After working in reality for about four
years and working in transcribing (click here for that) and reality
TV in general (click here for that) I have decided to finally do Five
Things I Learned Assistant Editing. This isn't gonna be some tell all
information or dogging any particular show that I've worked on. Its
more about information that for those that want to work in reality TV
or want to do something more to learn.
Reality TV is different than any other
jobs that I've had in that upward movement can happen very fast as
long as you try. Yes, it helps to know someone in a higher position
but if you don't know your shit it is just as easy to be exposed as
not knowing what the fuck you're doing.
Do More Than You Need To
When you are hired as an assistant
editor there will be times when you're asked to put a scene together.
It goes like this. Story producers will know what happened on the set
because they were there (best case scenario) or they read what
happened (bad scenario) and were told what happened (worse case
scenario). They will then ask for this scene to be found. You pray
that they at least have the time this allegedly happened or the right
person it happened to. You have no idea how many times I wasted hours
looking for a situation with the wrong person listed.
After you are asked to find this stuff
you can just hand them what they asked for and work on your reel that
no one wants to see or you can go the extra mile. I always prefer the
extra mile. If you ask me for a clip of someone angrily leaving the
room I will give you that in at least three forms and from different
angles. Why? Because people don't know what they want. They have a
vague idea and you handing in options makes everyone's job easier
meaning yours. And don't just show the angry person leaving the room.
Follow them until they are off camera somewhere else.
Know More Than You Need To Know
This is how I went from transcribing to
being an AE in less than a year. I know people that transcribed for
years and years and were angry or annoyed that they weren't asked to
do more. For me it was a simple email asking if anyone knew AVID. I
was just learning it and said so. Next thing you know I went from a
gig that should have been three months that lasted for 10. If you
just wanna transcribe that is fine but if you want more learn
something else as well.
Most people want more but don't go
about doing extra. The dream job for so many people I heard was story
producer. Oh, if only I could get to that position I'd have it made!
Not really. Why? You don't know how to tell a story. As an AE there
are times where you have hours of nothing to do. Lots of folks slept.
I made my own show out of the footage from the show I was working on.
On one series I made 79 completed deleted scenes that producers would
be watching when I showed up for work. I wasn't part of story or even
an editor. I was an AE that had the ability to do their job because I
wanted to make my own easier. So if you're one of those people that
sleep your shift away now you know why you hit the glass ceiling.
Show Contestants Are Liars
I recently read an interview with a
contestant for a show I didn't work on or watch but knew the gist of.
She complained that they made her look bad for TV and edited what she
said or did. Most shows have a minimum of 10 people and that doesn't
include the host or guests. For some reason contestants think that a
42 minute show is going to be only about their journey. Weirdos. And
by the way, how presumptuous to think you're interesting enough for
your own show. They sign contracts giving away their life for a
certain amount of time and then get upset when it really happens.
These people have no idea how lucky
they are that most of what they say and do is never seen by the
public. If you watch a show and think someone is racist you have no
idea what you didn't see. There is stuff that is left on the cutting
room floor (not literally) because if it aired these people would
lose their friends, family, and jobs. And there is the fact that some
people are just dull and the story department has to create something
from nothing. You ask for me to find clips of this boring ass person
being gross and I know that they have nothing else to offer besides
ass scratching and farts. It was my job to get them on TV somehow.
Job Duties Are Blurred
This goes along with the knowing
stories when it isn't your job. There will be times where you are
asked to do things above and below your pay grade. Why? Usually
because someone else can't do what they were hired to do. This isn't
like other jobs where if someone is terrible you can tell a
supervisor and the person is talked to and/or let go. Sometimes you
would come to work and someone was just not there anymore and later
you'd find out that the right person saw them doing the wrong thing.
When you are put in a position to do
something you weren't trained to do you can say no, which I've done
dozens of times or say “I'll see if I can.” Seeing if I can gave
me the chance to learn a lot of stuff that if you'd asked me a few
months before trying I would've told you I'd never be able to do it.
But beware of jealousy. There will be someone whose job you are
learning that will not want to help you learn it because they know
the jig is up and they may be on their way out.
Hours Of Work Equal Seconds On Screen
There were times where I would spend
five hours looking for a clip and the finished product ended up on
screen for seconds. This is not an exaggeration. You can and will
spend hours looking for footage that hopefully exists and sending it
in thankful that its done. And when you watch the show its on screen
and gone if you blink.
This isn't a job I ever did for
recognition and if I had I would be angry. I think I just explained a
lot of attitudes I came across doing that job. Your friends that
don't work in that industry don't understand what it is you do
exactly or why you work the hours you do. They just know that you
sleep during the day and work all night doing something none of them
watches. But it pays great and if you do it right you work just a few
months a year so pffft.
Click here for previous Five Things I
Learned.
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