The bain of every creatives life... Payment. It seems to be pretty normal for most artists; and I use that term widely meaning- musicians, painters, actors, make up artists, dancers, directors, models, stylists, art directors, photographers, graphic designers (the list goes on), that working for free to gain experience or contacts has become a complete piss take. A good friend of mine has had enough! She has been working for free for years and has more than enough experience to be able to not give a toss if she loses a contact. And sure when you are starting out the more experiences the better but there needs to come a point when we start demanding payment or at least payment in favours or at least more direct opportunities. And it's not even the arts that are suffering. Thousands of people who are out of work and on the dole through no fault of there own are being forced to 'internship' at places as corporate as Superdrug. I.e working for free or lose your payments. Bad times.
Endless amounts of students are spending summers interning at the lose promise that it may turn into a position. Yeah sure if you lucky enough to be given that one position out of hundreds of people, then great. The thing is I constantly ask people to work for free on projects, however I'm not getting paid, and I always try and repay the favour. The minute I start getting paid, so will anyone I ask to work with me. It's fair and it's what I would expect from other people. So come on everyone, lets share those opportunities and contacts and start demanding what we deserve. Otherwise in the end all we are doing is under valuing our own hard work.
Saturday, 28 September 2013
Saturday, 7 September 2013
Breaking Bad Binging Habits
As Breaking
Bad hurtles towards its conclusion, I – like many others – have started
doing something I've ever done before: I'm watching the show weekly. A relative
latecomer to the show, I watched the first four seasons back to back last year,
and held off watching the first half of season 5 until I could do the same with
that. But with new episodes appearing weekly on Netflix the temptation to get
stuck in to the final episodes straight away became overwhelming, so now I am
enduring an agonising wait each week for the next episode. You know what? I'm
really enjoying it.
TV
binging for me became a habit when I started watching 24. Waiting a week
for the next episode of 24 was unbearable, and I only lasted 6 episodes
before I snapped and bought the box set. Since then binging on shows has become
my standard mode of consumption; blasting through entire seasons in a week has
become the norm.
So
many of the great shows at the moment are American, and only available on Sky
or other channels, that it has become rare for me to actually watch anything on
television. Therefore, when I do watch them, I usually have the whole series
available to me from the outset. When you can see what happens next straight
away, it takes great discipline to wait. On Netflix you don't even have to select
the next episode – it starts playing automatically, which is the ultimate
temptation.
Now I
have to wait a whole week for the next episode of Breaking Bad, and,
yes, at times it has been excruciating – but it's also been glorious. Each
cliffhanger has real impact, and the excitement and anticipation I feel when
Monday evening rolls around and I know I can enjoy the next instalment is
something that I'd actually forgotten TV can do.
I
also think that watching weekly episodes makes them more memorable. I spent
most of the third season of Game of Thrones desperately trying to
remember what had happened in season 2, which I had watched a year ago in the
space of a few days. When a storyline is resolved within three hours rather
than three weeks your brain doesn't commit it to memory in the same way. The
entertainment it provides becomes fleeting, with no chance to savour the
experience. Seeing as almost nothing memorable happens in season 3 of Game
Of Thrones, I doubt I'll be able to understand season 4 at all next year.
The
way we watch television has changed. As I said; actually watching a programme
weekly is an option that's rarely available to me any more. But I think by
blitzing through entire seasons of television we may be missing out on a lot. The
structure of weekly programming emerged for a reason, and we would be foolhardy
to abandon that. Though I doubt I'll watch another major drama weekly for a
while, I'm definitely going to try and watch my boxsets more slowly from now
on. After all, everyone knows binging is bad for you.
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