I'm going to take the liberty of assuming this was directed at me, since it's pretty much a reply to my previous post on the subject...
Not once in your chasing life would there have been a time you would have accepted a TV gig/sponsor/income source?
There have been times when I would've wanted to, but as I learned the hard way, those offers came with stipulations, the kind which would've turned chasing into something completely different than the activity I fell in love with so many years ago. I've had offers and turned them down, because what they were asking of me was, to me, just ridiculous. I refused to go through any type of "screening" process to be hand picked out of a group of other chasers, like some type of beauty contest. I found it asinine that I would be contacted by a producer, and THEN told I had to jump through all kinds of hoops (along with other chasers) so they could judge who they wanted. My take was this: if you do your research, you should be able to find out about a chaser on your own. By the time you're actually calling me, I better be hearing "we want YOU. Here's the offer....." Not "Okay Mr. Adams, we need you to do this and this and this, and then after we've reviewed all the other chasers' this and this and this and yours too, we'll get back to you." Whatever, I'll save you the trouble. I don't do tricks.
My point is that deep down, we are all likely similar in our reasons for chasing (a love for storms), and any one of us could have been the 'star' if we'd been the one chosen.
If we'd been chosen AND accepted. You make the assumption that we were all standing in line hoping to be the next star. Probably many were, but you shouldn't dismiss the fact that others never had any interest. As I stated before, myself (and many others I'd imagine) have received unsolicited offers before that we passed up.
A chaser is a chaser is a chaser. Some are better chasers than others, but I contend that we are really not all that different as to why we are out there to begin with and certainly not 'special' in any real sense of importance. Putting any chaser on a pedestal - or throwing one under the bus - for being the star is hypocritical to me, because it could have been any one of us.
Chasers are similar in one aspect only, the love of storms. Beyond that, we're as different as snowflakes (I laughed as I wrote that, but it gets the point across). If you mean outside perspective, then I agree, because the general public likely sees us all collectively as just a bunch of (1) nerdy losers or (2) adrenaline junkies...which is unfortunate. You said you think it's hypocritical to throw someone under a bus or put them on a pedestal because anyone of us could've been "the star." IMO that's a ridiculous reason. For starters, as I mentioned above, some people never wanted the spotlight, therefore we can't possibly be viewed as hypocritical for the reason you stated. Secondly, broad-brushing any criticism of a "star" chaser as hypocritical suggests they are infallible, which in fact DOES put them on a pedestal, which goes against your other point in the "hypocritical" sense. Lastly, it cancels out your original statement, that "a chaser is a chaser is a chaser."
Also, I don't think you can truly calibrate who is and isn't "great" these days. The bar is pretty low as far as ability required, with technology allowing anyone with the time and means to be successful right out of the box. Maybe as recently as a decade ago you could say "that person is better than that person", but technology has since made those determinations impossible IMO.
Knowing everything I know about the TV world now, I would be very leery of accepting an entertainment deal these days - but I can't honestly say that I would have *never* done it at some point in the past. And I'd not rule out accepting something I deemed worthy in the future (though that's highly unlikely, as I don't have the energetic personality that TV types love). I'd say most of us probably wouldn't, either, if we found ourselves faced with the real decision and not the hypothetical forum thread situation.
I agree mostly. I had no clue about the television world back in the 90s, but fortunately I knew enough about fair compensation to know when to cut a negotiation off immediately once it became obvious they were trying to lowball me (which ALL production companies did, at least to me). But I had to learn the hard way about things like sound bites and interview flow/direction. Fortunately, those lessons learned didn't cost me anything but time, patience, and a little pride (they couldn't use any of my stuff because I rambled). There was a time (back during those days I just described) when I was wild about the idea of television and being recognized and doing this professionally....but I believed I could keep being myself, chase the way I do, and they would just pay me to do it. I had no clue that with "stardom" everything I'd known about chasing would've been changed to fit the script, angle, producer's whim. I am very thankful that I didn't step into something all starry-eyed that I couldn't get out of without legal issues. So I guess I learned very early into my chasing life that television stardom and fame and fortune simply isn't for me.