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Filling in on Fillers
by Moira Allen

Recently a reader asked: "I started a writing course a few months ago and I am stuck on one of my assignments. I need to get either a letter and a filler item published. I did the letter -- eventually. But as to the filler, I've tried and tried but without success. Do any magazines even accept fillers anymore? Does anyone actually write them?"

Today, many writers have no idea what fillers are, whether magazines (other than, say, Reader's Digest) still buy them, or how to go about selling them.

So let's take a moment to fill in the blanks on the question of fillers -- what they are, where you can sell them, and why no one seems to know.

The first question is the easiest to answer. No one seems to know what fillers are -- because they are an outmoded concept. Back when I started out as a freelance writer, lots of markets claimed that they accepted "fillers." Lots of articles and books on "how to get started as a writer" urged fledgling writers to write "fillers" as a great way to "break in." Even then, no one seemed to spend much time explaining what fillers were, but everyone seemed to consider it "gospel" that this was a great way for new writers to get published.

Folks, that was 30 years ago.

To understand why no one seems to know, today, what fillers are or where you can sell them, it's important to know what they are. And to do that, you have only to look at the name: "Filler." Fillers were originally designed to do exactly what the name implies: Fill up space. Back in the "olden" days (again, decades ago), editors sent their articles off to the typesetter. The typesetter manually retyped all that information, and printed it out in long, long strips that were the width of the publication's columns.

The strips then went to the magazine's art director, who would paste them up on "boards" (big sheets about the weight of greeting card stock, marked with lines like graph paper). Armed with the typeset copy and any photos or illustrations that were going to be included in the article, the art director "laid out" the issue.

Sometimes, articles would end up too long for the allotted space, which is why, when you finally saw your piece in print, you'd discover that entire paragraphs had been cut from it. But quite often, articles would be too short. A few inches of space might left over. And that's where fillers came in. Editors would stock up on short pieces, such as anecdotes, light poetry, recipes, tips, "household hints," etc., that could be plugged into these holes. Often, they'd already be typeset and ready to go. The art director would simply rummage around for a piece of "filler" that was precisely the right number of inches to fit into the gap. (Content really didn't matter at this point!)

When I worked at Dog Fancy (also decades ago), we still used typesetters and we occasionally used fillers -- but even then, fillers were heading the way of the dinosaur (and typesetters would soon follow). By this time, it was much more appealing to simply stick in an extra photo, if we had one -- because it was no longer too expensive to use images. If we didn't have a photo, quite often the space would be filled with a "service ad" -- either an ad for one of the publication's other products, or an ad for a charity. This saved money all around, because you didn't have to pay for service ads or photos that had not been part of the author's original package.

Today, it's even less likely for a magazine or newspaper to have a gap, because layout is done entirely on computers. All you have to do is tweak an image, increase the font size of your headline, or add a subhead, and your space is filled. The problem of "leftover" gaps is history -- and that is why there is no longer a large market for what used to be known as "fillers."

These days, "fillers" tend to appear only in specific columns. News round-ups are a common place to find fillers, though they're not usually a great place to break in, because publications get most of that information free through press releases. Reader's Digest, of course, is famous for its humor columns, but the competition is fierce. Another place to look is some of the women's tabloids that you find at checkout counters, which often run lots of very short nuggets, like a round-up of herbs that can prevent dry skin or something along those lines. Often, too, fillers aren't known by that name.

If you look in the Writer's Market today, you'll see very few publications offering to buy "fillers." Gone are the days when this offered an easy "foot in the door" for new writers. And fillers were never a great way to build your publications list, because, again, they sat in the file until a gap of the right size appeared, which could be months or even years. In addition, fillers often were published without any sort of byline.

But here's the bottom line -- the part that concerns me most. And that is that would-be writers are taking classes from instructors who do not know this. Any instructor who believes that fillers are still being regularly published in today's market, or that they are a viable tool for "breaking in," is out of touch. Any instructor who makes "selling a filler" a required homework project is doing a disservice to his or her students. Yes, fillers can still be sold -- but it is no longer a matter of sending a favorite recipe off to a women's magazine and waiting until they need to plug a gap. "Fillers" today are just as competitive as any other writing market -- not the easy answer for "beginners."

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Copyright © 2012 Moira Allen

This article may be reprinted provided that the author's byline, bio, and copyright notice are retained in their entirety. For complete details on reprinting articles by Moira Allen, please click HERE.


Moira Allen is the editor of Writing-World.com, and has written nearly 400 articles, serving as a columnist and regular contributor for such publications as The Writer, Entrepreneur, Writer's Digest, and Byline. An award-winning writer, Allen is the author of numerous books, including Starting Your Career as a Freelance Writer, The Writer's Guide to Queries, Pitches and Proposals, and Coping with Sorrow on the Loss of Your Pet. In addition to Writing-World.com, Allen hosts VictorianVoices.net, a growing archive of articles from Victorian periodicals, and The Pet Loss Support Page, a resource for grieving pet owners. She lives in Kentucky with her husband and the obligatory writer's cat. She can be contacted at editors "at" writing-world.com.
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