Megan Farokhmanesh is a senior writer at Wired where she covers the exciting world of video games and the industry behind it.
During the podcast episode, Megan will delve into her writing process and share with us why she uses so many sticky notes, how to effectively format subject lines, her preference for lead time on stories, and much more. If you want to know more about her work, follow Megan on Twitter and LinkedIn.
[0:02:13] BB: Well said. You also cover everything culture. Of course, gear is a big thing, but security, there's science. There's a lot of meaty stuff in there. Megan, for you, though, specifically, what should us publicists know that you want to write about?
[0:02:28] MF: I'm a video game reporter, which means a lot of things to a lot of different people.
[0:02:32] BB: Yes.
[0:02:32] MF: What I'll say is the way that I approach video game coverage, and I've been doing this for oh, gosh, like more than a decade. I always think of it as not covering exactly the products themselves, but rather the industry around it. I'm interested in the people making games, the cultures that spring up because of it, or just interesting stories that tell us a little bit about what games can tell us about ourselves. I like to center my stories on people. I do a lot of labor reporting, because there's a lot of interesting stuff happening within this very strange industry that intersects tech and entertainment.
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[0:08:47] BB: Oh, okay. Well, one of our questions is relationship building, how can people make relationships with you. Is it an invite to anything game related? Or is it just even an invite of, “Hey, I have a lot of game clients. You want to go to coffee? I'm in Brooklyn.”
[0:09:02] MF: This depends, right? It depends on what it is you're trying to pitch me on, or who your client is. If you are coming to me and you're like, “I have somebody who wants to talk about Bitcoin.” Or very often wants to talk about the metaverse. I’ll look at it, it's like a VC, or someone who I don't think is actually going to be relevant for my audience and my stories, I don't want that. I'm not going to sit down and talk with you, because I think it would just be disrespectful to both our time, because if I'm not going to use any of your stories, you should go find somebody who will.
“I generally do like to sit down with people who if I've worked with you before and I know you're a good PR person, or you have a good idea of my work, you haven't just found me randomly, I'm very happy to sit down with you. I do prefer to actually have a conversation with people, because I really want to have that face-to-face interface, even if now it's just video-to-video phase.”
BB: Video or phone interview?
BB: Bullet points, or paragraphs?
BB: Short or long pitches?
BB: How short?
BB: Images attached, or Dropbox, or a zip file?
BB: Pitches in the morning, or in the evening, or no preference?
BB: Email or Twitter DM?
BB: One follow-up, or multiple?
BB: A healthy three. That is healthy. Okay.
BB: Direct or creative subject lines?
BB: Press release, or media kit?
BB: Attached, I'm assuming.
BB: Attached. All attached.
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