Hello Factor30 and Jno
Thank you for your responses.
Amateur Professionals is a new term coined by Charles Leadbeater referring to today�s consumers/users being able to become producers and facilitators due to the advancement and availability of high end technology...i.e consumers proactively create content to suit their needs desires and accelerate the product, instead of the 'said' company telling them what they should want, eg . Facebook and YouTube are perfect examples.
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/63 He says it much better.
Jno - now that is interesting (Not that yours wasn't Factor30). I find copywriters need to be as creative and diverse with their text as a design creative does with the images they use. They are saying the same thing, but using different tools... but for the same reasons. That�s why I asked what people did and who they saw as creatives as its always surprising although it seems so simple to others.
I see a chef as creative but then I personally wouldn't include all chefs in the creative industries but I would in one who took pride in his variety and aimed to be at the top of his game, the same goes for a hairdresser. I previously worked with a hairdresser who was broadening out to work on fashion photography with a Sculptor. However it is much easier to see dancers, actors, artists, musicians, designers, photographers, advertisers, etc etc as the core creatives, but then what about tattooists? Well, good ones. and marketing and pr people?
It�s an interesting and never ending question I suppose, as art and creativity touches every aspect. People's precision is their art, a sportsman, a medical person..but does that mean then they have to be great or even a perfectionist at what they do for it to be called art? Or is this getting ridiculous. :-)