BCM launches Best Chance Media publishing

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Best Chance Media (Best Chance is an independent “print-on-demand” (POD) publishing imprint dedicated to giving up-and-coming writers a chance to see their book in digital and print formats.

Best Chance is transparent about its legal, marketing, and financial approaches and welcomes your questions.

There is a catch.

I’m a member of several online writing groups. Many writers lament about receiving rejection letters. Some report as many as 60 “no-dice” notifications. Our authors must demonstrate that the manuscript they submitted was rejected by one or no more than three other agents or publishers within the past three years. The fundamental Best Chance mission is to counterbalance mainstream publishers’ control over writers.

Best Chance is author-focused and collaborative. Approximately 3,000 ISBNs are issued every day. This means the competition for brick-and-mortar shelf space is high and favors the big publishing houses that sign celebrities. Even Snoop Dogg has a best-selling children’s book. Where does that leave authors who have no natural outreach platforms?

This means that writers and small publishing companies must combine forces to compete better.

Best Chance partners with IngramSpark to ensure our books are widely accessible on major online platforms and available for purchase in storefronts. Our authors work closely with our management team to produce the highest-quality books.

Creating the New Creative Economy since 2001/

Best Chance is an imprint of Boulder Community Media (BCM), a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization formed in 2001. BCM’s philosophy is to create safe spaces through the arts for communities to discuss and resolve critical issues.

BCM wants media in all their forms to be accessible to all. Best Chance is most interested in helping authors get their stories told.

Alan O'Hashi, Best Chance Editor and Publisher has been hooked on writing since reading his first byline in his junior high school newspaper.

BCM Executive Producer and Director Alan O’Hashi has produced five PBS documentaries. During the COVID-19 pandemic, his work in progress stalled, and he dusted off his typewriter to resurrect his writing. He has now added Editor and Publisher to his credentials.

In early June 2019, he attended the Wyoming Writers, Inc. Conference in Laramie, where he met a publisher and pitched a book. Alan’s idea was accepted on the spot. He wrote 80,000 words and was contracted in October. It turns out that, COVID or no COVID, Alan doesn’t get out much. Since then, he has self-published nine books with another scheduled for traditional publication.

Securing a book deal on his first attempt wasn’t common. Alan didn’t realize how lucky he was. He became disillusioned by the stories he had heard from other authors about the daunting process of traditional publishing.

This led to the creation of Best Chance Media, which was designed around publishing and distributing Alan’s books and is diversifying, particularly encouraging first-time diverse, marginalized authors to submit. As the book industry evolves, Best Chance will continue to adapt and provide first-time authors the best chance of success.

My Wake Up Call: Thousands of ships pass through the night

The 151st running of the Kentucky Derby took place on Saturday, May 2nd. That also meant that it was my birthday. I was born on Derby Day. The pic is my Grandfather Ohashi and me.

I don’t know what got into me, but I realized I should be better at staying in touch with people I’d met over the years: family members, classmates, former colleagues, and near strangers.

My devices are full of email addresses that organically accumulated over the past 32 years. The number is around 5,800.

Email wasn’t widely used until the 1990s, which was about the time I moved from Lander, Wyoming, to Boulder, Colorado.

It took me a few hours, but I cleaned up my address book this week. There were people I had known during my various lives on the job and in the community. Some people had died. I’ve stayed connected with many of you, and now social media has become a more popular way to find out what you’re doing.

Ships passing in the night. For most of you, though, we were acquaintances who drifted in and out of each other’s lives as our circumstances changed.

Maybe you were a student intern, a client, a customer, a social media user, or a fleeting friend.

We could have been volunteers together in a nonprofit organization. We could be friends who met on social media.

Unsubscribe if you have better things to do!

What is the purpose of this newsletter? It will be like a holiday update, but more frequent, probably monthly. About my creative projects, new stories I’ve written. Since I have acquaintances who range from the far left and far right, there won’t be perspectives on current political events.

What have I been doing lately? I’ve been making documentary movies and writing books. During the COVID-19 pandemic, I spent my time in self-isolation resurrecting my writing.

I’ve written 10 books since 2020 and started a publishing company for emerging writers, Best Chance Media.

My first novel, A New Dawn at Libby Flats, which takes place in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Jersey, is a reverse coming-of-age story.

My documentary movie, The Arapaho Covered Wagon Redux, stalled during COVID. It finally saw the light of day in 2024 and screened at the Boulder International Film Festival in March 2025.

If you have any story ideas that the world should know about, I’m open to new ideas for books and movies.

I’ve been uncluttering. My cyberworld was getting cluttered with too many domain names. and consolidated all of my websites to converge on this one, Boulder Community Media.

I also noticed that I have 48,000 emails and have no idea why I’ve been hoarding them. Trashing those may be a project for another life.

My analog world also needed to be downsized. There was an urban wildfire that destroyed 1,000 homes east of Boulder on December 30, 2021. Most people lost everything.

That’s when I sold all of my collectible memorabilia in 2023. I still suffer from separation anxiety. I took photos of my best baseball cards and retained the memories. It’s time for others to get some enjoyment out of my junk.

I almost died in 2014. An exotic lung disease almost took me.

Life is short, and so far, I’ve been waking up on the right side of the grass to face another day. I was in the hospital and rehab for six weeks and housebound for another two months.

This is the only picture that I took while flat on my back.

If you’d like to stay in touch, especially those of you far away, or have moved on to different pursuits. This content will also be sent out in a newsletter. If you want to be included, please subscribe.

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