Tuesday, June 26, 2007

I Know It's Not Helping To Stop The Genocide In Africa But...

This is important too, just in a different way. Today, Internet broadcasters are observing a day of silence in protest to a royalty rate hike so obscene, it could only be called price gouging. The music industry is singling out online radio stations and charging them tons more than they charge satellite radio in royalty rates. Payments are due July 15 unless the Internet Radio Equality Act passes.

Find out what is going on and how you can help. I wrote an article all about this ordeal.

Monday, June 25, 2007

The possible internship turns up again

Being a freelancer, the phone either rings off the hook or never rings. Same with e-mail, snail mail, etc. I was trying to get an internship at a publication and figured after not hearing from the editor that this was dead in the water. I went through the same thing not too long ago with a freelance writing gig for a magazine where I just assumed they weren't interested in me. But in both these cases, out of the blue, I get an e-mail out of nowhere. Yes! They are interested!

That has been one hard thing to come to terms with as a freelancer. You hear nothing about queries you send or gigs you apply for to the point where enough time passes that you forget all about it. Then you get contacted out of the blue to fill a publication's need immediately. So it's really a feast or famine industry.

That is also the reason why freelancers have to hustle! Work can trickle in or come down like an avalanche. Most of the time, it's a trickle. So you always have to be networking, applying for gigs, and sending out queries. But what if all those feelers you put out for work come back all at once and you're loaded down with a mountain of deadlines suddenly?

I've yet to see that happen.

So happy hustling! Never be afraid to send out a pitch, apply for extra gigs, or pester an editor (within reason). If you haven't heard back from someone, that person just may be completely involved with putting together the latest magazine issue and has no time to breathe. Being a freelancer is a balancing act.

Reasons Why An Internship Is Good For Me At This Point:

1. Networking. You never know who that editor handing out the internship knows. Do well under that editor and maybe he/she will give you a glowing recommendation down the road when you need it.

2. Learning. Could I stand to learn more about publishing, writing, editing, etc? Absolutely. Never stop learning. I want to see how different people run their publications. I want my writing to grow. This doesn't happen working by myself in my office without anyone to bounce ideas off.

3. I need more current experience on my resume. I haven't interned in publishing in years. I interned for RAZOR magazine when it was still around. I also interned for SWEAT magazine way back when I first started taking classes again. My articles there were some of the first articles I wrote to ever be published. Times have definitely changed since then! I've written volumes of writing since then for a variety of different outlets. But I still want to do more. That's why I wake up every day to be a writer.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Podcast #12 is up at MelodyTrip.com

I finished and posted podcast #12 last night. I cover Glastonbury and Bonnaroo. No other music festivals matter, right? I mentioned a little bit of news but most of it is related to Glastonbury and Bonnaroo. I also play podasfe music from Ingrid Michaelson.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

New Freelance Adventures Await

The only person you can depend on is yourself. This is why I am a freelancer. My success or failure depends on me alone. How I work, how much I hustle, the work I get, the clients I land, the work I put out -- it all depends on me.

Now I realize my freelance income is finally going to pay my bills. And it's just as well, as I didn't get a full-time job at the station I applied for. Maybe I don't need a full-time job working for someone else. I can run my own gravy train and I am. I don't think I make enough not to have a steady part-time job somewhere still so I'm going to seek out a part-time job. Oh, and working at home alone can be very lonely! So anything that brings me out for social interaction would be great.

Working part-time allows me the freedom to still pursue my freelance writing. So that's my advice to anyone looking to embark on a freelance career of any sort; don't quit your day job just yet. Go out and get a part-time job doing anything that will support you as you try to build a business doing what you love.

I'm looking to pursue two beats right now, music journalism and yoga/fitness/health/wellness journalism. So I'm going to work towards becoming an "expert" in those fields right now. Obviously I'm no 'expert' but the more experience I get covering those subjects as a journalist, the better off I am.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Podcast #11 on NXNE, Chicago Blues

I do the weekly podcast for Melodytrip.com. This week, I talk to my colleague Danny Brown, the indie music writer at Suite101.com. He attended the North By Northeast (NXNE) fest in Toronto. I also talk to our Melodytrip correspondent, Leah Mueller, about Chicago Blues Fest.

Here is the link to podcast #11.

Here's another link, to my Podjunkie site. I will talk about our MelodyTrip podcasts there as well as whatever podcasts cross my path that I like.

The Paying Gig Is Going Away

Since my work writing for the Peak Blog is not in the budget, it's going to cease being a paid gig after Friday. I have envisioned so many things content-wise for the Peak blog, or the website in general. And I'm thinking like a jock, or a music journalist, or just a plain old creative. But sales is always trying to hijack the website -- and I don't blame them one bit. There's a ton of money to be made on the 'net. I wish I had my own sales team for the sites I'm about to launch!

The thing is, old media wants to go new media so badly, but it's hard to merge the two. While I have every skill possible (as a content creator) to make the Peak website a cool new media destination for the Peak audience, it's trying to convince the very corporate, old-media top brass of what needs to be done that becomes the obstacle.

Now my creative battle rages on, but in a soon-to-be unpaid capacity. Meanwhile, we have monetized Steve's videos for the site. So I do have hope. Watch his latest work:

Saturday, June 9, 2007

Maybe an internship?

My goal has long been to establish working relationships with local publications and it's hard to break in. So I'm hoping to land an internship where I can work under someone very good. My writing definitely needs to grow. My pitching skills especially need work because I just feel like I'm hitting a wall lately with pitches. I know every freelance writer goes through that spell. It's a slump I have to bust!

So here's the latest:

Here are my latest posts on the Peak blog.

Then on our main site, I'm in the Tom Car video. I'm in the camo shorts and hat tearin' it up in the desert in the four-door car. Go here and then watch Peak TV to see it.

Did a few updates today on Suite101.com. I'm the pop music feature writer there. I added a discussion on Richie Sambora going to rehab and another on Joe covering Carrie Underwood. I also blog about fellow Suite101 writer Danny Brown going to NXNE all weekend. Be sure to check out the article I posted today about Kelly Rowland's new album. I have a feeling this one is going to be good!

We've also posted our tenth podcast at MelodyTrip.com. Woo-hoo! This one covers mostly music news with some podsafe music from Machete Avenue.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Activities This Week

I've sent out one (as yet) unanswered query and pondered starting a strange business of my own. It's been a real holiday hangover week. To what I'm sure will someday be thunderous applause, (ha ha) I have just started a new blog href="http://bonotracker.blogspot.com/">tracking every movement of Bono. It's sort of an obsession/hobby. Most of my obsession/hobbies are writing-related, hence the many blogs I have going. I hope they entertain you as much as they do me! This is what I do on weeks like this that I just don't feel like I'm getting any answers back on queries, freelance gigs I applied for, or what have you.