4.8 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 29 June 2023
⏱️ 91 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Farrah Storr, former editor-in-chief of Elle, Cosmopolitan & Women's Health, sits down with Bridget to discuss the never-ending hustle of being a writer. They talk about how she got her start in the magazine industry, what her family thought of the career, the importance of getting in the door and getting experience over continuous higher education, working a lot for little to no money, how she became an editor, the difference between being a writer and an editor, and the mistakes she made along the way. They also cover how part of growing up is the ability to recognize your own mistakes, learning to look inwards and not point the blame at others, why the best editors are commercially minded but they have the soul of a writer, writers who come from money vs. writers who have day jobs, being undeniable, the death of hustle culture, when fashion magazines go all political, how the way to change someone’s mind is with love and humor, and why she doesn't look back.
Bridget Phetasy admires grit and authenticity. On Walk-Ins Welcome, she talks about the beautiful failures and frightening successes of her own life and the lives of her guests. She doesn’t conduct interviews—she has conversations. Conversations with real people about the real struggle and will remind you that we can laugh in pain and cry in joy but there’s no greater mistake than hiding from it all. By embracing it all, and celebrating it with the stories she’ll bring listeners, she believes that our lowest moments can be the building blocks for our eventual fulfillment.
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0:00.0 | This week we welcome writer Farris-door. |
0:03.2 | She is currently the head of writer partnerships for Sub-Subtec UK |
0:07.1 | and she was formerly the editor-in-chief of L cosmopolitan and women's health. |
0:12.3 | Vogue magazine in the UK became... Elle, Cosmopolitan, and Women's Health. |
0:13.1 | Vogue magazine in the UK became a, basically a political |
0:16.8 | manifesto. |
0:17.4 | It became incredibly political. |
0:20.9 | And the editor there has just resigned and whilst he did so much good you know he |
0:27.2 | sort of he completely diversified fashion but of course what's what's been |
0:31.4 | left is vogue is now a sort of political manifesto and so anybody and so whilst that's commendable and some would say it's had huge sort of seismic change on the culture. |
0:46.7 | It's not something you want to read anymore. |
0:48.9 | And so it's going to be very hard for another editor to come in and suddenly go let's talk about fashion now which is |
0:54.4 | what was always the point of a vote. |
0:56.4 | This is walk-in's welcome with Bridget Fettisey. I'm Bridget Fettisey and you are |
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