Fox NewsFox News anchor Chris Wallace confronted Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel on Sunday morning over the Hunter Biden laptop story that Trumpworld has incessantly pushed recently, asking her if she could provide any proof that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden took money from foreign companies and countries.Team Trump and its allies in conservative media have used materials purported to be from the younger Biden’s laptop to accuse the former vice president of corruption, claiming emails show Hunter Bidden involving his father in shady foreign dealings. The Biden campaign has denied any wrongdoing, and the Wall Street Journal reported last week that a review of documents shows “no role for Joe Biden” in any alleged pay-for-play scheme.With the right-wing media ecosystem continuing to run wild with the story, which involves Trump personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and other assorted sketchy personalities, Wallace grilled McDaniel on Fox News Sunday on whether or not there was any fire behind all the smoke.Read more at The Daily Beast.
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Chris Wallace Grills RNC Chair: You Have Any Proof That Biden Took Foreign Money?
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HOW TO START A NEWSLETTER: Everything you need to know about building an audience and making money off your writing
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Newsletters, one of the oldest methods of communication on the internet, have enjoyed a resurgent popularity in the last several months, spurred on by a variety of technological and business factors.
For one, the media landscape continues to shift, as publishers and tech platforms compete against each other for revenue and reader eyeballs. Thanks to their siloed nature, flying straight from writers’ minds to readers’ inboxes, newsletters are an oasis of content not mediated by algorithms or social media platforms. Newsletters find their way directly to the intended audience’s inbox, which has helped popularize the medium.
Plus, there are more ways than ever now to make money off a newsletter. Rising platforms like Substack, Revue, Buttondown, and Ghost, have simplified the process of constructing and delivering these emails. They have also made it easier for writers to make money from their content, by offering creators the option to monetize their output by placing it behind a series of tiered paywalls.
Combined, these forces have made newsletters one of the preeminent trends of 2020. Established journalists like Casey Newton and Anne Helen Peterson have left comfortable jobs, at Vulture and Buzzfeed respectively, to strike out on their own in the budding newsletter economy. Likewise, thousands of writers with no sizable following to boast of have launched their own newsletters, in hopes of finding success similar to that of Alicia Kennedy or the team at Petition.
To help aspiring newsletter creators, Business Insider has compiled all of its related resources below. Whether you’re still trying to figure out what to name your product, who your audience is, or how to price it (or whether or not to charge for it at all), this guide has an article to walk you through the process.
Business Insider regularly covers the latest news and must-have innovations in the newsletter ecosystem. You can read them all by subscribing to BI Premium.
Getting started
Picking a newsletter platform: Newsletters are all the rage. We broke down the 5 best platforms to use whether you want to market your business, make sales, or engage with customers
What to write about: Making money off a newsletter doesn’t come easy. Substack’s cofounder gives 4 secrets to writing emails people will pay to read.
Building your audience: Substack creators are making 6 figures off newsletters. Here’s how they built their audiences from scratch.
A case study of success: How a 25-year-old entrepreneur bootstrapped her free newsletter into a 500,000-subscriber business that made $1.1 million in one month
Tips for writers with small followings: Star writers are making 6 figures on newsletter platform Substack, but napkin math proves the odds are long. Here are 4 tips from successful writers without big followings.
The rise of Substack
How newsletters monetize writers: Newsletters are booming. Investing in writers could be the future of the media business — and a low-cost win for companies like Substack.
The Substack story: Subscription newsletter platform Substack has doubled its users as COVID-19 jeopardizes the ad-based media model
Top talent is flocking to Substack: Tech journalist Casey Newton takes us inside his upcoming newsletter, which is set to bring in at least $5,500 per monthSEE ALSO:
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“Money Can’t Buy Everything” – See 3 Things Davido Cannot Afford To Buy With His Wealth
The OBO(Omo Baba Olowo) boss Davido is truly the son of a rich man with the wealth and lavish lifestyle he portrays on social media. READ ALSO: After He Received N1M From Davido 5 Months Ago For Editing This Picture, See His Recent Work Davido has lived to the billing as the son of a […]
The post “Money Can’t Buy Everything” – See 3 Things Davido Cannot Afford To Buy With His Wealth appeared first on GhGossip.
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Al Qaeda’s second-in-command on FBI’s most wanted list ‘killed by Afghan security forces’
The man believed to be al Qaeda’s second-in-command has been killed, Afghan security forces have said.
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If you suddenly can’t print to your HP Printer from your Mac, you’re not alone: Code security cert snafu blamed
Driver software snubbed by macOS 10.15, 10.14, Amazon Music, too Updated Many Mac users today found, to their surprise, they are unable to print to their HP Inc printers.…
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Protecting remote workers an opportunity to do security better
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Minnesota attorney general says company suspected of recruiting private security to watch polling places on Election Day was misinformed
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A Tennessee-based company accused of recruiting armed men to watch polling places in Minnesota on Election Day caught the attention of the state’s attorney general, Keith Ellison.
It turns out, the effort was a misunderstanding, Ellison announced in a press release on Friday.
The company, Atlas Aegis, had responded to a request from a Minnesota company seeking private security contractors to protect private property in the state. According to Ellison, that company never indicated it needed private citizens to “protect election polls,” and that Atlas Aegis used that language of its own volition when reaching out to its network.
Ellison said his office received written assurance from Atlas Aegis that it will not send private security to polling locations, according to the press release.
“Minnesotans should expect that our elections will run as safely, smoothly, and securely as they always have. One of the reasons is that my office and our partners are actively enforcing our laws against threatening, frightening, or intimidating voters,” Ellison said.
“I’m holding Atlas Aegis to account for their misstatements about recruiting security for polling places in Minnesota that potentially frightened Minnesota voters. They won’t be doing it again and will not be anywhere in Minnesota before, during, or after Election Day.”
Minnesota state and federal laws “prohibit intimidating or interfering with voters and operating private armed forces in Minnesota,” Ellison said.
“I want to make it crystal clear to anyone who is even thinking about intimidating voters that I will not hesitate to enforce the laws against it to the fullest extent,” he said.Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: Why NASA won’t send humans to Venus
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