Thanks for what you do. I'd be interested in knowing data around Legacy Media subscriptions vs alternate media such as Rebel Media/True North (Canadian) or The Free Press/The Hill/Breaking Point (US) or GB News (UK) as well as readership on substack. Are those data available? I imagine it is difficult to compare apples to apples.
I bet there's something out there that reports competitive subscription numbers for legacy media, but for the newer challenging platforms I'd probably have to just go direct to their own substacks/ sites. Great idea.
I'd appreciate a post about shifting numbers of children in the 50 states so far this decade. There's the talk, and evidence, of people leaving northern states and California lately, and moving to southern states, but I don't know what the numbers are on changes in school-age populations.
Thank you for that suggestion. Great idea. I had done an analysis state by state for whole populations but it would absolutely be a good idea to look at how much of that is driven by families with school age kids.
Thanks for what you do. I'd be interested in knowing data around Legacy Media subscriptions vs alternate media such as Rebel Media/True North (Canadian) or The Free Press/The Hill/Breaking Point (US) or GB News (UK) as well as readership on substack. Are those data available? I imagine it is difficult to compare apples to apples.
Thanks again.
I bet there's something out there that reports competitive subscription numbers for legacy media, but for the newer challenging platforms I'd probably have to just go direct to their own substacks/ sites. Great idea.
I'd appreciate a post about shifting numbers of children in the 50 states so far this decade. There's the talk, and evidence, of people leaving northern states and California lately, and moving to southern states, but I don't know what the numbers are on changes in school-age populations.
Thank you for that suggestion. Great idea. I had done an analysis state by state for whole populations but it would absolutely be a good idea to look at how much of that is driven by families with school age kids.