CREATOR NEWSLETTER
Issue #152 | July 18, 2023
Is anyone else feeling the crushing boot of techno-capitalism on their necks more than usual this work week? I know I am. I started my career as a production assistant, prompted by the fierce love of documentaries I developed in college — obsessed with the weird tragic comedy of “Grizzly Man,” the gripping editing and narrative thrust of “Hoop Dreams,” the colorful, poetic whisperings of Agnes Varda. I hustled to get jobs with local filmmakers, trying not to care if I had to water their plants, drive in the middle of the night, do their jobs for them, and make less than minimum wage (or nothing, ‘for exposure,’ of course).
But I couldn’t keep working sweaty 18-hour days, juggling side jobs to make ends meet, getting yelled at by egomaniac producers. I developed chronic pain from endometriosis and needed healthcare, remote work, and a living wage. So I turned to another love of mine — writing. And while I love this gig, the experience of my past life is what makes the latest news from the writers’ strike so galling.
The Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) is joining the Writers Guild of America (WGA) in its ongoing strike, a significant boost for the WGA, which has been holding steadfast since the strike began in May. But Hollywood bosses are equally unwavering in their refusal to negotiate, and last week, anonymous sources (probably industry-planted fear-mongers) told Deadline that studio bosses are planning to wait for artists to go broke before resuming negotiations in the fall. The strike is going to get messier as this drags out, and it’s workers who are going to struggle to put food on the table.
It’s brutal out here. But what I loved about working in film was being there when that magical movie moment took place — when an interviewer finally asked the right question that ushered in catharsis, serendipity allowed for something astounding to unfold on screen, or light shined on some unseen heartache, some unspoken truth. And notably, when some company or government responded with a policy change because what you did helped push the final straw, and the story you helped tell was too true and powerful to ignore.
Stories have an impact, and what else are creators known for if not storytelling? Michael Moore’s documentary “Bowling for Columbine” led Kmart to stop selling gun ammunition in stores. Errol Morris’s “A Thin Blue Line” helped overturn an innocent man’s death sentence. And just last Tuesday, creator John Green released a compelling video essay that led pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson to make tuberculosis medication more accessible.
Even those of us who some might deem too young and too small to make an impact truly do — I still remember when my one of my first stories, a Daily Dot piece about workers being surveilled by a tech company through their webcams, led Klarna to stop employee webcam monitoring.
So this is my love letter to my younger movie-loving self, someone who should have been paid fairly for their time and whose work should have been respected. And to the creators out there who have struggled to make ends meet while big tech (I’m looking at you this week, Twitter) and entertainment companies profit off your labor: you deserve better, too.
Change is still possible, and it’s always stronger when we tell our stories, call for change, and of course, never cross the picket line. Although, as Steven Asarch explains this week, it’s not always easy to know how to show solidarity.
– Grace Stanley, Newsletter Editor
HOW TO INFLUENCE WITHOUT SCABBING
Confusing Rules for Influencers Make Union Solidarity Hard
Now that SAG-AFTRA has started to strike, influencers want to know what they can do to help.
By Steven Asarch, Passionfruit Contributor
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THE COMMENTS SECTION
“SAG is asking that you do not cosplay any movie or TV characters from current or past productions that would promote the studios that are currently being struck! Doing so will be considered crossing the picket line!”
—Artist Sarah McGonagall on solidarity with the ongoing Hollywood strike.
IN THE BIZ
- Indie designers are suing fast fashion Shein for copying their works “over and over again, as part of a long and continuous pattern of racketeering.”
- Shein is one of the fastest-growing online retailers in the world, and the company is no stranger to throwing creators under the bus, violating labor laws, and screwing up the environment (long live the memory of the infamous Shein Influencer Trip).
- The rose-colored lenses surrounding promising Twitter alternatives appear to be wearing off. Bluesky is under fire this week for allowing usernames with racial slurs and not cracking down hard enough on content moderation. Y’know, the exact hate speech problem Twitter is despised for.
- And remember the horrible tweet view limits Musk imposed a couple weeks ago, which led hoards of creators to want to leave the platform? Meta’s Threads also imposed rate limits on views this week in a controversial move. Not cool, Zuck, not cool.
- For all the indie-fiction writers out there, Wattpad’s 2023 Watty Awards are officially open for submissions — notably, both completed and ongoing projects will be considered. Can’t wait to see the freakiest vampire romance novels the platform has to offer.
HI SISTERS
Sorry Cosmo, James Charles Was Never Really Canceled
Despite what a recent Cosmopolitan profile might suggest, James Charles is still a multi-millionaire who gets hundreds of thousands of views a video.
By Steven Asarch, Passionfruit Contributor
THE DUMPSTER FIRE
Twitter Is Promoting Far-Right Figures Like Andrew Tate Through So-Called ‘Creator Ads Revenue Sharing Program’
Twitter is encouraging an uneven playing field for creators and allowing far-right hate speech to proliferate on the platform.
By Patricia Grisafi, Passionfruit Contributor
SOMETHING’S BREWING…
What Is ‘Perpetual Stew,’ And Why Is The Internet Obsessed With This Creator’s Viral Take On It?
The perpetual stew has been cooking for 37 days and counting.
By Rachel Kiley, Passionfruit Contributor
JOB BOARD
- Neuroscience entrepreneur Rian Doris is hiring a thumbnail designer.
- Video essayist Smarter Money is looking for a finance-savvy video editor.
- New York foodie Here Be Barr is seeking a food and travel editing expert.
- Gamer iFerg is looking for a Call-of-Duty-loving video editor.
- Minecraft creator LockDownLife is also hiring a video editor.
SOCCER MADE ME DO IT
We’re looking forward to all the content that will come of the Women’s World Cup kicking off this Thursday. … Cue obligatory Megan Rapinoe memes.
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