Hyperfixed - Presenting Proxy with Yowei Shaw: Alex and the Impossible Ask
Episode Date: September 11, 2025This week, Alex is a guest on another podcast that solves a problem for him. Episode description:Alex used to host a huge podcast (Reply All). He now makes a new independent show called Hype...rfixed. He loves making it. Only problem is, Alex now has to ask for money all the time to survive, which he hates doing.From the episode: Listen to Yowei's podcast, Proxy! Subscribe to Yowei's Patreon Become a premium Hyperfixed Member Learn more about Haley Bash and Donor Organizer Hub, a support network for people who fundraise for under-resourced causes The Accidental Fundraiser, Haley's step-by-step guide to raising money for your cause Alex's post about the state of Hyperfixed (posted May 2025) Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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Hey, it's Robin from PRX. There's a really special new show that I think you'd really enjoy.
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wherever you get your podcasts.
Please listen closely.
If it ain't got those hands, man.
You don't have to be gay to listen.
If it ain't got that stretch, if it ain't got those eyes.
This morning for breakfast, I had a toasted everything bagel
with eggs and cheese.
Hi, I'm Alex Goldman, and this is Hyperfixed.
On the show, listeners write in with problems, big and small,
and I try to solve them.
But this week, Hyperfix, the show itself, has a problem.
And no matter what we try, we simply have not figured out how to solve it.
So if you listen to independent podcasts with any regularity,
You probably know that the podcast industry is not in the best shape.
Over the last 10 years, the podcast industry expanded beyond anything that many of us could have dreamed of.
And then the bubble burst.
Advertising dollars started to dry up.
Corporate cash began shifting away from narrative journalism towards celebrity-driven chat shows.
And then, one after another, all of our favorite audio shop began to close.
and our friends, some of whom I consider the best producers in the business, starting
getting laid off from their jobs.
And then they got new jobs and got laid off from those.
And then they got laid off from the jobs they got after those jobs.
Hyperfix producer Emma Cortland has been laid off four times in the past three years.
So what do we do?
Without corporate dollars, without reliable ad revenue, how does a show like Hyperfixed make
enough money to stay afloat?
Honestly, I don't know the answer.
But recently, one of my friends set out to answer this question.
Producer Yo-Wei Shaw is among the hundreds of people I know
who have been laid off in the past couple of years.
You may know her as the one-time host of a phenomenal show called Invisibilia.
But when that show got canceled by NPR,
Yo-Wei started her own independent podcast called Proxy,
just kind of like a sibling to hyper-fixed.
On her show, Yo-Wei finds people with problems
and then pairs them with the perfect person, or proxy, if you will, to address that problem.
And since she was having the same anxiety about money, she thought, hey, maybe we should make an episode about this.
So what you're going to hear today is the episode of proxy where Yo-Wei solves my problem.
We're like a problem-solving Ouroboros.
Maybe we'll just pass problems back and forth and we'll never run out of content.
also please be sure to subscribe to proxy mine is just one of a number of great episodes that you always put together other episodes include one where brian reed the host of s town and question everything tries to get over his incessant urge to correct his mother-in-law who has Alzheimer's and in another she tries to help two friends who were in an up-and-coming band that was derailed by a band member and a relative's death it's an incredible show yo-way is a fantastic problem solver and an amazing proxy hunter she's
really got the goods. You can actually hear the hope return to my voice as this episode goes
on. You can find proxy wherever you listen to podcasts and at proxypodcast.com. But be aware,
like me, you will probably hear Yo-Wei at some point asking for financial support. All right,
here is the proxy episode, Alex, and The Impossible Ask. Thanks so much to Yo-Wei. Thanks so much to
proxy. And we will see you soon.
So, Alex, I asked this question of every guest.
If you had to vocalize the sound of your emotional conundrum, what would it be?
Uh, okay.
Ugh.
I think that's about it.
Welcome to Praxie.
I'm Yo-A. Shaw, your emotional investigative journalist.
Today, the case of the two sad chumps who desperately want to do anything.
Seriously, anything.
But the one thing they need to do to survive.
