No label, no manager, no permission
$14,000 a month. 2,100 subscribers. No label. No publishing deal. No manager taking 15 percent. A Nashville songwriter who left her contract in 2020 after calculating her advance worked out to $3,000 per song with no backend. She earns more than she ever did inside the system supposedly designed to support her.
The argument between creator advocates and platform defenders is about splitting the streaming pie. The pie is the wrong unit. The entire pipeline — creator through distributor to passive consumer — is dying. What replaces it is a direct relationship between maker and the people who pay, mediated by tools that did not exist fifteen years ago.
The parallel economy
Patreon paid over $3.5 billion in 2023. Substack: two million paid subscriptions. Bandcamp paid artists over $1 billion. The podcast economy: $2.3 billion in US ad revenue. These are not niche experiments. For a growing number of creators, they outperform the streaming platforms the other camps argue about.
Kevin Kelly described 1,000 true fans
in 2008. It took fifteen years for tools to catch up. The songwriter is the proof of concept. So is the illustrator with 800 Ko-fi subscribers, the indie developer on itch.io, the podcaster whose Patreon exceeded her NPR freelance pay. None are famous. All eat.
The WGA strike is instructive not as tragedy but as transition marker. Writers won real streaming residual improvements — collective action works. But during those 148 days, screenwriters launched Substacks and YouTube channels generating income outside the studio pipeline entirely. The end of movies as we knew them is real. The people who write them found other rooms. The AI compression of rates makes direct-to-fan more essential — a patron paying for a human’s process does not substitute it with a generator.
Where we concede ground: Survivorship bias. For every songwriter earning $14,000, thousands posted six months, earned $47, and quit.
What would change our mind: If Patreon’s top 1 percent earned 90 percent of payouts, mirroring Spotify’s concentration. Same disease, new host.
Read the full synthesis: What did streaming do to the people who actually make things?