the person everyone wants to know (By the way, I know this doesn’t have lots to do with marriage, but it’s a book I’ve been pondering for some time…)
  2. Mutual Fulfillment: How to Have the Marriage of Your Dreams for Life
  3. Full Tilt Marriage: How to Have the Marriage of Your Dreams for Life
  4. Your Next Honeymoon: How to Have the Most Romantic, Sexually Fulfilling Vacation of Your Life on Any Budget
  5. Sexual Intimacy: How to Have Mutually Fulfilling Sex for the Rest of Your Lives
  6. Hot Marriage: How to Have Mutually Fulfilling, Explosive Sex for the Rest of Your Lives
  7. Peaceful Intimacy: How to Stop Arguing and Start Enjoying Your Marriage
  8. Partners: How to Stop Arguing and Start Enjoying Your Marriage Partnership
  9. Finding Peace: Understanding and Living with the Angry Spouse

Again, thanks in advance for your input.

Online Mind Mapping Tool (…and it’s free)

September 15, 2007

I use mind maps all the time. In fact in my den I have a wall with no pictures, no decorations, just a plain wall I use to put up giant poster sized Post-Its and draw out my life. Sometimes one mind map will be up there for months.

Right now there are three: One helping me figure out how the narrator in Resurrection dies, one charting out ideas for the next stage of my career and one with ideas on a marriage site. Thinking creatively is my most important task, and mind mapping helps me to think creatively.

I had heard there were mind mapping programs you could use on your PC, but I always assumed they would be too limiting–the size of the screen is small and you can’t “draw” on it.

Because I have made a commitment to the “paperless office” I decided yesterday to see if I could find an online program that would allow me to create workable mind maps.

Mindomo is what I found. After one day I can tell you it is much better than using paper and markers.

Why Mindomo Beat My Paper Method

The interface is pretty intuitive. I didn’t have to read any instructions to get started. Your mileage may vary, but I think an average computer user should be able to figure out the basics pretty much as easily as the basics of a word processor.

One advantage of Mindomo over paper was the ease at which I could make sweeping or individual changes. For example: I realized in the mind map I made yesterday that the grouping of the different branches didn’t make logical sense. On a hand drawn mind map I couldn’t move the branches. With Mindomo I just clicked and dragged the branches around until I got them where I wanted them.

Another advantage is the ability to re-align the arrangements of branches. In my case there were a couple sub-branches (with a dozen or so individual elements each) that were better related to a “new” branch rather than the one they were originally associated with.

By clicking and dragging on the lead topic for a branch, I could move the entire topic.

I could also access and share my mind maps online. When I travel I used to actually take my current (and key past) mind maps with me to put up in my hotel room. With Mindomo I could simply log in and view any of my previously created maps.

One key feature I liked was the ability to easily change the overall appearance of the map. After a while I got sick of the format I had originally chosen. No problem, I just clicked a button and the entire look changed. The same goes for colors–select the area you want to color and click a button.

Pictures are easy to add as well. When I do manual mind maps, my doodles take a good deal of time and don’t always come out as planned. With Mindomo you can insert pictures from the web or from their stock clip-art. That’s pretty cool and can make your map really stir the creative juices.

I wondered about what options I had for downloading the map or printing. The map can be downloaded in a variety of formats. I downloaded mine as a jpg so I could easily view it using a simple program like Paint Shop Pro or even Paint. I could also print the map from my computer. The one I created yesterday would print out as 12 pages, and could be taped together to make up a paper mind map. (Think about it like a Rasterbator print out.)

Overall the experience using Mindomo was much better than using paper and much better than I had expected. I have this feeling I won’t be buying too many super sized Post-It pads in the future.

Here is a simple, sample mind-map I made to give you a simple idea:

mindomoexport.jpg

Creativity with Effort

September 2, 2007

Having no creativity has taught me something important. I first heard this idea as an illustration at a talk by some speaker I no longer remember.

“How much money do you think David Brenner gets paid to feel funny in Vegas?” asked the speaker.

The audience shouted out several figures.

“Zero,” replied the speaker, “Brenner doesn’t get paid anything to feel funny–he gets paid to be funny.”

Yesterday I wrote about 8 or so posts for Whore Church. Some of them are pretty good. Funny. Sarcastic.

But I didn’t feel it, I just did it. I pretended to be a funny, sarcastic, motivated, creative writer.

And it worked.

Writers: Do You Get Told This?

May 20, 2007

‘Been YouTubin’ and thought the freelancers out there might get a kick out of this.

Have you ever been told to get a real job?