That's coming right up.
Hello.
Hello, Alex Goldman.
Hi, O'Sha.
How's it going?
I'm okay.
Why are you laughing?
I don't know.
That I'm okay.
We sounded very qualified.
It sounded like there was like an unspoken I'm okay but in there that you just didn't say out loud.
Well, that's a good segue because we are here today.
Because we both need to solve the same problem.
Yeah, yeah.
So you and I used to work at big media outlets.
We had jobs with good benefits, regular paychecks, resources.
You were hosting Reply All.
I was hosting Invisibilia.
These were established shows with big audiences.
Yes.
And then that ended.
Yeah, and now we're out in the wilderness.
Yeah, so you've started this new show called Hyperfixed.
I have this new show proxy.
Do you want to explain what Hyperfixed your new show is?
My show is listeners write in with problems.
It sort of doesn't matter what the problem is.
It could be an enduring family mystery.
It could be an interpersonal argument.
It could be some annoying system that people have to navigate.
And I try and help them with it.
And in doing so, I hope that I and maybe they learn something about the world.
And your show is proxy.
In some ways, I feel like proxy, not to be a gender essentialist,
But it's like the girl version of your show.
Proxies all about feelings and what is your emotional hang-up and how can we make you feel better.
Whereas your show, a lot of it has to do with getting actual concrete answers.
That's a very funny way to put it.
Yes, that's true.
Okay, so we have these new shows that we are funding completely independently.
And so, yeah, we both now have to ask for money all the time.
to survive. Right. Like, for instance, as of today, we're kicking off the proxy fundraising drive
to get to 1,500 paying Patreon members so we can keep going. We live and die by patrons.
But here's our conundrum. Alex, I know from talking to you that we both hate asking for money.
Part of the reason it took me so long to get this show started in the first place is because I was like,
I really want to partner with a production company who will bankroll this thing. So I don't have to be
asking people for money. I want to be able to fund this entirely off of ads, but that's just
not the reality of almost any media these days. Like, that's just not happening anymore. And, like,
I don't know for you, but like for me, I don't know what I'm doing. I feel like I'm annoying people.
There's something about it that feels like deeply, I don't want to say sleazy. It's real. Oh, it feels
sleazy to me. I feel like a grifter sometimes. I'm like, oh, am I being a grifter right now? I really
believe in my show and think it should exist, but I just, I feel like a Bambi with shaky
legs. And also the stakes are really high. Right. You know, because if we don't succeed at
asking for money, then our shows will cease to exist. It's pretty terrifying, but so is the
prospect of asking for money. Yeah. You know, when I was in college, I worked at a telemarketing
agency for a summer. My job was to, like, call people and say, hey, I'm calling on behalf of, you know,
LGBTQ rights or whomever, and ask people for donations.
And I do not have that skill.
Why were you not successful at it?
Because trying to convince people that they should spend money on stuff is like a thing that I desperately don't want to do.
I remember very clearly calling someone one time and then being like, why would you think it's
appropriate to call me during my dinner time on a Sunday evening?
And I was like, I don't think this is appropriate.
I am doing this because I need to live.
I didn't even realize the extent of our similarities.
I also worked in telemarketing.
That was one of my gigs in college, calling alumni to donate to the university.
And I was terribly at it.
I get someone on the phone and be like,
Hi, this is Yo-Wei.
I'm so sorry to bother you.
I'm so sorry for existing.
Sometimes I would like make the call and connect with someone and I could just tell by the tone of their voice that I was not going to make the sale.
And I just disconnect.
I like wouldn't even say hi.
You know when they say, like, this call may be recorded for quality assurance?
Uh-huh.
Sometimes my calls were being recorded for quality assurance, and they're like, why do you keep hanging up on people?
And I was like, I don't know, I get scared.
Well, fate has decided that we are now stuck with a headset.
I know.
And this time, there is no end in sight.
Right.
This isn't a summer gig.
Okay, so specifically, let's talk about what are some of the emotional questions we need answers to?
I can say for me, I want to know what version of transparency is fun and brings people in and what version of transparency is pathetic and turns people off.
