Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 12, 2017

News on Youtube Dec 2 2017

I'm Max Gladstone, I'm a novelist, I make about

$48,000 a year.

So I write fantasy novels, I write games, I write

short fiction and a little bit of non-fiction

and blogging and things like that.

The fantasy novels are set in the world of The Craft

which is sort of a modern fantasy universe.

So in Game of Thrones you have these kind of very

medieval fantasy universe in which there are kings

and dukes and things that are marching around with

armies on horseback.

In The Craft sequence you have developed modern cities

you have gods that have shareholders committees

and you have wizards that operate kind of like lawyers

signing arcane contracts with eldritch entities and

that sort of thing.

And I've written a couple of games that are also

set in that universe, I've also written a couple of

unrelated serial pieces of short fiction so

that's in collaboration with a bunch of other writers

we all get in the same room and figure out characters

and situations and then we plot out a series of

short pieces that'll follow through a sort of season

of television.

So there are really two different sections of your job

when you are a professional writer.

One of them is some friends of mine called writing

and the other one they'll refer to as authoring

pretty often.

Writing is just everything that's involved in creating

a piece of art.

You sit down at a table with a cup of coffee or whatever

caffeinated beverage strikes your fancy,

and you create a story.

You plan it, you do the line by line writing,

you do the coding if you're writing game.

You put a script together if you're making a

television series or a play or you just write the

sentences one after the other if you're writing a

book or a piece of short fiction and that takes

about half of my time.

Generally I'll get to a coffee shop at about 8:30,

nine in the morning, after walking my wife to the subway

and sit down and open my computer and start work

and I'll go until lunch and it's generally 12:30 or one.

Most writers I know, not everyone but most writers I know

have about four hours and change of peak creative

productivity in them in the course of a day.

And that's time you're just sitting down and

grinding on the thing.

Some people take that all at once, that's the way

that I do it I'll go for the deep dive and

then come back up.

Some people spread them out over the course of a day

it's really a question of whatever fits your lifestyle

and whatever fits your work.

After that's done, there's all of the other stuff

that you have to do as a professional writer.

In my case, that means staying on top of correspondence

with my publisher, with my agent, with other partners

if I'm working on a collaborative project or if I'm

working on a work for hire thing, or for a piece of video

where I'm only one piece of a larger creative puzzle.

So staying on top of all of that, behind the scenes

collaboration and then there's public facing work.

These days writers are expected to be responsible

for a lot more of their marketing, publicity efforts,

obviously publishers do a good amount of that work

but then you're working with the publisher to make

sure your efforts aren't going across purposes

which adds another layer of coordination and then you

have to be a little bit public facing.

Some people do this in different ways.

Some of that's social media, I spend probably too much time

on Twitter and some of that's directly promotionally

useful or interacting with fans useful and some of it's

for my own personal entertainment.

You stay on top of email that's coming in from fans

and try to plan larger scale business things.

What you want to do next with your career,

where you want to go.

And then there's the level of authoring that's just

figuring out how you're going to get to the place

you need to be.

There's a convention six weeks from now that I've

agreed to go to, do I have the plane tickets,

do I have the hotel reservation, am I splitting a room

with somebody or not, have I actually told this person

that I'm going to do that, so all the logistics.

And some writers at various stages in their career

will hire a personal assistant to help with the logistics

that's not the place that I'm at right now, but

some of that stuff you really never can offload.

You're always going to be fielding questions about

your business, trying to run and build it and

that will always be something that's in tension with

the actual creative part of the job.

So money is a touchy question in the publishing world,

especially money for writers specifically.

There's this vision of the starving artist as somebody

who's like, tuberculotic in a garret somewhere,

can't afford heat, coughing into a rag and desperately

scrawling out words of genius.

And this is a dangerous and problematic way to

think about doing art.

I mean even if you look at some of the great writers of

the last two, three hundred years, these are people

who did their peak artistic work even if they had

some period of living a van or a garret or something

a lot of their peak artistic work was done after reaching

a level of security.

Writers don't write well when they're hungry.

So it is really important to be thinking about

where the money's coming from and where's it going.

Writing's also starting a small business and that's

the thing that I think trips a lot of people up.

You're going into business as a sole proprietor,

of you LLC you are not going to get any loans to start

the business, you're not going to get any venture money.

And probably if you're into a writer, you have spent

a lot of time making stuff up, making cool stories,

and that sort of technical skill is something that

you have an enormous amount of expertise at,

but the business side is maybe a place where you'll

lag behind a little bit and publishing is it's own

separate universe of business even from working in

tech or working in law, working in a lot of different

professional fields.

So all of that said,

money as a writer can come from a lot of different sources.

Novels are generally, novels that are published with

traditional publishing, through traditional publishing

pay you in advance, which is basically a down payment

on the royalties that you will eventually earn from

the book having been published.

And that advance is against some percentage of the

cover price or the publisher's take home price of

the book that gets published as a unit either as

an electronic unit or as a physical unit.

The advance is if you're publisher is reputable,

the advance is non-refundable.

