Fall 2022

How Colorado companies can address suicide in the workplace

Denver Business Journal — Sept. 30, 2022

The workplace plays a key role in mental health and suicide prevention, according to both national and Colorado-based organizations putting increased emphasis this month on employers’ role in crafting policies that support employee well-being.

The man behind Andrew Hudson’s Job List talks Colorado hiring trends

Denver Business Journal — Aug 5, 2022

Andrew Hudson, whose website Andrew Hudson’s Job List has been a popular source of Colorado job postings for 25 years, says the hiring trends he’s seeing right now are “a whiplash” from what he saw just a few months ago.

Mid 2022

Fan Expo Denver brought costumed fans downtown

Denver Business Journal – July 5, 2022

Fan Expo Denver, an annual convention known for attracting more than 100,000 attendees to downtown — many of them costumed — returned over the July 4 holiday weekend.

How Colorado employers can better support the mental health of workers

Denver Business Journal – May 13, 2022

Companies still recovering from the pandemic may find there’s another crisis looming over workplaces related to mental health.

Here’s what 420 looked like in Denver in 2022

Denver Business Journal – April 22, 2022

In Denver, the Mile High 420 Festival was back in-person this year for the first time since 2019. Event producer Pepe Breton estimated 60,000 attended the cannabis celebration in Civic Center Park downtown.

Late 2021

Hi, I changed jobs and wrote some business news stuff.

Denver’s Pop Culture Convention returns as Fan Expo Denver this weekend

Denver Business Journal – Oct. 29, 2021

Get ready for the return of cosplay to downtown Denver this weekend. Denver’s comics and pop culture fan convention is back for the first time since 2019.

Denver game studio hopes for big hit with Dune release

Denver Business Journal – Oct. 20, 2021

Denver-based game studio Dire Wolf Digital hopes to gain a wider audience starting Friday.

Early 2021

Experts warn of loneliness epidemic worsening alongside COVID-19

The Hill – March 11, 2021

A growing epidemic of loneliness is affecting large swaths of the U.S. population, exacerbated by isolation measures advised by health officials during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Best New Gear for Winter in Boulder

Travel Boulder – February 4, 2021

This winter, Boulder gear stores are predicting that even the most outdoorsy among us will be getting outdoors more.

Summer 2020

Courtesy Trump Statue Initiative
Hollywood gambles on first major movie release since coronavirus lockdowns
The Hill – August 21, 2020
Hollywood is gambling with high stakes this week as theater chains reopen and a major release hits cinemas for the first time since March.

How to cool off in Boulder’s hot summer months
Travel Boulder – July 31, 2020

It’s hot, hot, hot this summer — averaging a few degrees above normal — and many public pools are still closed due to the coronavirus. Fortunately, there are still plenty of opportunities to hop in a refreshing lake or river fed from Colorado’s cold mountain water.

Artists install anti-Trump living statues around DC
The Hill – July 17, 2020

Living statues were installed around Washington, D.C. on Friday depicting President Trump as a “destroyer of civil rights and liberties.”

Boulder Breweries With Fabulous Patios
Travel Boulder – June 25, 2020

Looking for that socially distanced spot to get a craft beer in Boulder this summer? Let this list take the research out of your next happy hour.

Drive-In Movies and Events Near Boulder
Travel Boulder – June 3, 2020

Looking for something to do from the safety and comfort of your car? Drive-in movies, concerts and other shows are making a comeback along the Front Range.

