#Why many journalists join Substack
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What Is the Future of Substack
Will it face Enshittification like other platforms? Thought Experiment: Here’s Why Some People Say Substack Is Too Good to Be True Tackling “Enshittification” as It Matters It is not difficult to feel something has gone wrong with the apps and platforms we once loved. They were places where creativity flourished, connections deepened, and communities thrived. However, over time, they have…
#Ben Thompson#Casey Newton#Cory Doctorow#How can we address enshittification?#Meaning of enshittification#Substack Enshittification Possibility#Substack Is Too Good to Be True#What are the enshittification signs?#What is crapification?#Who coined enshittification?#Why enshittification became so popular?#Why Justin Welsh Became a Bestseller#Why many journalists join Substack#Why NewsBreak faced enshittification#Why Substack is immune to enshittification#Will Medium face enshittification?#Wy Dr Joseph Mercola Joined Substack?
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Do nonfiction authors really need social media to get a book deal?
I asked successful agents and trad signed authors how important social media is to getting book contracts. Here are some data and quotes about how they responded on my Authors of Nonfiction Books in Progress Substack! Read if you want more details and caveats to the data, as well as my story and why I like social media anyway.
TLDR: Social media is NOT necessary!
Here's an editorial explaining why. But for nonfiction non-memoir, you have to do something to prove that you know what you’re talking about, as you'll see repeated over and over in my Substack article. That proof could be social media.
Trad publishing is very hard and competitive, and sometimes even unfair. But the people who say "you can't get a deal unless you know someone or are TikTok famous" are flat-out wrong. (Also, you can become a person who knows someone by joining communities, attending conferences...hell, you can DM me if you have writing experience and I might hook you up with my agent. There, now you know someone and have no excuse. I've successfully hooked up 4 people I knew from communities I'm in, or something like that, not because they're my family members. I have said "come back when your query and/or experience are better" to 3 people, and 2 people didn't get the deal despite having good pitches and my recommendation, it just wasn't a match.)
Unfortunately, I think some aspiring authors are looking for an excuse, as many of these people don't often tend their writing craft. That is a much bigger indicator as to whether you'll get a deal, even if the trad world still isn't a perfect meritocracy.
Remember, I LOVE social media and have over 300,000 followers across platforms. I mostly do recommend that writers and journalists should use it! I find it sad, even, that there are so many writers with no audiences, when there are huge social audiences who would love to hear what these writers have to say! (But there are downsides too, so it's not ideal for all. Check out the pros and cons for science journalists being on TikTok.)
If you’d like to share your experience with trad publishing and social media (or lack of social media!), I still look at the survey results, so feel free to fill it out here and I may share the results in the future. Some questions are optional and of course I redact the (optional, anyway) emails:
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
September 23, 2020
Heather Cox Richardson
Today Americans were roiled by an article in The Atlantic, detailing the method by which the Trump campaign is planning to steal the 2020 election. The article was slated for The Atlantic’s November issue, but the editor decided to release it early because of its importance.
The article’s author, Barton Gellman, explains that Trump will not accept losing the 2020 election. If he cannot win it, he plans to steal it. We already know he is trying to suppress voting and his hand-picked Postmaster General is working to hinder the delivery of mail-in ballots. Now Trump’s teams are recruiting 50,000 volunteers in 15 states to challenge voters at polling places; this will, of course, intimidate Democrats and likely keep them from showing up.
But if those plans don’t manage to depress the Democratic vote enough to let him declare victory, he intends to insist on calling a winner in the election on November 3. His legal teams will challenge later mail-in ballots, which tend to swing Democratic, on the grounds that they are fraudulent, and they will try to silence local election officials by attacking them as agents of antifa or George Soros. The president and his team will continue to insist that the Democrats are refusing to honor the results of the election.
Gellman warns that the Trump team is already exploring a way to work around the vote counts in battleground states. Rather than appointing Democratic electors chosen by voters, a state legislature could conclude that the vote was tainted and appoint a Republican slate instead. A Trump legal advisor who spoke to Trump explained they would insist they were protecting the will of the people from those who were trying to rig an election. “The state legislatures will say, ‘All right, we’ve been given this constitutional power. We don’t think the results of our own state are accurate, so here’s our slate of electors that we think properly reflect the results of our state,’ ” the adviser explained. The election would then go to Congress, where there would be two sets of electoral votes to fight over… and things would devolve from there.
