The Minearverse 5: Closer to the Earth, Further from the Ax
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
From where I'm standing (as neither a teacher nor a nurse) teaching and nursing are often used as examples of important professions which are direly underpaid. If there's any comparison being made to the worth to society of writers vs. teachers, I'd be very surprised--in either direction, actually.
I read it as "You know who else gets paid crap for no good reason?" and don't see any implied derision.
Yeah, ita, absent the actual article, I'm not sure what the context is. But often when I hear comparisons to teacher's salaries, it seems to be less about look-how-we're-underpaid-just-like-teachers and more this profession which should make more makes something comparable to teachers.
And registered nurses? The NICU nurses make great money, deservedly so. More than average screenwriters, possibly. And they probably have better job security too. Life flight nurses make even more.
I took the quote to mean underpaid. Though comparing screenwriters to teachers is like comparing apples and toasters.
I took the quote to mean underpaid. Though comparing screenwriters to teachers is like comparing apples and toasters.
This is true, but to expand, I took the quote to mean underpaid, especially considering the amount of money the industry makes.
This is true, but to expand, I took the quote to mean underpaid, especially considering the amount of money the industry makes.
Exactly how I took it, victor.
I have to say, the "equivalent to a grade school teacher" is something that could totally piss me off out of context because (1)I am a grade school teacher (2) the implication is that the level of skill and professionalism necessary to write for TV is greater than the skill and professionalism necessary to teach (3) infers that teachers are less than writers, even though our education and professional credentialling requirements, particularly in california, rival that of other professions that require post-BA/BS work.
Regardless of how it was meant, I had exactly this reaction. But I am so sick in general of the use of the terms "schoolteacher" and "grade school teacher" because they are almost always used in a condescending manner. Teacher or educator, kthxbye.
I know that the statement is probably meant simply to emphasize how little writers, like teachers, make, but I can't help how it makes me feel.
Obvious, the reaction that I have is shaded by being a teacher.
And again, the quote is not necessarily a quote as it was in an unspecified article. Don't know the context.
I am having a hard time explaining it. If you say, "X job gets paid so little, almost as little as a teacher" there are a couple of problems. The implication is both teachers are underpaid and that X job should be paid more than a teacher for a variety of reasons.
It's something that is tiresome to read when you are a teacher. But writing this all out, it makes me feel like the caveman from the Geico commercials complaining to his therapist.
It's something that is tiresome to read when you are a teacher. But writing this all out, it makes me feel like the caveman from the Geico commercials complaining to his therapist.
Well, here's this: I make a tad less in journalism than the average WGA writer (going by the $50K average) even though I'm in a flailing industry and TV and film, despite having problems, is still immensely profitable. I would expect if newspapers made a lot more money, to make a bit more myself, and I'm sure my union would agree.
The probelm with comparing any profession to teachers is that teachers' pay isn't (and shouldn't be) linked directly to profit.
The probelm with comparing any profession to teachers is that teachers' pay isn't (and shouldn't be) linked directly to profit.
There's also the fact that there have to be a huge number of teachers per capita compared to professions that pay well, like doctors or lawyers. Education is in the same ballpark of importance as medical care, but one GP can serve hundreds of patients, whereas I'm dubious about even the best teachers being able to teach effectively if they're given more than 30 students in a class.