Almost anyone can type. Some of those people can write and think clearly enough to shape a coherent story. A tiny fraction of those do it well enough to get a good novel published.
Anyone can splash paint onto a canvas. Even if you have no talent for illustration or composition or brush strokes, you can make painted shapes and call it modern art. A tiny fraction of those can convince critics that their work should be sold in galleries.
It’s true for every field of art. With the tools that are readily available today, almost anyone can make a creative project — a film, a sculpture, a photograph, a book. A few of those will be really good.
It requires talent and work and patience and luck to produce something that most people would see as art. It’s incredibly difficult. It’s something many people spend a lifetime trying to do.
But as difficult as those things are, it’s even harder to earn a living today with art.
For some people, it’s simply because their work isn’t good enough. But even many people who produce excellent work can no longer make a living from the art they most want to create.
The world has changed in ways that make things very hard for creative people today. I don’t like the changes. I’ve ranted about those changes and been angry about them, as have many creators.
But the media world of the past is gone. It’s not coming back. For me, that means I have to change. It’s time for me to stop fighting reality.

Is it abuse to force atypical kids to conform to norms of society?
Paradox of choice can leave us longing for certainty of the past
Without growth on similar paths, two people drift apart, love dies
No loneliness worse than being with others, but not the right one
Fetish for privatizing misses point; it’s having a choice that matters
If politics sends you into a rage, is it really a good use of your time?
If there are exceptions to free speech, it’s not really free speech, is it?
Her dad didn’t want to help her, so here’s a jack-o’-lantern for Hannah