Right. That's a very interesting question because I have defaulted to doing that.
My questions are just like, how do I feel okay with this? I have this feeling like what makes you feel like you're worth spending money on?
The unmitigated gall of asking other people to pay for you to do anything, it feels like an insane level of ego to be asking for that kind of thing.
And a thing that I've been thinking about a lot in the past couple weeks is like if things get really bad, I mean, they already are really bad.
But if they get much worse, like economically, the first thing people are going to stop buying is their monthly podcast feed.
we are the discretionary spending.
Absolutely. I've been thinking about this, too.
And I want to know how to tell myself and to a degree everyone else,
hey, this thing is worth spending money on no matter what.
That's a really hard thing to feel in like a time where people feel desperate and scared.
Yeah.
Okay.
Today, we are going to tackle the great question of our age, which is because,
Because everything is falling apart from public infrastructure to health care to how we fund news and science, more and more of us are going to need to ask for money for all kinds of things.
And so is there any way to do it that isn't soul crushing?
God, what a bleak question.
This episode will determine whether the shows exist or not in the future.
But no pressure at all.
No big deal.
Okay.
I'm going to go and see what I can find out.
This is exciting.
It's been a while. It's been several months.
Okay. So for me, a lot has happened since then. I have talked to a lot of interesting people.
And I want to start with someone that I found helpful for me.
Okay.
Her name is Haley Bash.
How are you doing today?
Wow. You are the second person ever to ask me that question in an interview.
She wrote this book, Accidental Fundraiser. And she trains people just like us who,
really don't want to raise money, but have to. And the weird thing about Haley is that she is
very, very psyched about fundraising. She used the literal words really fun to describe asking for
money. Oh, that's crazy. So 15 years ago, Haley was living in San Francisco working as a
software engineer and was disturbed, not surprisingly, by the intense inequality she was seeing
around her on the streets. But she also felt powerless. What could she one person do?
Right.
But one day she goes to an organizing meeting and someone asks Haley, do you want to help fundraise for local social justice orgs?
And even though Haley is terrified to ask people for money and hasn't really ever done it before, she says yes.
Okay.
Haley is so nervous.
She doesn't want to ask people directly or in person.
So she just sends a BCC email to 20 coworkers with a link and she's panicking.
I am so embarrassed to go to work tomorrow.
everybody is going to be gossiping about, oh, look at how greedy or presumptuous Haley is.
Wow. She takes it harder than I think we do.
And we're asking for money for ourselves. It's not like we're being altruistic here.
But I woke up the next day and I'd already hit my fundraising goal.
Oh, dang. Okay.
In that moment, Haley is hooked.
It felt like I had agency for the first time. You know, I felt very very,
very powerless in a lot of ways. The tech world is so behemoth. I'm a newcomer here. I just met
these co-workers. But to see that, you know, despite all that sort of negative self-talk that
I was able to accomplish my goal so quickly, which I mean, goes to show that I was really
low-balling what I could raise. I learned more about goal-setting later on. But it did give me the
feeling of like, oh, I can make a difference. Okay. For Haley, this early success tapped into an
appreciation for fundraising that was lying dormant. She grew up in a farming town in the Midwest,
and as a kid, she was always getting dragged to some spaghetti dinner or pancake breakfast.
You know, if someone got sick and needed help with medical bills, that sort of thing.
And for Haley, this is what fundraising is all about, building community.
There was kind of this unofficial, you know, especially for the families where it was the raising was because of tough times.
You know, there's kind of like support circles around them.
What do you mean by a support circle?
People just surrounding and hugging.
Hmm.
That's beautiful.
I mean, that's another thing about me is that I've always hated asking for help.
I've always felt like, no, I should be able to do this on my own.
Which is like a very toxic and actually pretty harmful way to think.
Yeah, same.
Okay, well, today, Haley is an executive director of donor organizer hub.
This organization she founded to help people fundraise for under-resource causes.
And something she's always doing in workshops is dealing with people's hang-ups about asking for money, because people have a lot of them.