So at the very least, even if no books sell,

you get to keep however many thousand dollars the

publisher gave you for the advance, provided that

you deliver to them a book that they can then sell.

So the advance money when you're starting out is

what most authors are taking home.

This means that the early stages of your writing career

are going to be, unless you're sort of a sport,

unless you've had a really excellent first deal,

or unless things go surprisingly for you,

you're going to be at you're leanest in your first

year or two after publication.

If the book does reasonably well, I'm not saying

explodes into bestseller stardom status, but if it does

well enough to keep you working,

at some point you're going to earn out your advance

on that book and what that means is the royalties

that you've sold which will generally be you can

think about it as like a dollar or a couple dollars

per copy of book sold,

will close out the however many thousand dollar advance

that you earned initially.

After that, you have a passive income stream,

and that's where publishing starts to get

kind of interesting as an author.

Even if your books aren't in New York Times Bestseller

categories, if you have enough books that have earned out

and they stay in print and they keep selling,

you start adding up these checks that are going to come

in with no further work on your part.

Also you have as an author, your subsidiary rights to sell.

The big ticket ones of those are movie and television rights

and some people get their series made or get their

big movie made and then that's what they're eating on

for the rest of their lives.

But a lot of people make a little bit of money

selling options to works that they publish.

Hollywood is generally pretty hungry for content

and it's really excited to talk to people about

cool new stories that they've written.

So you can make a certain number of thousands of dollars

selling options for a year or two years to a studio,

to a screenwriter who might then try to adapt and

sell that story.

But there are also translations into foreign languages,

a lot of people make a lot of their money off of that.

And then if you've sold a translation into a foreign

language you'll also eventually maybe get royalties

off of that so you have all of these different

ways that money's coming in just off of a traditionally

published book.

Last year about a third of my income was passive,

and two thirds of my income were active.

And that shifts around from year to year

depending on what projects I'm doing,

or depending on when major deals come down the pike

so sometimes you'll sign a contract for many books

at once and there will be a large on-signing percentage

of that contract, so frequently advances are broken off

into three chunks, at least in my experience.

There will be a chunk that you get paid on the signing

of the deal, there's a chunk you get paid on the

submission of the manuscript, and then the chunk you get

paid on the publication of the manuscript.

So if you sign a decently sized deal, then in that year

you'll get paid the on-signing chunk of the contract

for whatever books you're working on, plus whatever

books you delivered that year plus whatever books

you published and then you have your royalty income

which is always growing.

You're getting a sense maybe as I'm talking about this

that writing income is often in flux,

and this is absolutely true.

One of the real dangers of this job is the income

is very spiky, you get royalty payments twice a year.

You get your advances for new contracts whenever

those come up, and there may be a lag between

agreeing on the general shape of a deal and having

a final hammered out contract.

So it's not uncommon for deals to take weeks to negotiate

and if you're the kind of person who really needs

that paycheck to come in every two weeks in order to make

your budgeting and your process work, then this can

be a very dicey business to be involved in.

Once the passive income reaches a certain dependable level

then you start being able to ease up on that.

That's kind of the way it works and then there's

a lot of growth potential both as passive income increases

and as you sell more books and become more of a recognized

face and can argue for larger advances.

For more infomation >> Max, Author Part 1 - What I do and how much I make - Duration: 12:17.

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How Much Sleep Does Your Child Need - Duration: 0:31.

Hi, I'm Dr. Edith Bracho Sanchez with

today's tip for kids from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Every parent knows sleep is essential for the entire family's health and happiness.

But how much does your child really need?

Toddlers and preschoolers need anywhere from 10 to 14 hours of sleep.

School-aged kids need at least 8 or 9 hours of sleep a night

– and some kids may need more.

If your child seems sleepy in the morning,

talk with your pediatrician on how to improve the quality of sleep she is getting.

For more tips on kids and sleep, visit HealthyChildren.org.

For more infomation >> How Much Sleep Does Your Child Need - Duration: 0:31.

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How Does a Charitable Contribution Affect My Taxes? - Duration: 1:24.

Today we're going to be discussing charitable contributions and that is one

Today we're going to be discussing charitable contributions and that is one

a few things to think about. First, you have got to figure out how much are you going

to want to be gifting and is it something that you can actually deduct

on your taxes? So first of all, you have to be filing a "Schedule A", which is

Itemized Deductions, in order to actually deduct any charitable contributions on

your tax return. Your deadline to make this charitable contribution is December 31st

of the year that you're hoping to get the deduction. Now the IRS does put

limits on how much you can deduct. So you have to know what your adjusted gross

income (AGI) is likely going to be. The max is right about 50 percent of your adjusted

gross income. It could go down to 30 percent or as low as 20 depending on the

organization that you're gifting to. Is it a church? Is it a school? Is it a

private foundation? Those are all items that will determine how much you're able

to gift. And is it going to be cash? Or is it going to be highly appreciated assets?

Those are also different types of considerations you want to make. Again

those are all questions that should be answered but if you need

more information go to

purefinancial.com

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