Facebook Pixel Inbox ARMAGEDDON | Town & Country US - fashion - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

Inbox ARMAGEDDON

Town & Country US

|

May 2025

Everyone you know has a Substack. How did that become your problem?

- BY MATTIE KAHN

Inbox ARMAGEDDON

The emails promise two installments per week, with a chat function and commenting privileges. There are vows to include exclusive reporting or coveted sale codes or personalized recommendations. Several proffer eternal gratitude for the low cost of $5 a month!

You think the fee seems reasonable—even appropriate. Work, after all, deserves compensation. And who doesn't like the sound of an unmediated relationship between writer and audience? (Besides editors. And fact-checkers.) But then the emails keep coming. Five bucks a month becomes $10, then $20. Your inbox is bursting at the seams. Forget back issues of the New Yorker, your shame is now an unread stack of newsletters. It turns out Ronald Reagan was wrong about the scariest words in the English language: There are four, not nine: “I’m starting a Substack.”

In March, Substack—the preferred online newsletter service of the chattering classes, home to both venture-backed media companies like the Free Press and individual enthusiasts who all seem to have discovered the same pair of $900 pants at once—announced it had surged past 5 million paid subscribers. Its co-founder Hamish Mckenzie attributed the growth not just to the collapse of mainstream media, which has driven journalist defections from once untouchable institutions like CNN, MSNBC, the Washington Post, and the New York Times, but also to the platform’s new emphasis on video and audio tools. Now influencers who might once have generated TikTok content for free can do it on Substack and hawk their haircare tutorials or Joan Didion-inspired close reads for a price. Tina Brown has joined them, riffing on private jets and Meghan Markle. Nate Silver and Plum Sykes are there too. The marketplace is crowded, and the hustle is constant.

MORE STORIES FROM Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Is Just a Cruise Not Enough?

We have some suggestions.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

When Europe Wakes Up, Follow the River

AmaWaterways invites you to take a season-led approach to discovering cities, villages and daily life along Europe’s rivers in Spring 2027.

time to read

1 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Clickety-Clack

These trains will take you to points A, B, and C. And back in time.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Learning How to Listen

The best company you could ask for on a long drive might surprise you.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Regent Seven Seas Cruises builds ships to reach more places

Their fleet is compact by conviction, not compromise. All rooms are suites, the crew-to-guest ratio is nearly 1 to 1, and the all-inclusive fare covers shore excursions, specialty dining, spirits, Wi-Fi, a daily minibar restock, and so much more. Onboard restaurants compete with restaurants that have Michelin ambitions, and the Culinary Arts Kitchen runs cooking classes that change with every coastline.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Tell Me EVERYTHING

Give us a great woman’s stories, and we'll show you the world.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Capital Campaign

We’ve been teasing and toasting it all year, but our September issue will be where we really celebrate T&C’s 180th anniversary.

time to read

1 min

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

Get It in WRITING

If there’s anyone who could bring back a simpler time of elegant analog correspondence, it’s Ralph.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Is This the Coolest GOLF CLUB IN AMERICA?

Nine holes, a whiskey distillery, and a waiting list. Sweetens Cove isn't your average green.

time to read

2 mins

Summer 2026

Town & Country US

Town & Country US

There Goes the Inheritance

As Britain prepares to abolish hereditary political titles one less thing for America to be smug about! one earl argues that, in some realms, a little nepotism has a lot of value.

time to read

5 mins

Summer 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size