Yesterday, whilst reading an interview with Charlie Brooker, this sentence caught my attention:
Securing his first television job as a writer on The 11 O'Clock Show, at the relatively late age of 29, he feels he wasted time that many of his contemporaries and future collaborators didn't, bolstered by self-belief and connections they took from public school and Oxbridge.
This raises a couple of questions.
Firstly, if 29 is a 'relatively late' age for a comedy writer to attain their first television work - then what is the average age?
And secondly, does that mean that aspiring comedy writers who are 30+ have effectively 'missed the boat' and are thus essentially pissing in the wind?
What are your thoughts?