@TankTheTeck are you touring with ECB this year? PLEASE SAY YES, FYI your German is getting better and better! LOVE THAT YOU GO OUT OF YOUR WAY TO LEARN THE LANGUAGE 🤟🏼.
Accident is exactly it. Same for me. Playing in local metalcore bands in the Nashville area. I befriend a dude in another band. A much bigger band. We got close. My band broke up one day, and he asked me what I had planned for the next 3 months. I said get a real job. And he told me to call a number and say he sent me. Next day I was meeting with this dude and I was doing merch for a popular pop band out of Nashville. And from there its just doing your job. Dont compain. And whoever is in charge knows who does their job. And if you do it, they will call for the next tour. Because alot of people dont take it seriously. So when someone actually does, you get noticed.
Exactly! I think the most important part of working for bands on tour aside from just getting along with people is letting your work speak for you. People notice. Almost every job I've ever gotten has been cause someone from another tour that I have worked with at some point remembered me and called.
Yes please, more of this. Roofer, glass blower, radiologist, fighter pilot, roadie... it's always interesting to see and/or listen to people who know their job.
Showed up to one too many gigs with a camera in hand and BOOM - tour photographer/videographer for 8 years on and off. More accurate title would like tour mom, babysitter, counselor and general cat herder to a bunch of crazy guys who barely kept it together , but I loved my time on the road and love Storytime with Tank!
I’ve shared my story before, but I saw a band post on Facebook that they needed a guitar tech. I was recently laid off from my job, so I emailed their management and emailed them. After some discussions, I got the gig. And it’s been almost nonstop since.
I'm 100% for this series. I love music but I have little knowledge of the industry, especially the touring industry, so I love this (and the roadie vlogs).
I'm not even a metal fan. All my life I've been into indie guitar bands like The Cure, Pixies, the Strokes, Blur etc. But I keep coming back to your channel and your tour vlogs with Electric Callboy. For the friendliness and the good vibes and the human warmth that you all send out. Keep at it, buddy. Sending you all only the best vibes!
worked as a local stagehand in NE Ohio covering venues in Cleveland and Akron in the local unions and always had the most respect for the guys on the road.
considering how unlikely it is for a local band to actually take off (especially without anything to make them stand out) it definitely was the right choice to take the sure money. if a band was serious and actually best friends than they'd agree and spent the time you're on tour to prepare new music until you come back and use it all to kickstart the band. i'd never wanna be in a band just for the success. if it's not with my best friends and i can wait for their personal stuff to pan out for us to focus than it's not the right people. And Tank ending up with Electric Callboy just shows he did the best to end up with the right people in the end. That friendship seems deeper than the industry would ever allow to grow naturally.
I wonder how many people working in the industry fell into it? That was certainly the case for me, I was a regular at a local 150 cap venue and got to know the owners and staff. One day, the sound guy said, "You've seen me do this enough times, I have double booked myself; do you think you could do sound tonight?" I said yes, and between you, I, and the Internet, I was terrified I'd screw it up; despite this, the overall mix was decent, I learned on the fly, and this became my career, becoming the house engineer, later moving onto a bigger 300 cap venue, taking on more responsibility, PA maintenance, lighting and video, and even worked additional nights in a larger 1000 cap venue, acting as a backup house engineer. All this is history now; I met my now wife on MySpace, moved to the US, and went back to my fallback career in IT, as in Kansas, the scope for working sound is limited, and often does not pay a living wage to support a family.
"It's all about who knows YOU." Absolutely! In the industry it's not about asking around looking for gigs. It's people trying to make music or do a show that say "I need someone for X" and someone saying "I know a guy."
I love this! Please keep doing Storytime!! One thing that you didn't really highlight much in all this that I think was the most crucial moment was when you told the Tour Manager that you know lighting. I've met so many people in the industry that are super talented and knowledgeable but they never put themselves out there. Sometimes all it takes is for you to say "I can do that" and boom! you just created that opportunity for yourself.
3:38 Thank you for making this distinction ("who knows you"), Tank. I've long felt uncomfortable by the original adage, and this reframes it beautifully. More of this please!
