Makeup artist. Most people think it’s lalala let’s play in makeup it’s so fun! Doing your own makeup, getting ready to go out is fun. I’m not doing that.
This industry (film, fashion, TV, commercial, e-comm) is about 20% makeup AT MOST. The other 80% and up is Paperwork (I am an accountant, tax preparer, money manager, I receive emails and return them daily, hourly, if I miss an email I might lose a job in three minutes, receipt stacker, insurance is a requirement, I bill clients and keep them on a schedule, have to keep track of business expenses separately from personal, etc etc etc)
Inventory (can’t run out of things I use for every job, have to order things in time to receive them, don’t let things get too old) Website (update after every few jobs, overhaul regularly)
Research (new tech, new techniques, industry changes, is this production company a good one, is this location safe, what are my peers doing, does this company pay on time, who did their last campaign, this trendy new ingredient - is it any good? who is this new brand, who owns this other one, who is this client)
Client relations (one of the few things separating me from other artists is how much my clients like me. Or don’t)
Kit updating (new products, new bags, new technology, new brands, new employees in PR who give me gratis, new trends)
Organization (I have an entire 7x12 room for makeup and hair supplies, the investment of time, energy, and money into organization is exhausting)
Chasing a paycheck (paychecks occasionally go missing - did they not send it? Or did they take out taxes and send it without an invoice number for my records? Who can tell)
Wardrobe maintenance (I must look professional in 90 degree shoots outside, in multi-billion dollar corporate offices, twenty-hour shoots in hundred-year old armory basements, and exteriors in winter. I have totally separate work wardrobes from my regular clothes)
Health management (I’m exposed to sick people all the time. “Fashion Week Flu” is a really thing. This has increased a hundredfold recently)
Budgeting (so I get through months of few jobs without losing my apartment)
Networking (social media, making friends and keeping them, having people I can trust to hand work to and take work from)
Education (that I pay for and take time off for)
Understanding and predicting the industry trends
The psychological drain of talent who isn’t cooperative, producers who think your department is a waste of money, and a crew who think you’re a waste of space.
Not to mention that each job requires a slightly different kit. This means that I have to touch everything in my kit before and after every job. I have basically, three to five different kinds of kit, and they run from a 30lb backpack to about 120lbs in five bags, that requires a car service to transport.
Another not-to-mention is basic sanitation requires me (and always has) to clean everything I’ve touched during and after every single job.
It’s not like I don’t enjoy my work - I’ve been on movie sets, joked around with celebrities, stood on stage on Broadway, chased by paparazzi, been on tv and movies, been hugged by clients, paid 1k for thirty seconds of work, I shop a lot, and play a lot, and get to spend days having coffee with friends and calling it work.
My job is amazing and the creative process is almost as rewarding as the paychecks, but it sure as shit is not putting pink lipstick on a friend.
Username: Constant-Wanderer