long response
@frost The way I usually do these is to offer an introduction, make a bulleted list of skills and experience I have that might answer their needs, then wrap it up giving contact information and inviting them to reach out to me. If I'm really feeling ambitious, I copy-paste the job listing's descriptions of what they want you to do, then try to rephrase those as things I've worked with, to be my bulleted list.
I have NO CLUE whether that helps. I grew up with the conventional knowledge that you HAD TO write a cover letter for every application and I honestly don't know if that's true.
re: rubber pig selfie, eye contact, no nudity
@icefoxx You will probably hate this, but I think the pig mask is really adorable and kissable and nice.
#subskeet the really fascinating thing about the Beastie Boys is that their first album - the one everyone's heard tracks from several million times - is actually their *weakest*.
@frost I usually get coffee and a pastry, and listen to music while doing job hunt stuff, in an attempt to feel less miserable about it.
then I responded to a reach out asking when I got my degree because they specialize in jobs for recent college graduates with "That's ageism, that's exploitative, and now that you've admitted up front I'm not good enough for you, I have no interest in working for your firm. Thanks" which basically suggests I should call it quits on job hunt stuff and get food.
re: blathering about artists and AI artists, reference to personal stuff
@fairydoctor420 it'd be a funnier tragedy if it didn't hit me. It's poisoned now.
It's like how you could have the best book or documentary on the Ardennes out there, and if the only people stumping for it have really big Totenkopf-verband arm tattoos and Trump signs on their F150s, are you really gonna want to look?
re: mass shootings
@rkniner the media had other things they could scream about so we'd be outraged. It's the USA, we're never all *that* free of gun violence.
blathering about artists and AI artists, reference to personal stuff
Assuming a situation in which ML is less problematic, I can imagine ML as an useful tool for knocking out 70% of work quickly so an artist can really push on the remaining 30%.
But it's not being sold that way, "AI artists" are sure what ML kicks out is 100% finished. The same way they don't acknowledge what they have is an intermediate step, they are not interested in the obviously unfinished, they want a full color painting NOW. On the personal level, I think the idea that you want THIS tool to do EVERYTHING really feels one-true-way-ish, the adapt or die rhetoric doesn't help here.
This also contrasts a thing you notice about artists, which is wanting to work on stuff just a little more... and a little more. In an age of clearly fantastic digital tools, there are tons of people who WANT to work in traditional media (can't speak for everyone but for me using traditional media winds up being convenient in ways opposite to what we're told!). The love for process reflects into WANTING stuff like that.
This feels like another example of "our thought patterns work completely differently" and it doesn't even have to be a bad thing. I think it's just having differences which always existed between people, more obviously and uncomfortably lampshaded?
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