Mal: Hell, this job I would pull for free. Zoe: Can I have your share? Mal: No. Zoe: If you die, can I have your share? Mal: Yes.

'The Train Job'


Buffista Business Talk: I wanted simple, I wanted in-and-out, I wanted easy money.

A virtual watercooler where Buffistas in business can talk, share, exchange, bemoan, exult and assorted other power verbs associated with all areas of running/starting up a business. For existing or potential Buffista business owners of all types. Spamming is NOT ON. A list of our Buffista owned businesses is on our links page.


Stephanie - May 10, 2012 7:50:16 am PDT #857 of 1416
Trust my rage

The life of the self-employed - either you are exhausted and overwhelmed, like ND these last weeks, or you are sitting in your office with nothing to do, feeling like you will be broke shortly. There is no middle ground.


Strix - May 10, 2012 8:08:10 am PDT #858 of 1416
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Stephanie ain't wrong; I feel ya, sister-girl.

I'm on the upswing, a bit, but the beginning of 2012 has been a little dry money-wise for me.

Here's hoping that will change; I'm doing a trial edit for another publishing house, so maybe I will have two freelancing gigs editing books. And this would be developmental editing, with line editing as part of the package, so I would get some useful experience. I would LOVE to edit for Hachette or Luna or Orbit -- some great fantasy and para romance titles.


NoiseDesign - May 10, 2012 9:32:59 am PDT #859 of 1416
Our wings are not tired

Thankfully things look like they will level out for a bit for June and July, unless another batch of crazy work comes it.

Right now I'm out in Orlando working on a new show and more poor full time employee is back in Los Angeles trying to keep all the other projects afloat while I'm doing this. He's mixing a musical, putting in a new show for the observatory, and a new thing for Six Flags, and I've got another team working on a project for The House the Mouse Built.


Pix - May 10, 2012 4:50:32 pm PDT #860 of 1416
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

The life of the self-employed - either you are exhausted and overwhelmed, like ND these last weeks, or you are sitting in your office with nothing to do, feeling like you will be broke shortly. There is no middle ground.

Yep, this.


Jessica - May 10, 2012 5:40:27 pm PDT #861 of 1416
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

For reasons unknown to me, Google just sent me a $100 Adsense gift card. Would anyone in here like to have it? I really have no use for it at all - I'm guessing they sent it to me because I'm technically an officer on a corporate board, but the corporation is an apartment coop, not the kind of business that markets anything!

Let me know by email and I'll send you the code and URL.


smonster - May 17, 2012 8:48:03 am PDT #862 of 1416
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Hi - I am currently being paid as a contractor, not an employee. This means I'm responsible for paying all of FICA, right? Is there a "tax-paying for dummy contractors" web resource or something? Hiring an accountant is right out, I'm barely covering expenses right now.

I think I'll be an employee eventually, but don't know the timetable.


flea - May 17, 2012 9:52:46 am PDT #863 of 1416
information libertarian

Smonster, don;t say the IRS never gave you anything: [link]


smonster - May 17, 2012 11:08:52 am PDT #864 of 1416
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Thanks, flea!! And OY. I guess I need to pay my first round of estimated tax in June.


javachik - May 17, 2012 11:26:53 am PDT #865 of 1416
Our wings are not tired.

smonster, your medical insurance can be a tax write off as well. Don't know if you're paying for that out of pocket, but when you're a contractor, many, many things are business expenses that can decrease your "income" as far as paying taxes go.


NoiseDesign - May 17, 2012 12:39:30 pm PDT #866 of 1416
Our wings are not tired

Start logging any mileage you drive for work, including any commute to and from work. As a contractor you can claim all of those miles.