In those heady blogger days of the last decade when there were so many good blogs in Cleveland that we couldn’t read them all, the central question was always: can we make money at this? I don’t know that any of us ever did, but we had a model to follow: Cleveland’s proto-blogger Roldo Bartimole and his weekly Point Of View.
For 32 years Roldo blogged on paper, yes POV was closer to I.F. Stone’s Weekly than Have Coffee Will Write, but that was our fault for not paying better attention to our elders.
We had an opportunity to commit real journalism and, for the most part, fell short.
Journalist blogger Glenn Greenwald wrote earlier this month about the importance of reader-supported journalism. He said:
As governments and private financial power centers become larger, more secretive, and less accountable, one of the few remaining mechanisms for checking, investigating and undermining them – adversarial journalism – has continued to weaken. Many of these large struggling media outlets don’t actually do worthwhile adversarial journalism and aren’t interested in doing it, but some of them do. For an entity as vast as the US government and the oligarchical factions that control it – with their potent propaganda platforms and limitless financial power – only robust, healthy and well-funded journalism can provide meaningful opposition.
For several years, I’ve been absolutely convinced that there is one uniquely potent solution to all of this: reader-supported journalism. That model produces numerous significant benefits. To begin with, it liberates good journalists from the constraints imposed by exclusive reliance on corporate advertisers and media corporations. It enables journalism that is truly in the public interest – and that actually engages, informs, and inspires its readers – to be primarily accountable to those readers.
That last bit — to be primarily accountable to those readers — is the critical point. We pay attention to the people who write us checks. That’s true when you work nine-to-five or collect an annual salary. When speaking about my fiction, I’ve long held that I’m much more interested in the opinions of anyone willing to pay for my writing than I am in those anxious to offer their critique.
Greenwald, at the end of his piece, does make the pitch and ask for the sale, and I’m OK with that.
There was a time when I subscribed to several dozen magazines and newspapers, but I tapered off to zero in the ’90s because of time constraints. Since then I have sporadically subscribed to Mother Jones and the Sunday New York Times, but I’ve never paid for a blog (although I did once toss a few ducats into the tip jar of Blogger Interrupted).
What do you pay for? What do you think you should pay for? Is independent journalism at all important to you?