Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,556 Authors
50,500 Quality Articles
& 3,680 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
David Pekrul (972)
Robert Melaccio, Sr. (6,253)
Nicole Beurkens (184)
Mogama (11,388)
Jane Bullard (3,855)
Terry Mitchell (2,643)
Susan Thom (9,047)
Rodney Biamby (90)
Michael Ramzy (156)
Aaron Taylor (1,129)
Ronyae (1,286)
Joel Hendon (10,717)
Mike Fak (9,928)
Joel Hirschhorn (857)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
The Yellow Submarine Songtrack From 1999

20 Searchwarp Authors Named and Shamed - What Does Your Name Say About You

Clermont Ferrand - Much more than Tyres

A Novel Approach To No-Smoking Signs: The Mobile Cigar Lounge

Broadcasting Internships

Performing Magic for Living in the Modern World

Female Players Reign Supreme in Casual Online Games

Wars And Stratagems And Cigars?

Tobacco, Patrick Henry, And The Struggle For Freedom

Tobacco: A Muse For Writers

Home » Categories » Entertainment » Other Entertainment » Breaking Into Hollywood: Who Should I Pay to Get Paid? » Printer Friendly

Donna Michelle Anderson

Breaking Into Hollywood: Who Should I Pay to Get Paid?

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Donna Michelle Anderson
Submitted Monday, May 07, 2007
Donna Michelle Anderson (776)
Donna Michelle Anderson

http://www.planetdma.com
Log in to become a member of Donna Michelle Anderson's Fan Club!


I'm going to keep this short, but not at all sweet! Who should you pay to make it in show biz? You should expect to pay any professional whose products or services help you break into the industry if that person will NOT otherwise directly financially profit from your income.

YOU NEED START-UP FUNDS. Whatever area of entertainment you're driven to thrive in, do yourself an important favor before you begin - or continue - that pursuit. Stop for at least 1-3 months and work as many jobs as you can to raise real seed money. You're shooting for $1000 - unless you're moving to New York or Los Angeles, in which case, you're shooting for $5,000 (don't come to L.A. and not have a downpayment for a car). Believe me, it will change your experience when you can pay for what you need rather than wait for people to do you favors. And a favor is what someone is doing for you if you have no experience or contacts to help them out with in return!

Okay, let's start with the models. As you get started, you SHOULD PAY photographers, make-up artists, hair stylists and fashion stylists for your test shoots. You don't have to, of course; there are many rising photogs and set artists who are looking for models for their book. But if you are just starting out, you don't want to work exclusively with other newbies. A paid professional with a solid portfolio and good references gives you not just more experience (and when it comes to lighting, that counts), but more contacts s/he can turn you on to. You SHOULD NOT PAY any agent or talent scouts upfront. The scouts get paid by the agency if you're signed, and the agency takes 20% of what you earn. That's all they get - it's enough!

Next up, actors. Follow everything I wrote for the models (except your agents only get 10% of your earnings). Now add that you SHOULD PAY acting coaches, dialect trainers and other instructors. May I add that that includes casting directors who hold casting seminars? If they are teaching you something you don't know and giving you a front row audition for their critical services, why wouldn't you pay them for that? They aren't going to profit directly from your income! You won't be mad about it if you've saved up the cash to pay for training at the beginning of your career.

Singers and songwriters, you're next. Read everything for the models and the actors (except the casting directors). Now you're going to add that you SHOULD PAY for studio time, an engineer, possibly a producer and a vocalist for you non-singing songwriters to get your demo CD made (with mp3 files if you can't convert tracks at home). In this modern day of Cakewalk and ProTools, you should be able to find a very talented arranger with a home studio to lay your tracks down with you, and many of them need vocalists for their cuts, so do your homework and partner up. But when it's time for a demo, you want a professional environment, and not all composer/arrangers are producers. A real audio booth, a mixer who really gets the boards and knows how to make the vocals shine and a producer who has a trained ear for your genre (and for pitch!)...that's invaluable. Pay for it! That money isn't just buying you experience, it's buying you a guaranteed session (free connections love to flake) and, once again, industry contacts if you show them you're as good as you believe you are. You SHOULD NOT PAY for people to shop your deal; they are going to get a management commission for that, usually 15% of your overall deal.

Writers and producers, you're the lucky ones because you're behind the scenes. You SHOULD PAY for professional memberships and seminars to learn your trade - and because contacts are the only way you'll get a job! You also need some good coffee, lunch and giftie money because you SHOULD PAY to treat professionals who share their expertise with you. Thank people! A Starbucks card does wonders. You SHOULD NOT PAY anyone to shop your projects. They get a piece of your sales pie.

For everybody in the biz, the most important person you SHOULD PAY...is an experienced entertainment attorney. Now we're talking $150-500/hour. But the money s/he will save you by reviewing and negotiating your deals...priceless. Don't you dare sign even the simplest contract without a lawyer looking over it. A real one. Not your ex-boyfriend, the divorce attorney. Or your best friend's mom who went to law school. An attorney who has done many, many, many of the same deals that you are about to sign is the only one you're going to work with, okay? Why wouldn't you protect yourself with the most informed, well-connected professional you can find?

Well, it turns out that wasn't even short, but it's important information! Trust me on this: you won't mind paying people if you're actually approaching your career as a business, not a DREAM. Do you see the difference? If you were opening a bakery, you wouldn't be looking for people to work for you in exchange for exposure to customers, or bartering for ovens, or expecting to get a license from the County for free! And you sure wouldn't sign a 5-year, $3 million lease without a contracts attorney looking it over. It's only in the entertainment industry that people throw their good sense to the wind and let pride and entitlement and panic take over. It's show BUSINESS. Accept it, embrace it, and watch your experience in this game change once you do.

DMA is a former film story analyst and performer who has spent over a decade creating, producing and running successful non-fiction and new media projects for networks including CBS, Bravo, A&E, TLC, BET and more.  Learn how to sell a screenplay and how to pitch and sell a reality show from her books, “The 1-3-5 Story Structure Made Simple System: The Nine Essential Elements of a Sellable Screenplay" and "The Show Starter Reality TV Made Simple System: Ten Steps to Creating and Pitching a Sellable Reality Show."






Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Donna Michelle Anderson's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 39 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Monday, May 07, 2007
View other articles written by Donna Michelle Anderson (776)
Donna Michelle Anderson


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
16 Grey's Anatomy Quotes – Famous Words From Your Favorite Characters

Pick 3 Lottery Tips & Strategies

Pick 3 Lottery Tips and Information

14 Shakespeare Quotes to Celebrate The Birth of A Literary Genius

14 Doctor Seuss Quotes to Celebrate The Birthday of Theodor Seuss Geisel

20 Mae West Quotes to Celebrate Her Birthday

Court Jester Party Jokes - He Who Laughs Last

14 Diane Arbus Quotes to Remember the Birth of a Genius

20 Searchwarp Authors Named and Shamed - What Does Your Name Say About You

10 Grey's Anatomy Quotes to Get Us Through the Writers' Strike

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company