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by Fullofkittens 12/20/2015, 5:38am PST |
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I won't pretend to be an insider but I can make the following observations:
- There are YouTube stars that have made a ton of money by becoming wacky outsize internet personalities but tbh they seem to work a lot harder than I do at my regular job to get that money
- Instructional videos are something I'm willing to pay for if the content is really good; I get them via MacProVideo, Udemy, and Pluralsight
- There are podcasts that are extremely well-made and popular (RadioLab, This American Life, Welcome to Night Vale, etc); They are free to download, their authors are being paid by NPR subscribers with the exception of WtNV which makes all of its money from donations and merch.
- ...which brings up the example of successful online comics authors (e.g. Ryan North, Matthew Inman) who also distribute their flagship product for free and get money via merch
- There are blogs that I read as part of my industry (software testing) but to the degree they enrich their authors, they only do it by upping their industry cred
- I presume that there's nothing in this book about Ruth Bader Ginsburg that author Irin Carmon couldn't have put on an online blog, but nonetheless I just paid $15 to buy it as a gift.
... as some might remember at one point I was a musician. I found it very frustrating that I could spend days or weeks writing and recording a song that was implicitly free in the minds of consumers, because you can put it on the internet and download it... meanwhile we go to the art fair here in town and buy wall art for hundreds of dollars, a price which was set arbitrarily by the artist who spent an equivalent amount of time creating that art. Ideas, words, music... consumers consider all that shit essentially valueless and free. Anything that a computer can copy and paste is free. People are mainly willing to trade actual cash money for physical objects.
Now, it is true that places like HuffPo have professional online journalists who make a living doing that. I don't know a thing about how to break into that business. |
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