When writing becomes "content" and desperate-for-work writers and newly-unemployed journalists write for free, or close to it, we all lose. Just say no. (I've ranted on this before here.)
From his post:
Helium sells content to publishers on the super cheap as participating writers collect crumbs. Of course a deal with Hearst is in the works. I’ll be shocked if other cash-strapped publishers don’t follow suit.He follows with three good reasons why you shouldn't fall for it. bkAs a writer, I can attest to Helium’s allure. Write whatever you want on any topic and publish instantly? No waiting for a query response? No rejections? Sign me up.
And yet this very low bar is the literary equivalent of a siren call.
1 comment:
Barbara,
Thanks for your comment, I very much appreciate it. Helium has its place but I fear that would-be writers rely on it too much and for the wrong reasons. There's simply no substitute for working with a great editor.
Best regards,
Tim
http://timbeyers.com
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