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2 paź 2024 · Matthew Yglesias, a prolific political writer, cofounded Vox in 2014. Six years later, he left to run his own Substack newsletter. That turned out to be a very good decision: Yglesias says Slow...
9 lut 2023 · Yglesias was originally tempted to the platform with a $250,000 up-front payment (offset by Substack taking 85% of his first year’s subscription revenue). According to Press Gazette's analysis ...
Matthew Yglesias (/ ɪ ˈ ɡ l eɪ s i ə s /; born May 18, 1981 [2]) is an American blogger and journalist who writes about economics and politics. [3] [4] Yglesias has written columns and articles for publications such as The American Prospect, The Atlantic, and Slate. In 2014 he co-founded the news website Vox.
Last month, Matt Yglesias left Vox to start Slow Boring, a personal subscription newsletter hosted on the Substack platform. This morning (paywalled here), he announced that he has surpassed 7,000 paid subscribers.
20 mar 2021 · [Matthew] Yglesias says that when it lured him to the platform last fall, Substack agreed to pay him $250,000 along with 15 percent of any subscription revenue he generates; after a year, Yglesias’s take will increase to 90 percent of his revenue, but he won’t get any additional payouts from Substack.
2 paź 2024 · Matthew Yglesias, a prolific political writer, co-founded Vox in 2014. Six years later, he left to run his own Substack newsletter.That turned out to be a
13 lip 2021 · His excellent Substack, Slow Boring, is one of the best out there (well worth the price of a paid subscription), and has brought a mix of perspectives that I don’t really see many others bringing. This has not been without controversy, and we discuss that controversy in the interview below.