The way of deals While copyright battles over generative
Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2025 5:50 am
So it wasn't really a choice, since there were no others. On the other hand, today it's a decision I've fully assumed. What a pleasure to do this job with complete freedom despite the financial difficulties: being able to go where I want, when I want, on the subjects and formats of my choice. It would be difficult to give that up to go on a contract. For the moment, I've preferred to turn down the offers.
The idea of sitting behind a desk is not possible. My job is the austria telegram field. Does the reputation of the Albert-Londres prize protect against a precarious market by offering more opportunities to its winners? Winning the award opens the door to more freelance work, new media offers and the publishing world. I am currently in discussions with publishers. I have also been asked to teach courses at journalism schools in Belgium. Beyond writing, which is your preferred field, you also do TV and radio reporting.
.. How do these activities complement each other? As a freelance journalist, I can't live off the written press alone. I enjoy doing radio and TV. It brings diversity. But the first factor remains financial: the remuneration I receive for my TV work serves to "subsidize" my articles. But when I cover the same topic in all three media, I divide my brain into three. It’s quite frustrating. When I’m busy filming, paying attention to the light, the sequence, the sounds, it’s brain space that’s unavailable to think about the additional information I need for my articles.
The idea of sitting behind a desk is not possible. My job is the austria telegram field. Does the reputation of the Albert-Londres prize protect against a precarious market by offering more opportunities to its winners? Winning the award opens the door to more freelance work, new media offers and the publishing world. I am currently in discussions with publishers. I have also been asked to teach courses at journalism schools in Belgium. Beyond writing, which is your preferred field, you also do TV and radio reporting.
.. How do these activities complement each other? As a freelance journalist, I can't live off the written press alone. I enjoy doing radio and TV. It brings diversity. But the first factor remains financial: the remuneration I receive for my TV work serves to "subsidize" my articles. But when I cover the same topic in all three media, I divide my brain into three. It’s quite frustrating. When I’m busy filming, paying attention to the light, the sequence, the sounds, it’s brain space that’s unavailable to think about the additional information I need for my articles.