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What exactly is a “creator journalist?”

It was early in 2022, and I was part of a virtual panel on the crisis in local news hosted by WBUR in Boston along with an extraordinary entrepreneur and force of nature named Crystal Good, who was dialing in from West Virginia. It was on that panel that I heard the term “creator journalist” for the first time.

Good was explaining her role as an independent “publisher,” that is the title she preferred, as the founder of a multimedia organization called “Black by God: The West Virginian” that serves the Black community in a handful of rural counties in Central Appalachia. Given the wattage that comes off of just about everything Crystal Good says and does, I should have paid much more attention to this idea of “creator journalism.” For me, she is the embodiment of that movement.

Now at journalism conferences, from the Online News Association’s gathering last month in Chicago to this month’s International Journalism Festival in Perugia, Italy, the buzz is all about “creator journalism.”

There are seemingly endless panel discussions and keynote speeches by and about “creator journalism,” as the phrase finds itself thrust into the very center of the debate on the future of news and how journalists will build back trust with audiences after years of seeing it erode.

The questions that loom over this idea are mostly around how it will be funded and whether a galaxy of independent, individual approaches serving smaller niche audiences is sustainable as a way to fill information gaps in news across the country, and around the world. Project C and its founder Liz Kelly Nelson offer a critical source of research on the emerging market in America, and surveys of top creator journalists in the U.S. reveal that the movement took shape in 2020 and is in some ways born of the pandemic. But it has grown exponentially, particularly over the last year, and a Muck Rack study last year found that fully one-third of all journalists fit the definition of “creator journalist.” It is now an important force that is essential to understand.

The individuals who make up this sector depend largely on direct audience support through platforms, like Substack and of course YouTube and TikTok, that are making this easier, according to Project C. Other important platforms for monetization are happening on beehiiv, Twitch and Ghost.

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