Twitch is devoted to covering unusual films from around the globe. We're not anti-Hollywood per se but we bore easily and don't see much point in covering the same five or ten films that every other film site is already covering.
Our readers tend to be college age and up, a fairly civil bunch. We get a LOT of buyers from different film companies reading, too, because we do a lot of their legwork for them. Our comment threads are usually pretty quiet because we're talking about films people don't know that much about but, yes, I have good contact with a lot of the regular readers.
I was writing for someone else and our tastes were obviously diverging. It seemed better to chart our own paths while we were still on friendly terms rather than fighting for control.
It varies. My laptop is my office and I've been traveling a lot lately so cafes, airport lounges, hotel rooms. Or, quite often, on my couch in the living room.
Finding things? Well, readers send a lot of stuff in, I attend a handful of major festivals and all the major film markets, I've gotten to know a lot of film makers who send me stuff, I've collected contributing writers from all around the world, and I've got a few hundred trailer sites, news blogs, sales agents and other news sources bookmarked to check on a regular basis. I write only about the things that catch my eye and legitimately excite me, I never write about things because I feel like I should.
I've written about three thousand … no way to pick one out of all that.
Ah, that'd be the Isabella Rossellini bug-porn one. That's still up close to the top of our traffic charts every day.
Twitch
Ah, that's funny. You're a funny man. I've been doing this for four years now and have easily the most popular site in my particular niche and I'm still working a day job. If there's some business model for this that will let you get rich doing it, then it's obviously eluded me.
Depends on the blogger, really, and how well they want to write. Blogging's more personal, basically, but I think the writer's personality should come through in “serious” journalism as well.
Grady Hendrix at Kaiju Shakedown. He's a friend and hysterically funny. And there's a British comedy writer named James Henry who I read every day.
Yeah, it has. I'm not living off the blog but it has led to me programming for a handful of film festivals, doing some consulting work, etc. Plus I was an associate producer on a Spanish film last year and am again on a little US indie that's shooting right now. Blogging ain’t ever likely to pay my bills but it has put me in a position where film very likely will in the near future.