I'm glad at lease one person knows the name Peter Thomas besides myself. Peter and I have different types of voices, and do different types of work. That's why I would cast him for the V/O.
Also, I may have created an incorrect impression with the mention of 250 hour pilots. I was referring to the 250 hours of turbine experience at GIA. I'm sure that some of the GIA guys have arrived there with more than 250 hours, and have gone on to success elsewhere, and that captains like GIACAPT are hardworking individuals. After all, he and the other guys who fly left seat at GIA have to watch over their copilots while being the responsible PIC. In addition, as soon as the guy gets to the 250 hour mark, he gets replaced by someone who may know even less about flying than the previous FO. That's a lot of mental energy expended on a week to week basis by the captain. As soon as they get used to working together, the guy is replaced.
I too understand about networking. Greg Brown and I have discussed this on the phone quite a bit, and I "get it". If that were how these guys were getting a place in a GIA plane, we wouldn't be having this thread at all.
The P in PFT, IMHO, takes away some of the dignity and professionalism from our business, and reminds me of the 18 year old actress who meets the powerful producer at a party in Malibu, and decides "how bad she wants that job" (to paraphrase an old Eagles song) and comes to the conclusion that a payment made now will bring a big reward later.
I find the idea of competing for the job based on experience, merit, and the door-opening of a good contact to be far preferable to purchasing an $18,000 plane ticket for a 250 hour trip.
Would I have avoided this if able? Well, I was able, and I didn't avoid this "paying of dues" because experienced people told me that I would be avoiding a great amount of positive experience in the process, and at the end of the day I would likely not be as seasoned an aviator if I decided to take the shorter and easier road. Maybe this idea is out of step with pop culture, but I think that the road to real success is paved with the experience I am finding every time I fly.
I'm looking forward to more charter and freight experiences. I think I can then bring a positive force of assistance to the cockpit instead of merely providing a familiarity with switches and procedures recently acquired in the ground training I just purchased. I'll know that I'm in the right seat because someone saw ability and potential in me, and not just a reduction in their costs.
Of course, there is more than one side to every situation. This is one of the best ways to get the word out on this side.