I won a meet n greet with Metallica. Waiting at the 3rd stage for them to show up I caught a stick from one of the local bands playing. Talked to the local bands that were wrapping up to see if they'd sign it. Metallica's crew came up to say they needed to hurry up and get out, so I offered to help them throw some gear and they gave me tix to their next show. And since they gave me the tix I offered to help them setup and teardown that show too. And since I was there already I did the same for all the bands there. They gave me tix to another show and comp'd my bar tab. Ended up working a gig where half the dudes there were named Dave. Singer said he needed Dave. Bass? Sound? Merch? Bartender?? He shouts "I need 'ROADIE DAVE!!" And I've been Roadie Dave ever since. Repeated that for a year or so at least once a week and I started getting calls to come help with shows. Started getting offers for going on tours and gigs with bigger and bigger bands and finally actually getting paid!! Started hearing "Oh YOU'RE Roadie Dave!" from people I'd never met. Crystal Method's roadie knew me on sight and I still have no idea how he knew me at all. NGL I was pretty stoked to be somewhat of a local legend lol. So how do you get to be a Roadie? Volunteer, be cool and professional, NO FANBOYING!! Don't be that guy!!, learn the ropes, learn the people, and show up early and often. Watch the Eddie Riggs "A roadie's job" clip from Brutal Legend.
Thank you Tank for telling how you got to be a roady And for all the other stuff you do on your channel It gives you more Appreciation for what Goes on in the music industry.
I love that you are doing this! I have always wondered how you got into this. Whatever you decide to do in your life, it isn't easy and you have to work your way up.
@TankTheTech Die hard Halestorm fan here,awesome that you got to tour w/them! Without giving too much detail I've not been able to get out to concerts. A very close friend was gifted tickets & the meet greet for one at their recent acoustic tour dates. She told them I was the one who introduced her to the band & told them I had not been able to make some shows. Lzzy said let's make her a personalized video. I was gobsmacked when my friend sent the video wishing me well. Incredibly nice of her to do that! Hope you don't mind me sharing this story. Absolutely love this series, keep them coming!!!!!
Oh man I love tour stories. So good. Thank you for sharing with us. I started touring on and off in 2004. I absolutely love it. I'm trying to get back out there full time. The road is the only place I feel at home and I know it's where I belong. I'm looking to drive, do merch, merch manage or pretty much anything else I can help out with to get me back out there. It's not easy to get a gig but I'm giving it my best. I appreciate the videos Tank!
I am just now putting 2 and 2 together that you were in Inept. I saw you guys countless times back in the day, everywhere from Chicago out to the small town shows outside of the suburbs. Still have the CDs in the truck.
I stepped on a bee barefoot. It just happened to occur where a regional sound and lighting company was loading out for a tour. I had grown up in a theater company and had drifted to the techie side and asked them about some of their lighting equipment. Turned out they were scrambling to support some dates with odds and ends as a favor in an emergency. As it turned out we all got lucky, this was 77 and I made more in a week than I was in a month, they got to support their main contract ShaNaNa and I ended up with Chrystal Gale. The very first venue would not allow the lighting trees on the stage and the concert was going to be canceled. Fortunately we could use anything they had hung and the house system and mainly country ballads fit right in my skill set. So I refocused and gelled a show on the fly with just the evolving stage setup using just a bit more saturated coloring than I would have for a play. Got a lot of work because of that. I probably should have taken some of the band offers I got along the way, but the challenge of briefly supporting acts on the way down or up that use regional sound was just more alluring. Probably wouldn't have burnt out so quick and lasted a lot longer before I just joined the Army.
Even though I play drums for local bands here, I've always been interested in the tech side of things, so your stories are a treat to me. Keep those coming Tank!
That was great story. I hope you will continue it because you're good storyteller. Thank you for share it. More story from first show in other countries, culture shocks (video about sauna was fantastic) etc?
Small world. I saw your band Inept play several times back in the day. I was in a local band at that time in the Chicagoland area and always liked your guys shows. Not sure if you were still playing with them for this but I still have the Inept EP Say Goodbye to This.
