Podcast Summary: Growth In Reverse
Episode: This Newsletter Sold For $150m (And Why It Matters)
Hosts: Chenell Basilio & Dylan Redekop
Released: October 15, 2025
Overview
This episode dives deep into headline-making news in the newsletter world: the $150 million acquisition of Barry Weiss’ The Free Press newsletter by Paramount Skydance (CBS News). Chenell and Dylan break down what this means for newsletter operators, why the deal matters for the broader creator economy, and what actionable lessons listeners can apply to their own newsletters. The episode then explores creative engagement strategies, like gamification and high-impact referral programs, before concluding with a discussion on the “Big 3” media strategies for modern audience builders (YouTube, Podcasts, Newsletters).
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Barry Weiss' Free Press Newsletter Sells for $150 Million
(01:00 - 06:10)
- The Acquisition:
- Free Press, an independent newsletter, was acquired by Paramount Skydance (parent of CBS News) for $150 million.
- Barry Weiss, the founder and accomplished journalist, becomes Editor-in-Chief of CBS News.
- This marks one of the largest newsletter exits to date.
- Reflects “aqua-hire” trend: buying both the creator and their brand.
- Host Reactions:
- “$150 million for a newsletter is pretty wild.” — Chenell (04:13)
- Bernstein and Dylan marvel at how Weiss’s Substack journey, begun post-NYT in 2020, led to this scale and opportunity.
- Recognition that Substack’s platform, despite losing one of its biggest drivers, benefits from the network effects of high-profile newsletters introducing more subscribers to the ecosystem.
- Platform Implications:
- Substack’s business model—being vulnerable to top-performers leaving for bigger media companies.
- “You gotta keep filling that leaky bucket in a way.” — Chenell (03:36)
Takeaways for Newsletter Operators
- “You never know who's reading… you just don’t know what could come from putting yourself out there, enhancing your skills, getting better at this kind of craft.” — Chenell (04:26)
- Consistency and public work serve as both portfolio and opportunity engine.
- “If you're good at what you do and you publish and you stick with this consistency, there is opportunity to create your own portfolio and… opportunities with something free like Substack.” — Dylan (06:01)
2. Gamification & Turning Your Newsletter into a Habit
(07:02 - 10:12)
- Case Study: The Assist’s “Werkle” Game
- The Assist (newsletter for women in business) launches “Werkle,” their spin on Wordle, to draw recurring website traffic and deepen engagement.
- “I think this is fun…a cool, interesting way to get people hooked on your brand and your newsletter.” — Chenell (07:23)
- Platform Benchmarks:
- NYT’s games are massive audience drivers; even LinkedIn has quietly built in games with leaderboards to fuel competition & daily returns.
- “They’ve incentivized you to keep playing every day, and now they’ve built in a leaderboard…that’s made it that much more interesting.” — Dylan (09:08)
- Advice for Creators:
- Leverage simple games or experiments—perfection is less important than speed and creativity.
- “With all the AI tools out now, I’m sure there’s a way to build, like, a basic geeky…” — Chenell (09:51)
- Creative competitions can boost newsletter engagement; doesn’t have to be a full-blown game (e.g., buttons, reply contests).
3. Referral Programs that Drive Viral Growth
(11:21 - 16:53)
- Case Study: The Dink’s Referral Program (Pickleball Newsletter):
- Partners with pickleball brands (e.g., Selkirk, Onyx) to offer milestone-based rewards for referrals—ranging from stickers to paddles and shoes.
- Brands get exposure and new leads; the program is self-sustaining due to highly targeted partnerships.
- “Every time someone opens this email, they're seeing Franklin Paddle, Selkirk pickleball stickers...the brands probably just love that exposure.” — Chenell (14:07)
- The Dink rapidly grew from 150,000 to likely 200,000+ subscribers (by 2025).
- Replication Potential:
- Particularly suited for hobby or enthusiast newsletters with gear, merch, or swag opportunities.
- Both small and large newsletters can leverage this model.
- Actionable Insight:
- If you can offer brands exposure and leads, you can negotiate rewards for your referral program, even without a massive audience.
