Five Dollar Friday
by digby
I love this idea so much.
Starting today, every Friday I’m going to give five dollars to someone who’s produced something funny/interesting/worthwhile and is giving it away on the internet(s). Obviously the internet is the greatest distribution technology ever created for music and writing and video and journalism. But it’s also obvious it generally makes it more difficult for people producing such things to earn a living. So I have three goals with this: 1. Finally start paying some of the people who’ve created wonderful things I’ve enjoyed. 2. If possible, get lots of other people online to start doing this as well. It would be a beautiful thing if it grew and grew, and three years from now 10,000 people were giving away $50,000 to artists every week. To help get things rolling, I’ve created the twitter hashtag #5DF. Every week I’ll link to the recipient of my five dollars on twitter with that tag, and if you start doing it I encourage you to do the same. (I’ll also archive all my recipients here.) 3. In my most grandiose dreams, this idea would—in the process of becoming popular—make people realize that we need a new way to fund all kinds of art. In theory the internet should be a dream come true for artists and people generally, but it will never fulfill its potential if everyone is trying to eke out a living from advertising or just what other people are willing to cough up on the spur of the moment. I’m convinced the answer is something like Dean Baker’s Artistic Freedom Vouchers. Baker’s proposal is that the government give every adult a $100 voucher each year that they could in turn give to anyone producing anything creative.
Please go over and read the rest of the post, which includes his first purchase and the thanks he got from the artist who made it.
I’m a big believer in this kind of voluntary payment system. It’s currently what supports me and it’s the most free form of work I’ve ever had. I work more constantly than I ever have before and I love (almost) every minute of it.
This is a nice way of institutionalizing it in a small way for each of us.
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