What the Hell am I doing?

Entries tagged as ‘multi-media’

Don’t get envious; get inspired. Don’t get angry; get busy.

September 15, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Ava creates powerful, provocative video on her site www.peacetakescourage.com

Ava creates powerful, provocative video on her site www.peacetakescourage.com

Three years of design/multimedia courses have taught me that inspiration is everywhere. You just have to train your eye and brain, so you recognize it when you see it.

I saw it when I read about Ava Lowery, an Alabama teenager, and her vlog, peacetakescourage.com .

She’s an amazing spirit who wields images with artistry and power. She started making these “animations”- her term, not mine – back in 2005, as a way to protest the Iraq war. News reports say she was 16 when she started.

Her work has brought her national attention, both good and bad. She’s been on CNN. She’s gotten death threats. And she keeps on doing her thing.

I love her sophistication. I love her commitment. Despite her youth, she’s a role model. If she can have such an impact at 16, what can I, a woman in her 50s, do? So whenever I get blocked or overwhelmed, I look at Ava’s site and her work.

Then I remember the slogan that serves as today’s headline.

Categories: coping · multi-media · presentation · work
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Hatching a plan for life after a buyout

September 2, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Matt Peiken wished himself right out of a job.

He’d sat out one buyout from his employer, the St. Paul Pioneer Press. But he’d been assigned to cover suburbs after a decade spent covering the arts.

“I was out to lunch with former colleague, and I said ‘If they offer another buyout, I’m leaving, ‘ ” Peiken recalled. Three hours later, the company announced another buyout. This time, he signed the papers.

Photo courtesy of sxc.hu

Photo courtesy of sxc.hu

That was in July, 2007, a little more than a year ago. Now Peiken is about three weeks away from launching 3minuteegg.org,  a website showcasing the arts community in St. Paul. Peiken plans to post new videos and podcasts daily. He claims he’s scooping both the mainstream and alternative media by offering a unique venue for arts-related news.

“I know my town, I know this community,” he said. “I can out hustle and out beat any other journalist.

I found Peiken through the discussion board at “Newspaper Escape Plan,” the facebook.com group that inspired this blog. His posting “Go Independent”(you might need to join facebook to read the thread) was passionate and intriguing. Peiken claimed he had gone beyond freelancing into “entrepreneurship.”

I balked at that one. As far as I’m concerned, freelancing is running a business.  After talking to him, though, I understood his distinction.

As a freelancer, I cede final control of my copy to the editors who buy it. But Peiken is creator and publisher, the ultimate one-man band.

It also means he’s responsible for everything.  He looked at the business model of public broadcasting and decided to form a non-profit, so he can get funding from grants, donations and sponsors.  Financing came courtesy of his 401-K, he said. In order to succeed, 3minuteegg.org has to become a destination for a fair amount of  visitors.

“If I can get 3,000 regular subscribers, I become a viable entity to a sponsor. It’s a matter of coming up something that’s interesting to a local audience,” he said.

He admits he’s taking a risk. But experts say such a willingness is common to many successful entrepreneurs. Peiken also exhibits another necessary characteristic: he’s willing to fail.

“And the worst that can happen?” he wrote on on facebook.com. “I go back to the job world — much more marketable than when I left it.”

That frame of mind recalls advice I’d heard from Joe Grimm, who writes the “Ask the Recruiter” column for www.poynter.org.  Learn to think in terms of projects, not 30-year plans, Grimm told a gathering of mid-career journalists.

If we follow Grimm’s advice – and Peiken’s example – we’ll always be looking for the next opportunity. We’ll  act as if every job is ours for a season, not a lifetime.

Categories: business · entrepreneurship · work
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