4. The “Big Three” Media Strategy for Newsletter Businesses
(17:04 - 21:52)
- From Matt McGarry’s Framework:
- The future of media is concentrated around three pillars:
- YouTube = TV
- Podcasts = Radio
- Newsletters = Magazines/Newspapers
- Everything else is either a distraction or a means to drive audiences to these core platforms.
- The future of media is concentrated around three pillars:
- Key Points:
- “If you’re not exceptional at at least one of these channels, it’s impossible to build a content business.” — Paraphrased from McGarry (18:12)
- Specialize deeply in one “pillar” and use “discovery platforms” (Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Instagram, etc.) to route people to your core.
- Discovery Channels:
- “Podcasts and newsletters are inherently hard to grow; you need something like [YouTube or social].” — Chenell (19:01)
- Video is becoming increasingly crucial for top-of-funnel discovery.
- Mindset Shift:
- “Fear of video is stunting your growth.” — Dylan, summarizing McGarry (19:50)
- Writers should push past video fears—longterm, video accelerates growth.
- Some creators can still thrive without video, especially with standout content, but most will grow faster with it.
5. Growth Cycles: TV → Creator / Creator → TV
(24:00 - 25:12)
- Changing Media Landscape:
- Major media companies now see independent newsletter creators as high-value acquisition targets, flipping the traditional “TV-to-newsletter” paradigm.
- “It’s almost flipping…you used to think of CBS News as the place to go to find out what’s happening. And now…I’d say more people are actually looking at YouTube creators, newsletters, those kinds of things as more trustworthy.” — Chenell (24:00)
- Content & Consistency Win:
- “It always comes back to insanely valuable content.” — Dylan (25:12)
- Dedication and relentless value, often forged over long and underappreciated hours, ultimately separates top creators.
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- On Opportunities:
- “You never know who's reading. That's my biggest takeaway.” — Chenell (04:26)
- On Consistency:
- “If you’re good at what you do and you publish and you stick with this consistency, there is opportunity to…create your own opportunities with something free like Substack.” — Dylan (06:01)
- On Gamification:
- “They’ve incentivized you to keep playing every day and now they’ve built in a leaderboard…so I just think there’s…probably a way that you could incorporate some kind of fun in entertainment and competition, even with your readers.” — Dylan (09:08)
- On Referral Programs:
- “Every time someone opens this email, they're seeing [these brands]…so I think the brands probably just love that exposure.” — Chenell (14:07)
- On the Importance of Video:
- “Fear of video is stunting your growth…If you want to take your content to the next level and get in front of more people, that’s the way you are going to have to go.” — Dylan (19:50)
- On the New Creator Path:
- “Access to audiences is democratized…now the barriers to entry have become a lot lower, at least for getting there.” — Dylan (23:00)
- On Traditional Media Adapting:
- “The biggest news organizations are seeing that, taking notice and being like, we need to pull in these top creators so that we get that mind share back and that market share.” — Chenell (24:00)
- On Grit Behind Success:
- “[Go] back to the beginning. She was probably working 15, 16 hour days figuring this out in the beginning. Got her leg in the door somewhere and went from there…you don’t see all those … hard work that she did, but it’s there.” — Chenell (25:21)
Timestamps for Major Segments
- 00:55 — Introduction to $150m newsletter acquisition
- 01:12 — Barry Weiss’ career & Substack’s platform implications
- 04:26 — Key takeaways for newsletter writers
- 07:02 — Gamification: “Werkle” and New York Times/LinkedIn games
- 11:21 — Referral program deep dive: The Dink (Pickleball newsletter)
- 17:04 — Big 3 Media Strategy discussion
- 19:50 — The importance of video for modern creators
- 24:00 — The shift from traditional media to creator-first acquisitions
- 25:12 — The grit and value behind newsletter success
Final Thoughts
Throughout the episode, Chenell and Dylan emphasize the explosive potential for independent creators—whether through record-breaking exits, creative audience engagement, or media strategies that merge old and new. Their central message: Show up with value, be creative in audience engagement, and don’t fear evolving platforms or formats. The market for impactful, niche-driven newsletters and their operators is only just beginning.
