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13 Oct 22:45

Online Media and Win-Win Patronage

by Jason Kottke

This piece on How to Compete with Patreon by Siderea is interesting throughout, but this bit on enabling "non quid pro quo patronage" caught my eye:

There is an entire little universe of people using Patreon to be funded to do good works in the world. These may be open source contributors. They may be activists. They may be journalists or bloggers. They do not make things that they exchange for money with the people who pledge them on Patreon.

Their patrons do not pay these creators to give things to them. Their patrons pay these creators to give things to the world: to release code for anyone to use, to engage in activism that changes the world for the better, or to write things that anyone can read.

I'm one of them. The number one reason I signed up for Patreon as my funding platform nine years ago, was because it was literally the only way of funding my writing that did not entail my selling it: my withholding it only for those people who paid me for it.

She continues:

What I want to do is write openly on the internet where anyone can read what I write. Where what I write can be cited by anyone who wants to refer to it in any internet discussion.

The audience of my writing is not my patrons, and it is not just the people who pay me for it. It's the whole world.

And that, quite explicitly, is what my patrons pay me to do.

I could not have put this better myself. This sort of win-win patronage is at the heart of what I do here on kottke.org with the membership program; it's what Tim Carmody calls Unlocking the Commons:

The most economically powerful thing you can do is to buy something for your own enjoyment that also improves the world. This has always been the value proposition of journalism and art. It's a nonexclusive good that's best enjoyed nonexclusively.

Anyways. This is a prediction for 2019 and beyond: The most powerful and interesting media model will remain raising money from members who don't just permit but insist that the product be given away for free. The value comes not just what they're buying, but who they're buying it from and who gets to enjoy it.

I modelled my membership program, in part, after that "little universe of people using Patreon". Watching what's going on in the world of paid newsletters and paywalled media, the nonexclusive future of media that Tim hoped for is struggling for air, but I remain thankful to have found a group of readers who understand and support that vision in this tiny corner of the web.

Tags: business · kottke.org · Siderea · Tim Carmody

13 Oct 10:41

‘It Ain’t Over’ Netflix US Streaming Release Date Set for October 2023

by Kasey Moore
It Aint Over Documentary Releasing on Netflix

Picture: Sony Pictures Classics

Netflix has just confirmed that it’ll be streaming the excellent sports documentary It Ain’t Over from October 26th in the United States. The movie comes to Netflix thanks to the first window deal Netflix holds with Sony Pictures.

Documentary maker Sean Mullin is behind the 98-minute doc and is best known for his debut feature film Amira & Sam and Semper Fi.

Premiering first at the 2022 Tribeca Film Festival, the movie provides a deep dive into the life of a frequently misinterpreted American legend, Yogi Berra. It delves into the soul of an athletic titan whose unmatched feats in baseball often took a backseat to his off-the-field image.

The doc features an impressive array of players and pundits from baseball over the years, including former Yankees captain and Hall of Famer Derek Jeter, Hall of Famer Mariano Rivera, broadcaster Vin Scully, and MLB executive Joe Torre.

The documentary holds a Certified Fresh rating on RottenTomatoes based on 57 reviews, giving a 98% score overall. In their review, Steve Davis for the Austin Chronicle concluded, “With the help of a slew of adoring talking heads, It Ain’t Over director Sean Mullin effortlessly validates his subject’s legendary career through the film’s zeal to restore him to his proper place.”

As mentioned, the documentary is coming to Netflix as part of the Sony first window deal which covers the main Sony Pictures theatrical releases and titles from their subsidiaries, such as Sony Pictures Classics. While SPC titles haven’t been coming to Netflix in quite the same manner as the main movies, we have seen over half a dozen added since 2022.

It Ain’t Over is expected to reside on Netflix US for 18 months before jumping over to Hulu that means you have the remainder of 2023 and all of 2024 to watch.

This is one of several Sony movies confirmed or expected to land on Netflix in October 2023. No Hard Feelings was just confirmed for release in the US in late October with the international live-action anime movie Saint Seiya, and earlier in the month, we got the Sony Pictures Classics documentary The Return of Tanya Tucker.

yogi berra it aint over doc

Picture: Sony Pictures Classics

The documentary’s release will sit alongside some excellent other sports documentaries that Netflix released this year. Adjacent to It Ain’t Over sit the Untold documentaries, McGregor Forever, The Redeem Team, and The Saint of Second Chances.

Are you looking forward to checking out It Ain’t Over on Netflix? Let us know in the comments below.

12 May 10:39

Immigration and falling fertility rates

by Tyler Cowen

That is the topic of my latest Bloomberg column, here is one excerpt:

Some countries can be expected to keep their relatively restrictionist immigration policies. But in these countries, the population will become smaller and smaller while taxes on the young will get higher and higher, in part to pay for the retirements and health care of the elderly. The high taxes will in turn lower living standards, and that may depress fertility further yet.

A less obvious problem is that once nations enter the lower-population-higher-tax cycle, it may be very difficult for them to attract new migrants. If you were thinking of leaving your country, would you rather go to a wealthy country with higher tax rates, or one with lower tax rates? Especially if the country with higher taxes has a long tradition of not welcoming migrants, and you would be less likely to find any expatriates there? Besides which, due to their aging population, those countries may simply be boring, at least for young people.

The danger is that countries with more restrictionist immigration policies will get locked into low-migration outcomes for the foreseeable future, whether they like it or not.

Recommended.

The post Immigration and falling fertility rates appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

24 Mar 11:56

The Age of AI has begun | Bill Gates

06 Mar 11:37

Safety and Soundness in Rust

by oconnor663@users.lobste.rs (oconnor663)