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    Home»Books»The Economics of Independent Media are Just Really Tough
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    The Economics of Independent Media are Just Really Tough

    By AdminOctober 14, 2025
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    The Economics of Independent Media are Just Really Tough



    Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more.

    One story dominating my feeds today, so thought I would get into it.

    n+1 Job Posting Gets People Both Mad and Defensive

    n+1 did one of the most necessary and thankless tasks in media: post about a job opening and include the actual salary range. The number is above the median U.S. salary of $49,500, but the gig is in Brooklyn, which I can report from personal experience is considerably more expensive than the median place to live (which apparently is Cleveland?).

    The strongest negative reactions were as predictable as they were understandable: this just doesn’t seem like enough for the responsibilities, n+1’s reputation, and the realities of trying to build a professional life and career in New York. The loudest defender of n+l responded to these criticisms with perhaps unadvised (and largely deleted) as far as I can tell) vitriol. (side note: I am not going to link to individual X posts here. If you are interested, you can search for n+1 and see the terrain quickly).

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    I have a little perspective to give on the subject of running an independent media organization that doesn’t fit neatly into “this salary is shameful” or the “It is what it is.” I am also going to assume for the moment that n+1 is not radically overpaying some top executive person somewhere or renting ungodly expensive office space, and of course if this is the case then those dollars should be redirected. And as a registered nonprofit, n+1 does not have some corporate overlord siphoning off dollars that could be used to raise the salaries of people working there.

    The truth that bridges these extreme ends of responses is this: there is not much money in independent media. There is even less money for indie media that has a mission of some kind. And that is what n+1 is, and I have a ton of respect for them. My guess is that they are probably paying as much as they can across the board and wish they could pay more. To say that they should unionize is a nice sentiment, but that assumes that there are marginal dollars available to flow to employees from the corporation. For employees of The New York Times or Conde Nast, this is an on-going negotiation, as those companies, over decades, have built brands and businesses that can be quite profitable–and can be even more profitable if employee salaries are kept as low as they can be. I will go farther to say that a company should be profitable, if only because it allows for a margin of safety and the possibility of growth.

    So if a company like n+1 simply cannot pay more, what to do? Should they….just stop operating? What is the next move? I don’t have an answer and neither do people bemoaning this job and other lower-paying full-time positions in media.

    Nor does it feel right to shrug your shoulders and say them’s the breaks. Because I think we want people who care about arts and ideas to be able to build lives around their jobs. And we would like them to be able to do it without having family money or some other leg up not generally available. The answer to this question isn’t one of hiring policy or unionization or “you could always just go be a cop.”

    A lot more of us need to pay for indie media. There is more money for employees when more people are paying for it. The dollars to be found for managing editors and junior publicists, and senior designers is not sitting on an untapped line on a ledger somewhere: it is in the quarterly reports of Meta, Netflix, Alphabet, TikTok, and Amazon.

    Media dollars flow to where attention flows. If n+1 had 27% more subscribers, I bet that job would pay more. Maybe even 27% more. Dollars that come directly from readers are the most reliable and the most insulated from a sponsor walking a way or a tech company changing their terms. Five or ten dollars out of your pocket every month to whatever website or paper or journal or podcast that you care about makes a small difference, but a real one. The nice thing about supporting indie media is that it doesn’t take millions of people changing their habits. A thousand people kicking in and subscribing matters. For some places, hundreds matter, a couple dozen matters.

    I believe n+1 is doing the best they can. I believe people balking at this level of pay really care. And I think neither n+1 or its critics today can do as much to change the game if there isn’t more support out there.

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