- Joined
- Feb 13, 2022
I feel like this is both true and false. In the digital age, getting into arts literally could not be easier. There are countless, COUNTLESS FOSS and tools for any painting, image, video, musical need, and if not then sailing the seas for it is also quite trivial (This also rings true for any learning material for it). The real cost of course is time and how much of it you are willing to spend on it to refine your skills. There's a multitude of factors that can effect how much one really spends on it, maybe you're a deadend wagie making it paycheck by paycheck and sleeping once you get home, maybe you're a parent who has no time to engage with being creative, maybe you're just lazy and not really feeling it. Either way, "getting gud" is definitely a huge time sink that some people don't have room to schedule in.Music, art, sports, they all cost money now. If you're an average working shmoe living in Nowhere, TX you can't expect your kids to become talented stars by just playing the family piano or throwing a pigskin around the backyard. No, you gotta get lessons. And lessons cost money. Everyone else is training their asses off, so your kids have to as well or else forget about it. Gone are the days when you can be a star just by believing in yourself and trying really hard.
And don't think "being an animator" is enough to get you into "The Industry", no they expect you to have a multilevel set of skills on you (video editing, audio engineering, storyboarding, etc etc) for companies to think you're worthy of hiring, so add those on top of "getting gud" at the arts.

