Reese Is Going Freelance, Baby!

On Friday, I sent an email to a list of about 40 close connections I had made working with Jeremiah over the past three and a half years. Here’s what it said:

“Heyyo! 

It’s bittersweet to announce that today is my final day as the full-time manager of Jeremiah Davis (@thatoneblondkid). It has been the time of my life to help build TOBK Studios from the ground up over the past 3.5 years. 

I’m passing the management baton to the capable and hungry Hudson Hopper. Feel free to reach out to him for future content and social collaborations. I will still be producing brand projects consistently with Jeremiah and TOBK Studios, and I’ll be active on this email. Stay in touch. We’ll see you on set.

What’s next for me? I’m opening my doors for freelance producing and copywriting. Here are the links for my creative production portfolio and my copywriting portfolio. As a multi-disciplinary creative producer, I wear a few hats to get the job done. Creative development, copywriting, on-set production, client accounts–they’re all in my wheelhouse.

Need to turn your creative vision into reality? Let’s chat.
I can be reached at:
Reese@reesehopper.co

Here’s to a prosperous 2021 for us all.”

Originally, I planned on using this post to share what I learned over the past three and a half years working with Jeremiah. But as I thought about what to write this weekend, I realized that it’s nearly impossible to put all of that into one blog. How can I boil down a thousand successes and failures into one digestible post?

Now, I’m realizing that so many of the blogs I’ve published over the past few years have already shared what I’ve learned. The insights on pitching, producing, entrepreneurship, and productivity have been inspired by Jeremiah. Even the things I’ve learned and researched on my own have been given an arena for testing and perfecting through our work together. He gave me so many opportunities and trusted me with success and failure. 

So, instead of boiling down my work of the last few years, I’ll simply say “thank you” to Jeremiah. If there’s anything for you to learn from Jeremiah, it’s that generosity and trust can transform motivated people into confident, capable creators who love their work.

Onward! 

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