One person said in a training, apparently, they'd rather pluck out each of their individual nails than fundraise.
Yeah, okay. That sounds right.
You know, if you feel that way initially, it's like, congrats you're human.
I still get the butterfly flutters when I ask people for money.
Hmm. Really?
Yeah, yeah. I think.
And that never goes away?
It never goes away.
Shoot. Okay, so the first thing Haley tried to do with me is reframe what asking for money means. And she got a list of facts and arguments. I'm going to hit you with some of the ones that stuck out to me.
Okay.
First reframe. With funding cuts left and right. Yep.
No universal health care and affordability crisis. Haley argues that asking for money is a first aid skill that everybody needs to learn.
A lot more of us are going to have to step up.
for ourselves and for people that we love.
That makes perfect sense.
It doesn't make it less bleak to me.
It does make me feel slightly less alone.
All right.
Second reframe from Haley.
When you ask for money, you are giving a gift.
Okay.
I'm interested to hear the explanation for that.
Haley says that most people think of asking for money as a favor,
but you should think about it from the point of view of the person being asked,
because you're actually giving them an invitation to get involved with a cool project.
Plus, she said there's lots of research that shows people feel good when they give money.
It activates the reward system in people's brains.
It releases the feel-good, happy chemicals.
And over the long term, it even improves mental and physical health.
It can lower blood pressure, reduce stress, boost self-esteem, combat depression.
I don't know if I would use this in my messaging exactly,
But that does help. This will salve my anxiety a bit.
Okay, good. We're getting somewhere.
Here's the third reframe Haley made.
Are you ready for a mic drop moment, your way?
She said, asking for money is secretly the most popular thing ever.
She gave me this fact.
More people donate than go to church or vote or any other civic or community engagement.
Okay. Well, that is a mind blower.
I would not have expected that.
Why is it mind blowing?
I just think about sort of the schedule on which I donate money and I do a decent amount when I can, but like I'm just surprised at sort of that massive scale.
I was really surprised by this too and it made me feel more hopeful. Like, oh, lots of people donate. It makes it feel like less of an imposition to ask.
That's it. It makes it feel more normal. Here's the last reframe that's the last reframe that's the same.
stuck in my brain. Haley said that research shows that we underestimate the number of people
who will say yes to us and how much money they will give to us, mainly because we're embarrassed.
Oh, okay. I mean, honestly, we're getting to the really encouraging stuff. I'm sorry if I
seemed under enthused at the beginning, but yeah, I appreciate this. Well, Haley demonstrated this
lesson by flipping the script and doing this role-playing thing where she asked me for money.
Alex, I'm going to do it with you right now if you can send.
I do.
Okay, so Alex, let's say I write a weekly newsletter reviewing synths.
Ooh, I'm already on board.
So you love this newsletter.
You live for my articles about how to build modular synths at home.
I simultaneously feel like very called out by this and like very comforted.
It's like, you know me too well, but also.
It's like, oh, I'm home.
Well, okay, you love this newsletter, but it's going to go under if readers don't give.
But because I'm a fearless, synth newsletter writer, I'm going to ask you for a bold and ambitious but not undoable amount of money.
How much money comes to mind?
I would say $75 a year or like $10 a month.
What are the reasons you would say yes?
Um, because I'm getting information I can't get elsewhere, probably because I've developed a relationship with the author, that kind of thing.
Any other reasons?
Um, because I can afford it and I feel like things like that should exist.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
And are there any other reasons why you would give?
Uh, I mean, I suppose maybe for some kind of bobble or benefit.
But, I mean, the podcasts that I pay for, I, I mean, the podcasts that I pay for, I,
I often do not avail myself of all of the benefits.
Okay.
What are the reasons you would say no?
Uh, what are the reasons I would say no?
That's actually much harder.
Um, either I can't afford it or it doesn't interest me enough or I'm already supporting
other things that take up a significant chunk of my income.
Any other reasons you would say no?
