Is the Traditional Magazine Writer Doomed? We Say No.

Who wouldn't want to be this guy?Photo: Getty Images
At one point, Shafrir argues that nobody wants to take editorial-assistant jobs at magazines any more. Call us crazy, but it's always been our impression (i.e., all those years when we were desperately trying to get those jobs) that they are still incredibly difficult to land. Blogging is an obvious second choice, especially since it offers such good exposure. Then you use that exposure to get a magazine job (or a book deal or a newspaper gig). The fact of the matter is there aren't that many blogs that will pay a 22-year-old, as Shafrir suggests, $50,000. We would argue that there are hundreds, perhaps thousands of young writers who are blogging precisely in order to become magazine writers. Maybe this will be in a different format (writing online, editing Websites, etc), but even so, it's there.
Of course, we did absolutely no research for this post, so our argument is inconclusive. This is, after all, a blog. But one day we hope to be big-time magazine writers, and then we'll start picking up the phone. What we're wondering, you massive creative underclass out there, is what you think. Do our research for us and respond in the comments. Do any of you still want to work in magazines?

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