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Monday, Oct 24
AvantGuild Member of the Week: Richard Truesdell
Location: I call Southern California home but typically I'm on the road 15-20 weeks a year. What has been your most difficult project of late and how did you deal with its challenges? The main problem was that no matter how hard we tried, it was almost impossible, given that I was photographing the adventure, to stay on schedule. It required rising at sunrise and several evenings, finishing up after 10 PM before arriving at the night's hotel. Was it worth it? Sure was as thus far different versions of the feature has been published in the US, UK, Holland and Romania with France coming up shortly. I am still working on getting placements in Italy, Germany, South Africa, Australia and Japan. Given the expense involved in producing such a project, over $7.000 (I funded this project on my own as I couldn't secure an assignment in advance making it the ultimate spec project), it's essential to maximize each placement opportunity. In the US, three more versions are scheduled to appear, that don't conflict or compete with my initial placement, one in a webzine with an entirely different focus than my first placement, a second in a mainstream automotive title that will focus just on the day at the famed Nürburgring in Germany and a third in a lifestyle publication. What's the most helpful thing you've learned about freelancing? I try to make contact with at least three new editors and publications each week. Also, listen carefully to what your editors want. While I have a vision for each of my features even before I start, it's the editor who has to fit the project within the format of his or her publication. I find it frustrating, in the in-flight category, to find that I can't make any real progress, that most editors won't even respond to my queries even though their readers are more male than female, especially in the premium classes. More often than not, these men, and to a lesser degree, women, are car enthusiasts and that some of my projects will be more entertaining than some of the celebrity-focused features that seem to be the staple of so many of the in-flight titles. When held captive in a pressurized aluminum tube for five plus hours, I know that I want to read a story that pulls me in, tells me what it's really like to visit a destination, not tell me about some $500/night hotel that most people will never stay at. Any such hotel should be a great experience; I want to tell readers about hotels that cost one fifth that amount, that provide a truly unique experience. What's been the worst advice you've ever received about writing? What advice do you have for writers hoping to break into covering cars/the automotive industry? Email This Post |
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