Please do more of these. I did a little tour managing back in 2008-2011. Mind you it was for a band that really stuck to the southwest, and mostly local home shows. My buddy managed the band and asked me to tour manage. I didnt know wtf I was doing but agreed to do it. Looking back it was the best time of my life. Unfortunately they broke up, I focused more on a stable job. Fast forward I'm now almost 20 years deep into work at high end country clubs overseeing the production of events. I feel like now with that under my belt, and with such high expectations having worked at high end country clubs, I have the skills I didnt have back then to tour manage. I have way high self confidence which is something I definitely lacked in my early 20's. I would love to get back into tour managing somehow, someway. I almost wish you'd be down for an intern or at least a "Tour Managing Course" so learn from. Anyways, love all the content, Tank. Keep it up dude!
i would assume that nowadays, his former band members know that too. but they were all young back then. the world looks different when you just fell out of the nest :D
Yeah, I'm still totally cool with all the old band guys. One of them is still one of my best friends and was one of my groomsmen in my wedding years ago, and I just saw him recently when we had a show in Chicago.
Well, to be honest, I've never booked/routed a tour. As a Tour Manager, I just get all those details from management and the booking agent and then just start coordinating everything to make it happen from a logistical standpoint.
i ended up as a tech and eventually a truck driver on tour starting as a stage hand and being in the right place at the right time. drum tech got fired and was asked if i was interested said yes was told i had a hour to get home and pack before the bus left and its been 20 years in the industry at this point.
This is cool stuff, lets hear more! I have my "what if" story. I used to book/promote bands out of riverside, ca. I got there because i used to be in the music scene from security to roadie to drum and guitar tech. For a spell i was in a couple of bands. I set up a cool party night with the local radio dj, Dirty D from the now defunct X103.9. In the midst of it, i had many musician friends, one was Aaron Rossi from Prong at the time and they were needing a tour manager. It would have meant leaving a cushy truck driving job i had. I honestly wish i would have taken it but with no money saved up to cover bills while on tour, i had to pass on it.
Same for me, accidentally. A few friends wanted me to come hangout and sell merch for them/drive. And now they have a 2 month tour including going to Canada. However I cannot do it full time because my main job is a 7 day on/off 6 figure job haha.
I know a lot of venues i work regularly have fun storys attached to them. Would be cool if you did onsite story times to see venues and share storys of their city.
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I found this so interesting of a story 🤘🏽🔥🎶❤️🔥🫶🏽
@TankTheTeck are you touring with ECB this year? PLEASE SAY YES, FYI your German is getting better and better! LOVE THAT YOU GO OUT OF YOUR WAY TO LEARN THE LANGUAGE 🤟🏼.
@@KarenKrugerViljoen-m6p Ja sicher.
Please continue these
Okay.
Red firing you is a massive cliffhanger. We need that story ASAP if not next.
Next please!
Yes!
Okay that'll be next. Haha
@@TankTheTech looking forward to it!
made probably more than the Band with tips 😂
Accident is exactly it. Same for me. Playing in local metalcore bands in the Nashville area. I befriend a dude in another band. A much bigger band. We got close. My band broke up one day, and he asked me what I had planned for the next 3 months. I said get a real job. And he told me to call a number and say he sent me. Next day I was meeting with this dude and I was doing merch for a popular pop band out of Nashville. And from there its just doing your job. Dont compain. And whoever is in charge knows who does their job. And if you do it, they will call for the next tour. Because alot of people dont take it seriously. So when someone actually does, you get noticed.
Exactly! I think the most important part of working for bands on tour aside from just getting along with people is letting your work speak for you. People notice. Almost every job I've ever gotten has been cause someone from another tour that I have worked with at some point remembered me and called.
Yes please, more of this.
Roofer, glass blower, radiologist, fighter pilot, roadie... it's always interesting to see and/or listen to people who know their job.
Showed up to one too many gigs with a camera in hand and BOOM - tour photographer/videographer for 8 years on and off. More accurate title would like tour mom, babysitter, counselor and general cat herder to a bunch of crazy guys who barely kept it together , but I loved my time on the road and love Storytime with Tank!
This should 100% be a regular series
I find these stories super interesting
I’ve shared my story before, but I saw a band post on Facebook that they needed a guitar tech. I was recently laid off from my job, so I emailed their management and emailed them. After some discussions, I got the gig. And it’s been almost nonstop since.
Yup. Sometimes it just happens when you're not even trying. Hahaha. Hope you're doing well, man!
I'm 100% for this series. I love music but I have little knowledge of the industry, especially the touring industry, so I love this (and the roadie vlogs).
Would love to have this as a regular series. 100%! This first Roadie Storytime episode was fantastic!
I'm not even a metal fan. All my life I've been into indie guitar bands like The Cure, Pixies, the Strokes, Blur etc.
