From February of 2010 until December of
2013 I worked in reality television. I started off as a transcriber
which is a job that I had no idea even existed until I got it. The
job consisted of watching interviews that ranged from minutes to
hours and writing down every single um, err..., and stammer that is
used in shows. I eventually went on to logging, assistant editing,
and even some story producing that I'll never be credited with. Hell,
on one show I did something that I'm not even sure what the title
could be called!
Reality television employs thousands of
people yet you will always hear people talk about how it ruined
television and is bad for the world. Oh, shut up. Its not all that
bad. I've worked on six seasons of Hell's Kitchen, Marcel's Quantum
Kitchen, Face Off, The Ultimate Gamer, Little People Big World, a
show that never got picked up starring Jenny McCarthy, and The Glass
House. Don't bother checking for me on IMDB because I filled out one
part and said “Fuck it” because it takes too long. Between all of
these shows I learned a shit ton of things but I'll only talk about a
few in the Five Things I Learned Working In Reality Television.
1. Feast Or Famine
There are some shows you work on where the catering is the shit. I mean that in a good way. One one show there were gourmet catering trucks that came four times a week and a full buffet every single day. If you got there early enough someone would be there to prepare your meal for you! I ended up gaining almost 30 pounds in three months working on one show. On the other hand there are shows where you survive on Goldfish crackers and pretzels.
Most shows tend to have almost nothing
but junk food so its a good idea to bring your own lunch. But
remember to put your name on it unless you want people pilfering your
shit. I had someone steal my wasabi one time even though it had my
name on it and was hidden. Guess they really wanted that wasabi. I
worked strange hours and don't drive so I was usually at the mercy of
wherever I worked, especially when I worked hours like 7pm until 5am
in areas where places closed at 9pm. This feast of famine also
applies to your life outside of work. I went weeks without seeing
friends or having the chance to talk to them because of my schedule.
Reality television pays very well
depending on what you do. I was paid more to type how people could
not cook scallops properly than I was to move dead bodies in the
hospital. I was able to stay fed, buy friends dinner and take them to
movies, loan folks money, and pay my rent on time. It was awesome.
Depending on what I was doing I had an entire months rent from a week
of work. I also noticed that a lot of people have gambling issues so
some would be anxious as all hell during pay check time.
On the other hand when you are in
between jobs the chances of hunger are strong. You can work for eight
months out of the year and if you did not plan properly starve for
the other four. I tend to go back and forth with this. I'll take a
month or two off and start looking for work only to realize that what
is around I can't do/don't wanna do again. Then I end up transcribing
from home and crawling back to it. I found that putting aside weeks
of checks helped but only for so long.
Now I get tagged with the being weird
label all the time. But I am a friendly weirdo. Okay fine. I have the
ability to be a friendly weirdo. But there have been countless times
where I will be flat out ignored by people or looked at as if I
farted on their keyboard. A lot of people have worked in reality
television for so long that maybe their behavior seems totally normal
to them. I will be with them in the kitchen and say good morning and
they will look me up and down and then leave or just completely not
acknowledge me. People get two chances to do this before I do the
same to them. I have been in these situations at other jobs but it
was usually because I made them look bad at their jobs or because
they had some previous issue with my brother. In reality television
this strange attitude is automatic. I laugh about it because chances
are they will need me more than I need them.
At one job a guy ignored me all the
time until he was told by a producer that Dante knew everything about
the show. At the time I was logging, transcribing, doing art, story
producing, learning the AVID editing program, and was on set once. I
was doing two shows at once and knew every contestant, their
attitude, and every situation that happened on and off camera. He
walked up to me and introduced himself by calling me “Bro” which
next to spitting in front of me or sneezing without covering your
mouth one of the fastest ways to make me hate you. I knew every
aspect of his job and knew that he was lazy as hell when it came to
doing his job. He thought I just transcribed.
You will also meet some cool people. I
don't want to make it seem like everyone in reality television is a
dick. I have met some funny ass people that got me through working
until dawn who were really interesting. Some editors would teach me
cool shit without feeling threatened that I was gonna take their spot
from them. Your reputation also follows you since reality television is a small world. There were jobs where I would hear about someone and work with them to realize everything I had heard was true good or bad. I had a reputation for being fast and saying no.
Once you tell someone that you work in
reality television they will almost always say “They could make a
show about my job!” No. No, they couldn't. You take that five
minute period when a bee got into the store and everyone freaked out
and try to stretch it into a 42 minute show. I couldn't really talk
about what happened at work because it is always confidential so when
I am at a gathering I can't talk about work. I sat in front of a
computer all night listening to shouting and/or crying. Its not
really a party topic.
These show have story producers. Their
job is to take your boring ass day and make it interesting. Are these
shows scripted? Yes, in that they have to give people something to do
otherwise you're sitting there watching people stare at the wall.
This has happened. On one show when there was nothing for the cast to
do they would just sleep or stare into their own souls. That does not
make good television. So if you think your job sitting behind the
counter is fun just wait until episode three when they decide to let
a bear loose in the store!
When I had a chance to talk to people a
lot of them would say that they went to school for film. I would ask
them what if anything they made and many of them said nothing. They
went to school to make a movie and had not done a single thing. There
were explanations like “I don't have the money for the equipment”
or “I don't have time for that.” Then they would ask me if I went
to film school and I would say that I didn't. I wouldn't bring up the
fact that I had filmed over 80 episodes of my own series, have
hundreds of podcasts, and wrote over 2000 blogs and stories.
The strange schedules do make it hard
to do stuff but there is always time. People who say they don't have
time for things wake up 45 years old and wondering where the time
went. If you work in reality television you have access to editing
programs that cost thousands of dollars and you can find time (even
after work) to use this for yourself. I suggest buying it for
yourself when you have the money because staying after work for extra
hours is just unhealthy on many social levels and when your life is
at a point where you take social cues from me you need help.
Click here for previous Five Things I Learned.
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