Society disappoints me. Those who are naturally and instinctively drawn to the arts are looked down upon, and shunned in the working world, and have to force themselves to grind through another field just for a chance and financial stability.
. The problem is artistic driven people need to learn how to market themselves better. So many don't get scholarships for their talents. So many don't actually sell their art. Why not go to CC and get a degree in marketing on the low and continue to perfect your craft. I didn't know it was just about "art" as in painting or graphic designs. Thought the topic was in reference to art in general such as music, painting, acting, creative writing, etc.
To say not to pursue a career out of a hobby is foolish. Many people's hobbies start off as that but end up as money-making careers.

I think that people have the mindset that art degrees are vanity degrees because art in itself is not deemed as a necessity, but we all agree that we need doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc.
I myself have a graphic design degree, I could've gotten a painting degree faster, but I know people with painting degrees, that have a hard time getting steady work. I don't knock the painting degrees or the theatre majors because I would rather them pursue that instead of a doctor who always wanted to be an actor or sculptor trying to operate on me because in reality they may not be devoted 100% to their craft or profession.

shoulda majored in finance
at people spending close to 100 racks for a private school or for profit school art degree.
on the inside, because you know a bunch of
looking people were like
to that same ad and thinking they can make it in hollywood or some some based on thatin factat you dudes with the audacity for thinking your worthless ass deserves to be paid for anything

I feel you on that post, but J.K Rowling breh? That's a great artist?So in this topic we encourage people to not follow their passions and instead do whatever ensures the best chance at making money because nothing else matters?
Glad J.K. Rowling, Quentin Tarantino, Denzel Washington and countless others didn't "follow the rules".
I would never tell someone not to seek out making money with a vanilla corporate job they aren't truly passionate about. If money is all you care about in regards to feeling fulfilled, cool. Nothing wrong with that.
But I'd also never tell someone to reject following their dreams in hopes of becoming something truly unique and great. There's no right or wrong path. I do believe strongly that one should follow their heart and dreams no matter how unlikely the outcome for success might seem though. You never know, and it's not like education for a regular decent paying job is something that becomes extinct with time. Can always fall back on something later in life.
to the rise and grinders. Whether you're working an office job, perfecting your hip hop producing skills, or attending acting school.