But I keep coming back to your channel and your tour vlogs with Electric Callboy. For the friendliness and the good vibes and the human warmth that you all send out.
Keep at it, buddy. Sending you all only the best vibes!
worked as a local stagehand in NE Ohio covering venues in Cleveland and Akron in the local unions and always had the most respect for the guys on the road.
considering how unlikely it is for a local band to actually take off (especially without anything to make them stand out) it definitely was the right choice to take the sure money. if a band was serious and actually best friends than they'd agree and spent the time you're on tour to prepare new music until you come back and use it all to kickstart the band. i'd never wanna be in a band just for the success. if it's not with my best friends and i can wait for their personal stuff to pan out for us to focus than it's not the right people.
And Tank ending up with Electric Callboy just shows he did the best to end up with the right people in the end. That friendship seems deeper than the industry would ever allow to grow naturally.
I wonder how many people working in the industry fell into it? That was certainly the case for me, I was a regular at a local 150 cap venue and got to know the owners and staff. One day, the sound guy said, "You've seen me do this enough times, I have double booked myself; do you think you could do sound tonight?" I said yes, and between you, I, and the Internet, I was terrified I'd screw it up; despite this, the overall mix was decent, I learned on the fly, and this became my career, becoming the house engineer, later moving onto a bigger 300 cap venue, taking on more responsibility, PA maintenance, lighting and video, and even worked additional nights in a larger 1000 cap venue, acting as a backup house engineer. All this is history now; I met my now wife on MySpace, moved to the US, and went back to my fallback career in IT, as in Kansas, the scope for working sound is limited, and often does not pay a living wage to support a family.
"It's all about who knows YOU." Absolutely! In the industry it's not about asking around looking for gigs. It's people trying to make music or do a show that say "I need someone for X" and someone saying "I know a guy."
Honestly its fascinating to hear how things surprisingly worked out.
Red is one of my favorite bands of all time, had no idea you got your career started with them haha. Love the story, would love to hear more!
Thanks Tank great story. Like this very much.
I'd listen to the whole story in chronological order honestly. Like next video being what happened next and how you got fired, next gig etc
This was great! thanks for sharing
I'm super excited to hear more. My schedule doesn't allow me to watch twitch very often so I rely on youtube uploads.
I was hooked after 5 minutes....need more of these
I love this! Please keep doing Storytime!! One thing that you didn't really highlight much in all this that I think was the most crucial moment was when you told the Tour Manager that you know lighting. I've met so many people in the industry that are super talented and knowledgeable but they never put themselves out there. Sometimes all it takes is for you to say "I can do that" and boom! you just created that opportunity for yourself.
This story has made me a bigger fan of Tank. HE TOURED WITH ALL TIME LOW AND RED??? THOSE ARE 2 OF MY FAVORITE BANDS
3:38 Thank you for making this distinction ("who knows you"), Tank. I've long felt uncomfortable by the original adage, and this reframes it beautifully. More of this please!
Please make this a regular series!! I really enjoyed this :)
Good stuff man. Absolutely looking forward to more stories
There’s a lot to be said for right place / right time 👍🏻
I won a meet n greet with Metallica. Waiting at the 3rd stage for them to show up I caught a stick from one of the local bands playing. Talked to the local bands that were wrapping up to see if they'd sign it. Metallica's crew came up to say they needed to hurry up and get out, so I offered to help them throw some gear and they gave me tix to their next show. And since they gave me the tix I offered to help them setup and teardown that show too. And since I was there already I did the same for all the bands there. They gave me tix to another show and comp'd my bar tab. Ended up working a gig where half the dudes there were named Dave. Singer said he needed Dave. Bass? Sound? Merch? Bartender?? He shouts "I need 'ROADIE DAVE!!" And I've been Roadie Dave ever since. Repeated that for a year or so at least once a week and I started getting calls to come help with shows. Started getting offers for going on tours and gigs with bigger and bigger bands and finally actually getting paid!! Started hearing "Oh YOU'RE Roadie Dave!" from people I'd never met. Crystal Method's roadie knew me on sight and I still have no idea how he knew me at all. NGL I was pretty stoked to be somewhat of a local legend lol.
So how do you get to be a Roadie? Volunteer, be cool and professional, NO FANBOYING!! Don't be that guy!!, learn the ropes, learn the people, and show up early and often. Watch the Eddie Riggs "A roadie's job" clip from Brutal Legend.
