In the last month, Meta announced that Bulletin would close and
reported that Twitter would shut down Revue. Upon hearing that news, our writer and product teams rallied to support these publishers.Today, we’re excited to share that an incredible roster of writers and creators from Bulletin are making Substack their new home. We hope you’ll offer them a warm welcome to the Substack writer community:
ofofMari Andrew, a bestselling author, artist, and speaker, brings her “joyfully philosophical illustrations and essays that meander between deep and light, bitter and sweet,” to Substack.
ofJessica Bennett, a contributing editor at The New York Times, author of Feminist Fight Club and This Is 18, and journalism educator at NYU, writes about women, culture, politics and whatever else sends her down a rabbit hole.
ofNBA writer, lecturer at Boston University, and co-host of the A-List Podcast, Sherrod Blakely covers NBA news on Substack.
Travel, features, Americana, and esoterica, from Ron Claiborne, who spent 40 years in news, the last 32 years as a correspondent and news reader at ABC News
Evan Dammarell of
ofEvan Dammarell is changing the way that Cleveland sports, news, entertainment, and culture are covered forever.
ofJournalist Giovanna Drpic profiles the Latino leaders in Florida who are rewriting the rules in business today.
ofAuthor, certified breathwork coach, and restorative writing teacher Alex Elle writes about how to find gratitude in the micro moments of life.
of“Weird and wonderful food distractions every week.” Sohla El-Waylly, an American chef, restaurateur, YouTube personality and former assistant food editor at Bon Appétit, explores the hot food topics that fascinate her at the moment, from house-made hot sauce to the tastiest food TV.
ofThe New York Times Bestselling author of RANGE: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World, shares insights to help readers expand their personal range and find interests they didn’t know they had.
ofJeremy Faust, MD, MS, is a board-certified emergency medicine physician. In his publication, he breaks down the data barrier between doctors and patients.
ofSports journalist, author, sports concussion researcher, public speaker, and college professor Joanne C. Gerstner covers sports and life.
orPoet, author and performer Andrea Gibson brings their publication Things That Don't Suck to Substack, which they describe as “a poet's quest to uncover what shifts when we shift our attention.”
ofDorie Greenspan gave up working on her doctorate in gerontology to bake cookies in a restaurant basement. Since then, she’s been a columnist for The New York Times Magazine and The Washington Post, has written 14 cookbooks (including three Bestsellers), and won five James Beard Awards.
ofJoe Haggerty has covered the NHL for nearly two decades. He shares unfiltered analysis, feature stories, columns, and more on his Substack.
ofHost and creator of the hit podcast and Netflix show Song Exploder and a co-host and producer of the podcasts Home Cooking and West Wing Weekly, Hrishikesh Hirway writes about “small delights in music, TV, film, and food” on Substack.
ofDeep dives on the royal family, musings on motherhood, style suggestions and more from the journalist and New York Times bestselling author of HRH: So Many Thoughts on Royal Style.
ofDocumentary and editorial photographer Dina Litovsky pens a newsletter “about the WHY in photography,” offering “an ongoing dialogue about the art and craft of creating and thinking about images.”
ofPaul Lukas deconstructs the finer points of sports uniforms, logos, and related topics in obsessive and excruciating detail. “If you’re the kind of person who geeks out over things like jersey unveilings, team rebrandings, sleeve patches, sock stripes, uni numbers, facemasks (the football kind, not the Covid kind), team logos, team colors, and so on, then you have come to the right place.”
ofA weekly newsletter about life, literature, and Lexapro, by potty-mouthed New York City-based writer and comedian Gregory Mania.
ofCelebrated environmental and science journalist, Andrew Revkin of the Columbia Climate School publishes “a weekly dose of sanity and substance amid the spin around climate and sustainability challenges.”
of"The Immaculate Jagoffs of Pittsburgh," is an epic comedy set during the last week of 1972, and delivered right to your inbox. Expect a mix of “slapstick and Joycean allusions, soaked in the vernacular of ‘the Burgh.’”
ofNik Sharma is a molecular biologist turned blogger turned food columnist for the likes of The San Francisco Chronicle, The Guardian, Serious Eats, and Food52. His approach to cooking uses recipes as experiments to help understand how flavor works and how to build recipes.
ofKate Swenson launched a Facebook page, Finding Cooper’s Voice, five years ago in hopes of finding one other child who had the same diagnosis as her own child—severe nonverbal autism. Today, she has nearly one million followers. Her Substack focuses on “normalizing the secret world of special needs parenting with humor, honesty, hope, and love.”
ofTherapist and New York Times Best Selling author Nedra Glover Tawwab writes a concise weekly newsletter about mental health, relationships, and life.
ofVirgie Tovar brings her newsletter about ending weight-based discrimination to Substack. She is the author of four books, a contributor to Forbes.com, and the host of the podcast Rebel Eaters Club.
ofCNBC special correspondent Jane Wells covers Wall Street and business news from a snarky perspective.
Emmy Award-winning broadcast journalist, turned family caregiver, educator and advocate, Julia Yarbough created Keeping it REAL Caregiving to deliver information, guidance, support and resources for family caregivers.
Switching to Substack
If you would like to move your publication to Substack from Bulletin—or any other publisher (WordPress, Revue, Medium, Tumblr, Mailchimp, TinyLetter, Ghost, and even some custom websites)—you can use our simple import tools here. Switching takes less than 5 minutes.
When you move to Substack, existing subscribers shouldn’t notice any major changes. Once you have imported your email list and archive from one of these services to Substack, you can simply resume publishing as normal. In your first Substack post, be sure to let your readers know that they can now read your publication on the go in the Substack iOS and Android apps.
On Substack, writers enjoy:
Audience growth. Marketing isn’t all on your shoulders here. More than 40% of all new free subscriptions and 12% of paid subscriptions to Substacks come from within our network. Read more.
A better financial model. The ad model demands that writers attract 40,000 page views every day to earn just $1,000 a month. With the Substack model, a steady base of 1,000 subscribers paying $5 each month earns you $60,000 per year. Estimate your earnings here.
Simple, easy-to-use tools. Zero tech knowledge is required to write on Substack. We take care of everything except the hard part (the writing itself). Podcasts, videos, community tools and an app are all integrated seamlessly into the Substack publishing experience, giving your subscribers the best experience on the internet.
Ownership. You will always own your mailing list, subscriber payment information, and intellectual property. If you decide to leave, you’ll take what you’ve built with you.
A direct relationship with readers. Algorithms shouldn’t decide who sees your work. On Substack, writers control the relationship with their readers. Comments and community threads encourage a sense of community amongst supporters.
Learn more about how to get started on Substack here.
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