They would likely end up at the Supreme Court, to which Trump this morning said he was in a hurry to confirm a new justice so there would be a solid majority to rule in his favor on the election results. “I think this will end up in the Supreme Court and I think it’s very important that we have nine justices, and I think the system’s going to go very quickly,” he said. "Having a 4-4 situation is not a good situation."
Amidst the flurry of concern over The Atlantic piece, a reporter this afternoon asked Trump if he would commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the election. "Well, we’re going to have to see what happens," Trump said. "You know that I’ve been complaining very strongly about the ballots and the ballots are a disaster." He went on to say: "Get rid of the ballots and you’ll have a very — we’ll have a very peaceful — there won’t be a transfer frankly, there’ll be a continuation."
In response to this shocking rejection of the basic principles of our government, Adam Schiff (D-CA), chair of the House Intelligence Committee, tweeted, “This is how democracy dies.” He said: “This is a moment that I would say to any republican of good conscience working in the administration, it is time for you to resign.” But only one Republican, Mitt Romney (R-UT), condemned Trump’s comments as “both unthinkable and unacceptable.”
On Facebook, veteran journalist Dan Rather wrote of living through the Depression, World War Two, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy, Watergate, and 9-11, then said: “This is a moment of reckoning unlike any I have seen in my lifetime…. What Donald Trump said today are the words of a dictator. To telegraph that he would consider becoming the first president in American history not to accept the peaceful transfer of power is not a throw-away line. It's not a joke. He doesn't joke. And it is not prospective. The words are already seeding a threat of violence and illegitimacy into our electoral process.”
There is no doubt that Trump’s statement today was a watershed moment. Another watershed event is the fact that Republicans are not condemning it.
But there are two significant tells in Trump’s statement. First of all, his signature act is to grab headlines away from stories he does not want us to read. Two new polls today put Biden up by ten points nationally. Fifty-eight percent of Americans do not approve of the way Trump is doing his job. Only 38% approve of how he is handling the coronavirus. Voters see Biden as more honest, intelligent, caring, and level-headed than Trump. They think Biden is a better leader.
Trump’s headline grabs keep attention from Biden’s clear and detailed plans, first for combatting coronavirus and rebuilding the economy, and then for reordering the country. The Republicans didn’t bother to write a platform this year, simply saying they supported Trump, but Trump has not been able to articulate why he wants a second term.
In contrast, Biden took his cue from Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and has released detailed and clear plans for a Biden presidency. Focusing on four areas, Biden has called for returning critical supply chains to America and rebuilding union jobs in manufacturing and technology; investing in infrastructure and clean energy; and supporting the long-ignored caregiving sector of the economy by increasing training and pay for those workers who care for children, elderly Americans, and people with disabilities. He has a detailed plan for leveling the playing field between Black and Brown people and whites, beginning by focusing on economic opportunity, but also addressing society’s systemic racial biases. Biden’s plans get little attention so long as the media is focused on Trump.
The president’s antics also overshadow the reality that many prominent Republicans are abandoning him. Yesterday, Arizona Senator John McCain’s widow Cindy endorsed Biden. “My husband John lived by a code: country first. We are Republicans, yes, but Americans foremost. There's only one candidate in this race who stands up for our values as a nation, and that is [Biden].” She added “Joe… is a good and honest man. He will lead us with dignity. He will be a commander in chief that the finest fighting force in the history of the world can depend on, because he knows what it is like to send a child off to fight."
McCain is only the latest of many prominent Republicans to endorse Biden, and her endorsement stings. She could help Biden in the crucial state of Arizona, especially with women. "I'm hoping that I can encourage suburban women to take another look, women that are particularly on the fence and are unhappy with what’s going on right now but also are not sure they want to cross the line and vote for Joe. I hope they’ll take a look at what I believe and will move forward and come with me and join team Biden," McCain said.
That McCain’s endorsement stung showed in Trump’s tweeted response: “I hardly know Cindy McCain other than having put her on a Committee at her husband’s request. Joe Biden was John McCain’s lapdog…. Never a fan of John. Cindy can have Sleepy Joe!”
And, of course, Trump’s declaration has taken the focus off the Republican senators’ abrupt about-face on confirming a Supreme Court justice in an election year. The ploy laid bare their determination to cement their power at all costs, and it is not popular. Sixty-two percent of Americans, including 50% of Republicans, think the next president should name Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s replacement.