Spring 2020

Here’s when all 50 states plan to reopen after coronavirus restrictions
The Hill – April 20, 2020
Governors are beginning to announce timelines for relaxing strict measures taken to mitigate the coronavirus. Many states are dropping stay-at-home orders beginning May 1, while several states have not yet announced an end to restrictions.
Americans are howling together at night amid isolation for coronavirus
The Hill – April 1, 2020
At 8 p.m. last night, howling was heard across the nation from houses of Americans in isolation due to the coronavirus.
Controversial satire ‘The Hunt’ tackles partisan divide
The Hill – March 13, 2020
It’s the “most talked about movie of the year … that no one’s actually seen,” according to the tagline for “The Hunt,” the controversial new film released Friday where “deplorables” and “liberal elites” kill each other.
4 Soups (and a Cocktail) to Order in Denver When You Have A Cold
5280.com – March 10, 2020
Even though coronavirus is the illness on all of our minds right now, it’s also regular, old cold and flu season, which means some of us are stuck at home with Kleenex and Netflix (and not because we’ve been quarantined). If the old adage to “feed a cold” for a speedier recovery is true, Denver’s restaurants are here to offer a wealth of more nourishing options than Lipton chicken noodle. While you shouldn’t venture out when you’re sick, each of the delicious soup offerings below are available through a delivery service. (And the cocktail is there for you when you’re back on your feet.) So, order up: Your stomach will thank you for the nourishment and your fellow Denverites will thank you for staying home.

Winter 2019

‘His Dark Materials’ Imagines a Church Without God
Christianity Today – Nov. 7, 2019

Imagine a world where the church exists without Jesus. Where a hierarchical church authority controls society, but lacks the genuine faith to guide it. His Dark Materials, a new HBO show based on the trilogy of the same name by Phillip Pullman, takes viewers into this oppressive world where the “Magisterium,” a fictional church, rules with fear and brutality.

Writer/Director Rian Johnson on Going From Star Wars to Knives Out
The Credits – Nov. 5, 2019

Director Rian Johnson wanted to do something “completely different” from Star Wars with his new movie, Knives Out (released Nov. 27).

So you want to be a freelance writer?

People ask me all the time how to become a freelance writer. Sometimes people seem to think becoming a freelance writer is like setting up an office and putting out a sign: If you build it, they will come. This is false. Writing jobs almost never come to the freelancer; the freelancer has to find writing jobs one by one, sell herself and her ability to do that individual job, and get that job done  — made to order, so to speak — on deadline, every time.

There’s no magic formula, but the ingredients I can identify for being a working freelance writer are: connections, ideas, time and persistence.

Connections

Some people start with connections. Other people are like me and research to find the right person to contact in order to find a gig. I cold email editors all the time, usually after scouring an outlet’s website or social media feeds for contact details. I ask one connection if they have another. It helps that I work full time in media and have media connections: If I know one editor at a certain outlet, they can usually direct me to the correct editor for the topic I want to freelance write about. Connections build on connections if you follow up. Freelancing requires being a consistent networker.

Ideas

You are selling your ideas as much as your writing. If you don’t have ideas  — things you are longing to write about — you can’t be a freelance writer. Do you read your favorite blog or magazine and find yourself thinking, I wish I had written this? That’s the start. Write down you ideas. Develop them by brainstorming who you could interview to provide insight or where you might go to observe details. Sometimes the idea comes first; sometimes the outlet does. Matchmaking an idea to an outlet that might be interested in publishing it is a key part of the process.

Time

Freelancing takes an almost painful amount of time  — which is why you have to be passionate about your ideas to do it. I don’t make my living freelancing, but I have for periods of three months at a time (while between full-time salaried jobs) and it’s really, really tough to make the cost/benefit ratio even out. I prefer freelancing with less concern for monetary ROI. There’s no consistent pay scale for freelancing: Jobs can pay anywhere from $50 per article to $800, in my experience, with no regard for how much work went into each. Freelancing for a living requires taking jobs you don’t love in order to make ends meet and to balance out the time involved in developing, pitching and executing each idea. At this point in my career, I freelance on the side on passion topics like beer and movies simply for the joy of writing about things I enjoy.

Persistence

Idea. Research editors and outlets, send a pitch. No response. Research and pitch again. Repeat. Get an assignment. Report and write. Revise. Repeat. 

The cycle of freelancing is all hustle. The payoff is watching those bylines pile up. My best advice is to stop to enjoy the accomplishments. You worked hard for it!