The Quiet Readers

By Cliff Potts, Editor-in-Chief

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 17, 2026

Most days, writing for the public feels a bit like working the late shift in a warehouse.

You show up. You clock in. You do the work.

Boxes go out the door, but you rarely see where they end up.

Independent publishing often feels the same way. Articles are written, edited, posted, and archived. The process repeats the next day, and the day after that. Over time the work becomes routine. You learn to focus on the craft itself rather than the response, because response is unpredictable and often invisible.

But every once in a while there are small reminders.

A quiet statistic. A returning visitor. A familiar pattern in the logs that says someone came back again to read another piece. Not loudly. Not publicly. Just another person spending a few minutes with the work.

That kind of readership is easy to overlook in a world that rewards noise.

Modern media tends to measure value in reactions—shares, arguments, bursts of attention. Independent work rarely moves that way. Instead, it accumulates slowly. One article read here, another bookmarked somewhere else. A thought carried forward into a conversation that the writer will never hear.

It is easy, after years of doing this, to assume the work disappears into the void.

But it doesn’t.

Someone is reading.

Someone is sitting with the ideas long enough to think about them. Someone returns weeks or months later to see what else has been written. Those readers rarely announce themselves, and that’s fine. The quiet readers have always been part of how writing travels through the world.

In fact, they may be the most important audience a writer can have.

A quiet reader isn’t chasing spectacle. They’re looking for something to consider. Something to file away. Something that might help make sense of the moment they’re living in.

For a writer, that is enough.

So if you are one of those readers—someone who stops by now and then, reads an article, and moves on with your day—know that your presence matters more than you might think.

The work may feel solitary from this side of the screen, but the act of reading completes the circuit.

And somewhere in the middle of a long workday, it is good to remember that the circuit is still there.

For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

References

Merton, R. K. (1938). Social structure and anomie. American Sociological Review, 3(5), 672–682.

#creativeLabor #digitalPublishing #independentMedia #mediaWork #readership #writingLife

UPDATE REGARDING AMSAL SITEPU CASE

WE WON, AMSAL SITEPU ARE FREE! ALL HIS ALLEGATIONS HAS BEEN DROPPED.

THIS SHOWS THAT, IN INDONESIA IT MUST BE VIRAL FIRST, NOT IT MUST BE REVIEWED FIRST.

YES, HE IS "LUCKY" THAT HIS CASE WENT VIRAL, THERE ARE MANY STORIES THAT NOT DISCOVERED BY THE MASS WITH SAD ENDING.

Case context:
https://infosec.exchange/@AmmarSpaces/116318006721908710

#MediaRights
#DocumentaryFilm
#CreativeLabor
#VideoVillage
#Indonesia
#JusticeForAmsalSitepu
#FreeAmsalSitepu
#AmsalSitepu
#IndonesiaNews
#Corruption
#Wrongfularrest

Recently, there is a fucking stupid case in Indonesia. Where a photographer were sentenced for two years in prison, because he was accused of doing budget markup for a VILLAGE VIDEO, which is the total are only around 30 Million rupiah or 1.763,17 Dolar.

The problem is, as you can see here, the auditor (the one accused the photographer) viewed that, the cost of CONCEPT/IDEAS, MICROPHONE, CUTTING, AND DUBBING

SHOULD HAVE BEEN ZERO, FUCKING ZERO....

Chronology so far can be found here:
https://www.bbc.com/indonesia/articles/cy41v3p1pxjo

The video profile in question: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dh2SxFbSEQ0

#MediaRights
#DocumentaryFilm
#CreativeLabor
#VideoVillage
#Indonesia
#JusticeForAmsalSitepu
#FreeAmsalSitepu
#AmsalSitepu
#IndonesiaNews
#Corruption
#Wrongfularrest

Pluralistic: Supreme Court saves artists from AI (03 Mar 2026)

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://pluralistic.net/2026/03/03/its-a-trap-2/

Pluralistic: Supreme Court saves artists from AI (03 Mar 2026) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

I’ve been thinking about why indie publishing—and a lot of creative work—feels increasingly busy, exhausting, and unsustainable, even as “opportunity” keeps expanding.

I call this pattern the deep-end dynamic:
when creators swim harder and deeper to survive, while platforms rise on that effort.

I unpack it here, starting with publishing but extending well beyond it:
https://lawrencenault.substack.com/p/the-deep-end-dynamic

#CreativeLabor #IndiePublishing #PlatformEconomy #MediaCriticism #AI

The Deep-End Dynamic

Why some markets rise as creators drown

Lawrence Nault

Who Decides What Succeeds in Film?

Andy Lauer challenges the idea that Hollywood controls what becomes a hit.

In this episode, actor/director Andy Lauer joins us to discuss parenting in a screen-heavy culture and the erosion of job security for actors in the age of streaming. A thoughtful conversation about art, economics, and audience influence.

▶️ Watch the full episode: https://youtu.be/nIc92qk6tEI

#Podcast #FilmIndustry #StreamingMedia #Parenting #CreativeLabor

When Stories Aren’t Written by Humans

#AI #Writing #Storytelling #CreativeLabor #TechAndCulture

Streaming Changed Actor Pay

Andy Lauer shares how streaming cut actor wages, reduced job stability, and reshaped creative careers—while also discussing parenting in a screen-heavy world.

🎧 Full episode: https://youtu.be/nIc92qk6tEI

#Podcast #Actors #FilmIndustry #Streaming #CreativeLabor #TheInternetIsCrack

🎭 Acting in the Age of Endless Content

Actor/director Andy Lauer explains how residuals once sustained actors—and why streaming upended that system.

We explore how constant screens affect families and how streaming has eroded job security across the acting profession.

▶️ Full episode available here: https://youtu.be/nIc92qk6tEI

#StreamingIndustry #ActorsRights #CreativeLabor #Podcast

Setting Boundaries in a Screen-First World

Andy Lauer discusses parenting choices, screen exposure, and resisting outside pressure when raising kids.

A thoughtful conversation with actor/director Andy Lauer about parenting in the age of constant screens and how streaming has transformed labor and job security in acting.

Watch the full episode: https://youtu.be/nIc92qk6tEI

#Parenting #DigitalLife #ScreenTime #AndyLauer #StreamingMedia #CreativeLabor