The second tell in Trump’s statement is that Trump’s lawyers confirmed to Gellman that their strategy is to leverage their power in the system to steal the election. Surely, they would want to keep that plan quiet… unless they are hoping to convince voters that the game is so fully rigged there is no point in showing up to vote.
Trump’s statement is abhorrent, and we must certainly be prepared for chaos surrounding this election. But never forget that Trump’s campaign, which-- according to our intelligence agencies-- is being helped by Russian disinformation, is keen on convincing Americans that our system doesn’t work, our democracy is over, and there is no point in participating in it. If you believe them, their disinformation is a self-fulfilling prophecy, despite the fact that a strong majority of Americans prefers Biden to Trump.
Trump’s statement is abhorrent, indeed; but the future remains unwritten.
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
Heather Cox Richardson
#newsletter#Heather Cox Richardson#Letters From An American#corrupt GOP#politics#political#election 2020
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I’m leaving the Democratic Party Again.
It all started like it always does. I wake up and then I check twitter. Someone on the far left said something about the police or something. I’m not exactly sure because I was very tried and had to work in three hours but I also only got two hours of sleep. Biden keeps going the worst things too. I can’t exactly explain to you what those things are in detail but what I do know is the white people are being replaced maybe because Tucker Carlson really loves truckers and that Green M&M that made me feel weird but now I don’t feel it anymore because she decided to change up the shoes. If woman can’t wear heels then are they even woman? What has the liberals made me do?
This man named Glenn Greenwald like the Green M&M also appears on Tucker and now I’m subscribed to his substack because I want to trust actual media that doesn’t involve big corporations. I did see the libs yelling at him over and over about him because he never critiques Tucker or Fox but also Fox is just always right so why would he say they were wrong? Are these people critiquing him even journalists know what they are talking about?
Then I saw the say gay or something bill by the genius conservatives Ron Desantis who wants to protect the kids from the gay agenda. I’m a gay man. It doesn’t sound great but also why can’t we all just learn some math? Yes some kids bullied me growing up but this will stop the bullying. Bullies will have to spread around who they bully because the school won’t be allowed to tell anyone about it unless a teacher complains but I love teachers. I don’t love unions and bad teachers much like cops who I also love.
I can’t keep up anymore. At the local school board in Alaska conservatives came with good arguments. The left decided to side step the issues by pointing out the slurs and other things that came up but that wasn’t the point. The one man who pointed at one of the members I can’t name was not being anti-semitic. I know this because a local journalist with a website that Is Reread or something that wears a very tight beany told me that the man was siding with the jews! Why would someone wear a star if they weren’t siding with the Jewish people!?
I don’t know what the democratic party is even more. Why do they care so much about so many things like money and helping people who should just work several jobs and if they can’t then well what do you want a cookie made of your dreams!? Get another job! Corporations would pay you more if they could! They would never lie at least if they were owned by Trump. I’m still waiting to join his social network but I got an error message. Sorry, I’m rambling.
I’m tired. I’m tired and I’m retiring from the democratic party again. I’d announce it again if Twitter would unban me and stop banning my accounts. I must let the people know that I’m finally leaving the democratic party.
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pAfter a customary bit of catching up and discussion on our Scripture passage for this week (Revelation 2:1-7), Tom and Jamie were joined for the majority of the episode by James Delingpole. James is a journalist and podcaster who has been at the forefront of the resistance to the corporate media's take on the Covid-19 phenomenon. We talk about how James' political and spiritual views have developed over the past couple of years, the state of contemporary politics, the possibility of a globalist takeover, the recent spate of hate pieces written against 'the unvaccinated' and many more topics. Links:Andrew Neil, a href='https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-10294225/Its-time-punish-Britains-five-million-vaccine-refuseniks-says-ANDREW-NEIL.html'Time to Punish Britain's Refusenicks/aKarren Brady, a href='https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/17011353/make-unnjabbed-face-lockdown-so-we-can-live-lives/'Make the unjabbed face their own lockdown/a Anne McElvoy, a href='https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/covid-unvaccinated-omicron-vaccine-passports-b971877.html'The unvaccinated have become a lethal liability that we can ill-afford/aCSPI, a href='https://cspicenter.org/blog/waronscience/have-we-been-thinking-about-the-pandemic-wrong-the-effect-of-population-structure-on-transmission/'Have we been thinking about the pandemic wrong? The effect of population structure on transmission/aNec Pluribus Impar, a href='https://necpluribusimpar.net/why-did-more-people-die-of-covid-19-in-sweden-than-in-other-nordic-countries-it-probably-h...
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