this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2025
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My one complaint in your comment is the "if you're a good artist you'll find work", it's simply not true.
I'm a shit artist (im an untrained outsider slapping paint on surfaces to vaguely resemble what my clients ask for) and I find work, yet none of my friends who are legitimately talented are finding anything.
I understand what you're saying, that the job market is a lot of luck and can be unfair. But it does sound like they need to keep trying. Every determined, talented person I've seen enter my industry (gamedev, an industry at the bleeding edge of ai art as a technology) has done so after hundreds of rejected applications and eventually broken in. Is it fair? Not at all. Will you eventually have your value recognized if you keep at it long enough and keep honing your craft? Absolutely. The difficult part lies in not burning out and quitting during the agonizingly grueling process of breaking in, which I can sympathize with, as I've gone through it myself. I have seen many people end up down that route, but the thing everybody on that route shared was that they didn't care enough about doing art to just keep on trying despite whatever circumstances they had thrown at them, which is just an unfortunate reality. And yes, for what it's worth, AI is absolutely making that process more frustrating.
You are being downvoted for your survivor bias and your lack of respect for Miyazaki.