Article 6EM75 From me to your inbox: 33 of the best Substack newsletters

From me to your inbox: 33 of the best Substack newsletters

by
Introduction by Observer technology columnist John
from Technology | The Guardian on (#6EM75)

The fast-growing US writing platform has come of age, offering all kinds of newsletters from a range of writers and experts for a subscription or even free. But how do you find the good stuff? We pick some of the best by theme

Substack - the American tech platform that enables anyone to create, publish, and (if they wish) get paid for a subscription newsletter - has belatedly become the New New Thing in mainstream media (MSM) discourse. It's actually been around for ever (since 2017, ie 42 internet-years ago) and you could think of it as the continuation of blogging by other means (and indeed, the tradition of conspiracy-theorising is alive and well on Substack). But MSM was never much interested in blogs - possibly because many journalists, like Samuel Johnson, regard anyone who writes for nothing as an imbecile. Substack, though, they can understand, because well-known writers (including a few famous hacks) appear to be earning serious money from it.

Substack is free for authors, operationally reliable and easy to use. If you want to charge subscribers a monthly fee, there's a simple button to activate it. The financial side is handled by Stripe; Substack takes 10%, and Stripe levies a 3% fee, but after that it's all yours (and the tax collector's).

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