"I stepped into the production world as a teenager when I founded a TV show at my church. By the time I graduated from high school, production was already second nature. I studied film at my local college, which led me to an internship at a local production studio, where I stayed as a full-time freelance editor for years. I had a 15-year career in production. I was lucky to experience some incredible moments, from assisting on set at Connie Francis' house to editing a documentary for James Patterson. It was the career of my dreams."
"When I found out I was pregnant in 2019, being a stay-at-home mom never crossed my mind. I loved my career and wanted to keep working. I planned to take a three-month maternity leave to acclimate and ease my child into a day care routine. The timing worked out perfectly for me to return to work on a new season of the travel and culinary TV shows I had helped shape for years."
Tiffany Tuttle began working in production as a teenager and built a 15-year career after studying film and freelancing as an editor. She experienced notable assignments, including assisting on set at Connie Francis' house and editing a documentary for James Patterson. Pregnant in 2019, she planned a three-month maternity leave and a return to new seasons of travel and culinary shows. COVID-19 shutdowns halted production and prevented her planned return, turning temporary leave into full-time stay-at-home parenting. Initially regretful about leaving production, she later embraced staying home, balancing freelance writing, podcasting, and parenting while redefining her professional identity.
Read at Business Insider
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