July 21st, 2009 by Andrew

Computer_Flyer_SmallI’m hang­ing a shin­gle for myself: I fix com­put­ers, and I’d like to fix yours.

I’m going back to school in August and I need to start cre­at­ing a more flex­i­ble line of work for myself, some­thing that I can mold  and make work around my 16-hour aca­d­e­mic cal­en­dar. I’ve got 10 years expe­ri­ence fix­ing com­put­ers for peo­ple, and I’m not being a brag­gart when I say: I’m good. I enjoy mak­ing com­put­ers work bet­ter, and I explain what I’m doing in friendly terms.  I usu­ally work in your home, but if I can do a bet­ter job by tak­ing your com­puter back to my work­bench, I’ll offer that. I’m good at dis­cern­ing whether the com­puter is the prob­lem — or whether you’re try­ing to do some­thing you shouldn’t (Doh!). If you want my advice while  buy­ing a com­puter you can bring me to the store. I may be able to save you money even after my fee, and you’ll get the right com­puter for your needs.

Also, I design busi­ness cards and fly­ers and such, like the ones you see here.

You can even call me and leave a mes­sage from right here, with this wid­get. Try it!

February 6th, 2009 by Andrew

Just wrapped up this poster on Thurs­day for jar-e, an Asheville musi­cian. Par (who is co-celebrating a birth­day with me) hooked me up with this job. I’ve really been work­ing on improv­ing my Illus­tra­tor chops, and it’s nice to be rewarded with a lit­tle bit of pay­ing work. Hope­fully this leads to more! Look for it around town. If you see it, take your pic­ture stand­ing next to it and send it to me, I’ll buy you your choice of cof­fee or beer.

jar-e_poster_final

October 16th, 2008 by Andrew

I worked for the local news­pa­per when I lived in Tryon, and still moon­light there a cou­ple hours a week. I saw this ad run and got a chuckle out of it, but looks like not every­body had such a benign reac­tion. I don’t under­stand why they are com­plain­ing about all the free pub­lic­ity — the con­tro­versy will blow over, of course, but this is pub­lic­ity you couldn’t pay for.

President’s Pic Appears in ‘Turkey Sea­son’ Ad

September 6th, 2008 by Andrew

I worked at the ‘World’s Small­est Daily News­pa­per,’ the Tryon Daily Bul­letin, for 8 years. In fact, I sort of still do; I moon­light there when they need an extra hand, or if some­thing that I put together breaks, and if I get short on cash and need to pick up a few hours. In other words: I don’t work there, I’m a consultant.

I have never seen peo­ple have such an attach­ment to a pub­li­ca­tion. Tryon loves the Bul­letin, even when they laugh at it, when they find typos and gig­gle, and that inanity of the local bridge scores, or the ele­men­tary school honor roll, the petty county pol­i­tics. But the paper reflects the com­mu­nity, and the read­ers are in on the joke. It’s a town insti­tu­tion. Merely say­ing ‘I work at the Bul­letin’ opened numer­ous con­ver­sa­tions and lent me an air of respon­si­bil­ity that I had to grow into. I was hired there when I was 16, and I have a lot to thank that place for.

While I was clean­ing out an old drawer, I found an old issue from 1995 and I imme­di­ately saw why I kept it. This is my first mem­ory of the Bulletin.

*My fam­ily lived on River Road for a time. Ralph Terciera was a Bermu­dan mil­lion­aire who retired near Tryon. My fam­ily would often see him in his mule cart, his cor­pu­lent body (we nick­named him Jabba) loung­ing in the back, while a thin, smil­ing gen­tle­man chaffeured.

The phrase ‘inde­pen­dent media’ is thrown around a lot these days, but the Bul­letin embod­ies that. It’s com­pletely inde­pen­dent. The owner sits in the front office. No cor­po­rate atti­tudes or bud­gets to meet. Nobody loses their job because some HR per­son 400 miles away didn’t like the num­bers. The writ­ing, cus­tomer ser­vice, pro­duc­tion, and print­ing all are accom­plished on the three floors of the 16 North Trade Build­ing, which is on the National Reg­is­ter of His­toric Places.

July 28th, 2008 by Andrew

Ok, maybe this doesn’t sound like a grand fun oppor­tu­nity to every­body, but I get to go to Raleigh for work tomor­row. Alexia, a jour­nal­ist and friend of Sen­si­ble City needs a ride to Raleigh and can’t rent a car (paper­work) so she hired me to drive her on my boss’ sug­ges­tion. Hope­fully I’ll get to see Laura while I’m there, but it will be nice to get out of town for a bit — even just for one day, mostly spent in the car.

I need a change of scenery.

June 19th, 2008 by Andrew

I’m live blog­ging at the open­ing cer­e­mony of the Ashevil­lage Build­ing Con­ver­gence for work tonight. Its pretty neat to be doing some­thing so hip for work. This is most cer­tainly a bra-burning crowd, and I would imag­ine that the only way to turn these peo­ple into a fren­zied blood-thirsty mob would be to parade Mayor McCheese Head in here and dis­trib­ute ham­burg­ers. Any­way. It takes every kind of per­son to make the world go round, and most of these peo­ple really do give a shit.