I’m loving these story videos
I can see this series blowing up and being really successful for you! 🤟🏼🤟🏼
Funny thing, listened to this live and loved it just as much on the re-watch.
Thank you Tank for telling how you got to be a roady And for all the other stuff you do on your channel It gives you more Appreciation for what Goes on in the music industry.
make this a regular series PLEASE
The Inept days! ❤
I hope you do more of these. It's great listening to your stories while I'm at work! I enjoy content like this.
As someone who used to be a box pusher at a local hotel, hearing these stories is always so interesting.
I'm keen to hear more stories, I find this interesting
I love this so much. Story is great and want to hear more. Also because of you I absolutely love Electric Callboy. Keep up the awesome work
Keep these coming please!
Bummed I missed the Twitch stream and happy to have YT vid to catch it. I definitely dig Roadie Stories and would love to hear more!
Another comment and a vote for more of this content! Thank you tank!
I love that you are doing this! I have always wondered how you got into this. Whatever you decide to do in your life, it isn't easy and you have to work your way up.
@TankTheTech Die hard Halestorm fan here,awesome that you got to tour w/them! Without giving too much detail I've not been able to get out to concerts. A very close friend was gifted tickets & the meet greet for one at their recent acoustic tour dates. She told them I was the one who introduced her to the band & told them I had not been able to make some shows.
Lzzy said let's make her a personalized video. I was gobsmacked when my friend sent the video wishing me well. Incredibly nice of her to do that!
Hope you don't mind me sharing this story.
Absolutely love this series, keep them coming!!!!!
Lzzy is top shelf excellence. Halestorm deserves every bit of fame they have, plus some more.
@davejohnston2197 Thank you for the reply. You are 💯 correct ♥
Oh man I love tour stories. So good. Thank you for sharing with us. I started touring on and off in 2004. I absolutely love it. I'm trying to get back out there full time. The road is the only place I feel at home and I know it's where I belong. I'm looking to drive, do merch, merch manage or pretty much anything else I can help out with to get me back out there. It's not easy to get a gig but I'm giving it my best. I appreciate the videos Tank!
I’ve heard parts of this story from other videos but this definitely fills in more of the story, please continue this series.
this was great Tank, plz continue these
I enjoyed it more then I expected. Nice one.
Yes
Lots of folks have already said it, but I'll say it too: I'm definitely interested in hearing more roadie stories!
I am just now putting 2 and 2 together that you were in Inept. I saw you guys countless times back in the day, everywhere from Chicago out to the small town shows outside of the suburbs. Still have the CDs in the truck.
Love these stories, and I can't wait for more of them.
Looking forward to the rest of the stories.My new go to channel. 🤘🇦🇺🇦🇺
I stepped on a bee barefoot. It just happened to occur where a regional sound and lighting company was loading out for a tour. I had grown up in a theater company and had drifted to the techie side and asked them about some of their lighting equipment. Turned out they were scrambling to support some dates with odds and ends as a favor in an emergency. As it turned out we all got lucky, this was 77 and I made more in a week than I was in a month, they got to support their main contract ShaNaNa and I ended up with Chrystal Gale. The very first venue would not allow the lighting trees on the stage and the concert was going to be canceled. Fortunately we could use anything they had hung and the house system and mainly country ballads fit right in my skill set. So I refocused and gelled a show on the fly with just the evolving stage setup using just a bit more saturated coloring than I would have for a play. Got a lot of work because of that.
I probably should have taken some of the band offers I got along the way, but the challenge of briefly supporting acts on the way down or up that use regional sound was just more alluring. Probably wouldn't have burnt out so quick and lasted a lot longer before I just joined the Army.
Love the roadie stories ! It takes me back to good old days.
Love this! Let’s hear all the stories.
This was great. Love anecdotes like this! More please!
Even though I play drums for local bands here, I've always been interested in the tech side of things, so your stories are a treat to me. Keep those coming Tank!
Thank you Tank!
Loved this. I'm really curious to see what happened with the VH lot. Can't wait to hear it!
Great vid, really looking forward for more parts!
Great stuff man! Keep it coming
That was great story. I hope you will continue it because you're good storyteller. Thank you for share it.
More story from first show in other countries, culture shocks (video about sauna was fantastic) etc?
