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Birgitte Rasine's avatar

First-person industrial complex. How utterly brilliant. And how profoundly telling, of us, of our careers, our writerly dreams and the psychological state that comes with it all (having a "complex").

I used to freelance a lot as well. For The Hollywood Reporter and Daily Variety, mainly, but this was for print. In the mid 1990's. So now I can't even find my name in their online archives—all I have is the print articles, scanned of course. Living in the SF Bay Area, you physically cannot survive on a freelance income. You need to figure out a different path. For me, it's running my own business, and being a highly versatile writer and strategist. But what I love about Substack is that no one tells me what I can or cannot write. This is my sandbox, and I love to play in it :)

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Haili Blassingame's avatar

I've been thinking about this a lot! Specifically the role editors, magazines, and other gatekeepers play in building writing careers. The landscape has absolutely changed, BUT I don't know if I totally agree with Leigh that an essay in a digital media outlet gets you nowhere (I subscribe to her substack and really enjoy her takes!) Funny enough, the NYTs Modern Love column reached out to me yesterday to write a follow-up to an essay I wrote for them a couple of years ago, and I began reflecting on how that essay launched my writing career. It was my first publication, I got my literary agent from that essay (even though I didn't think it was the great loll). Having your writing appear in major outlets I think does still matter--I think the central problem, at least for writers hoping to be traditionally published, remains, and that's that publishing houses are always trying to figure out what sells books, is it a viral essay in The Cut? Is it 100,000 followers on TikTok? And the answer continues to be a mix of: we don't really know and it depends and sometimes it helps and sometimes it doesn't lol. I think getting published in these outlets helps with credibility (many bigs substackers on the journalism side have these places on their resumes). What I feel is 100% true, and that I think you're getting at with this essay, is that writers give away too much of their power to gatekeepers. Things don't get published all the time for reasons that have nothing to do with the quality of the piece. The key is knowing when you've gotten a "no" because the essay etc needs more work vs because it's not a good fit, or they already picked up a similar essay. For some writers, being published in a certain caliber of outlet is more important than being published at all (Also see the Big 5 or nothing people lol). But I *think* many writers just want to write and be read, however that looks. As writer Torrey Peter says, when you find your readers, everything else (the presses and big magazines) follows. Thanks for writing this!!

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