Enjoyed the stories
I feel like you were very motivated to do this video, it came out quick! Great stuff both watching live and watching this.
Small world. I saw your band Inept play several times back in the day. I was in a local band at that time in the Chicagoland area and always liked your guys shows. Not sure if you were still playing with them for this but I still have the Inept EP Say Goodbye to This.
Oh that's crazy! What a small world! And yeah, I was in the band when we were touring off Say Goodbye To This.
Awesome new series. If you keep it going it would be great to hear some interviews with other roadies you know on their experience/stories
Love hearing stuff like this!!! Love the content!!!
Amazing storytime
Please continue these! Loved the story time and I really hope to hear more! ❤
Please do more of these. I did a little tour managing back in 2008-2011. Mind you it was for a band that really stuck to the southwest, and mostly local home shows. My buddy managed the band and asked me to tour manage. I didnt know wtf I was doing but agreed to do it. Looking back it was the best time of my life. Unfortunately they broke up, I focused more on a stable job. Fast forward I'm now almost 20 years deep into work at high end country clubs overseeing the production of events. I feel like now with that under my belt, and with such high expectations having worked at high end country clubs, I have the skills I didnt have back then to tour manage. I have way high self confidence which is something I definitely lacked in my early 20's. I would love to get back into tour managing somehow, someway. I almost wish you'd be down for an intern or at least a "Tour Managing Course" so learn from. Anyways, love all the content, Tank. Keep it up dude!
You weren’t just working extra and getting paid for it. You were literally the reason the band was getting opportunities to tour
i would assume that nowadays, his former band members know that too. but they were all young back then. the world looks different when you just fell out of the nest :D
This was really fun to listen to. Question: do you still have contact with your first band members and if so, is it all water under the bridge now?
Yeah, I'm still totally cool with all the old band guys. One of them is still one of my best friends and was one of my groomsmen in my wedding years ago, and I just saw him recently when we had a show in Chicago.
This will be an AWESOME series
More of this please! 😊
It's fun to hear other roades tour music venture's!
This was awesome, cant wait for more stories.
Great stories man
I loved this video, should be a series. Could you do a video on how you book/route a tour?
Well, to be honest, I've never booked/routed a tour. As a Tour Manager, I just get all those details from management and the booking agent and then just start coordinating everything to make it happen from a logistical standpoint.
@@TankTheTech Ahhh ok. I just thought with "tour" manager, that included routing a tour
Haha Fireside chats with Tank. Love it!
This story was great, more!
This was super interesting, I’d love to see more.
Heck yeah great story looking forward to more
I so remember the $40 a set to run sound and it was awesome
You definitely need to do more of that
Definitely want more roadie story times!
Love this stuff Tank! Keep it coming!
Keep these videos coming.
i ended up as a tech and eventually a truck driver on tour starting as a stage hand and being in the right place at the right time. drum tech got fired and was asked if i was interested said yes was told i had a hour to get home and pack before the bus left and its been 20 years in the industry at this point.
This is cool stuff, lets hear more!
I have my "what if" story. I used to book/promote bands out of riverside, ca. I got there because i used to be in the music scene from security to roadie to drum and guitar tech. For a spell i was in a couple of bands. I set up a cool party night with the local radio dj, Dirty D from the now defunct X103.9. In the midst of it, i had many musician friends, one was Aaron Rossi from Prong at the time and they were needing a tour manager. It would have meant leaving a cushy truck driving job i had. I honestly wish i would have taken it but with no money saved up to cover bills while on tour, i had to pass on it.
TIL next time on the episode of Roadie Story Hour…definitely do more of these!
Great series! Makes me like Red even more. Last time I saw them was in 2013 for their Release the Panic tour, and they put on a helluva show.
Great story Tank!
Same for me, accidentally. A few friends wanted me to come hangout and sell merch for them/drive. And now they have a 2 month tour including going to Canada. However I cannot do it full time because my main job is a 7 day on/off 6 figure job haha.
This was great! I also fell ass-backwards into my career. You never know what the future holds.
Love this, wish I could watch live on twitch but timezones.
I know a lot of venues i work regularly have fun storys attached to them. Would be cool if you did onsite story times to see venues and share storys of their city.
Love the Shibori x EC hoodie! I have the same one!
That question is exactly why I wrote a book. People asking what it’s like to be in the industry