Not that I can think of off the top of my head.
head. Okay, so this is the part where I'm trying to be Haley right now. What did that exercise
teach you about asking for money and what it feels like to be asked? It taught me that I'm like
pretty willing to give and that it's much easier to get me to donate to stuff that I thought
it would be. Did that do anything for you or not really? It did. It moved the needle a little bit
because it made it feel like, oh, okay, well, I mean, I have so little problem doing this and I like supporting things that I care about. Maybe I should be a little more chill.
That can be the secret title to this episode. Maybe we should be more chill. Okay. So I want to tell you about this other thing that Haley did with me because it was really funny, but also disconcerting. There were times when talking to Haley where it was,
It felt like I was being inducted into a cult, especially when she would say things like,
What if fundraising is living into exactly the purpose of why you have proxy?
See, that kind of language is really tough for me.
It just sounds so insincere.
And so it sounds very corporate speak to me.
But I also totally understood when talking to her why I would want to join this cult.
I felt like I was in a chair and Haley was like, cheerfully breaking me down.
Okay.
She'd ask me questions like, what are you hoping to overcome?
What do you want to be courageous about?
What's in your control?
Do you have control over whether they're busy?
No.
Is it likely that people think you're uppity or asking for money?
No.
Are people likely giving when they shouldn't be?
No.
What happens if you take away that agency from people?
Maybe it's condescending.
The fear of uppity becomes realized.
Hey, Lee.
Alex, I'm going to put you in the chair.
All right.
Put me in the chair.
You're in the chair.
So, Alex, what's your worst fear if you ask for money?
My worst fear is that people will not only not want to give me money, they just won't want to listen to the show anymore.
How likely do you think this is going to happen?
I think that you're going to tell me that it's not super likely, but like in my head, it's like if I ask more than once a month, in a more meaningful way than just saying in the end of the episode, like, hey, you know, we've got a premium membership.
If I do it like more than once a month in any meaningful way, people are just going to be like, go away.
You're so annoying.
What is your problem?
Is minimizing annoying people the point of life?
Wow.
Oh, that's a really big question.
I feel like I'm doing a terrible job at this because I have all of the same fears.
When Haley did this with me, though, she flipped the whole question around in a nice way.
Let's say six months from now, Yo-Way, I'm so sorry.
The unfortunate news is proxy was not able to fundraise the amount needed to sustain itself.
And so you have to announce closure to your listeners.
Do you think your listeners might be annoyed that you didn't ask for money, that you didn't
didn't say you needed support. I mean, that's very fair. But it's like, it's just a really
tough balancing act. Yeah. Now for the lesson that completely flips the way I've been asking
for money and the way you've been doing it. I can hardly wait. Alex, you sent this earnings report
email back in May. Do you remember the one I'm talking about? Yes, I do. So this is that email where
you break down the business model for making money and podcasts and how you hyperfixed where
you're at six months in with audience growth, membership subscription and ad revenue, and how
far you have to go to be sustainable. Can I have you do a dramatic reading of one paragraph?
Yes. Okay. I send it to you. Oh, I love doing dramatic readings, especially of my own
writing. I've agonized over whether or not to publish this. Well, agonized is a little strong, but I've
definitely waffled. I think that openness and honesty, even at a level that makes me
uncomfortable, is to some degree what people like about my work. I also genuinely want to
help people understand the cost of making real narrative journalism in 2025 after the advertising
market is contracted, after companies like Gimlet have all cashed out. I feel very confident
that there's a way forward. It's just taking longer and requiring me to take on more financial
liability than I'd hoped. And things could definitely turn. But I could also have to go get a real
job instead of telling stories on the internet. And if I do, hey, I had a good run of almost 20 years and I
feel very fortunate. So I shared your email with Haley and she thought there were parts of it that
were great. Like transparency in theory is great. Uh-oh. But she was like, I feel like you all are
collectively sharing the recipe, not the brownie. A lot of talk of, you know, it's hard. And it is hard.
Like I don't want to, you know, minimize how hard it has been. These shifts have been for you all.
but it's like, it's hard to be an independent podcaster out there. And it just all kind of feels
like, ooh, okay, so it's hard to pay your bills, y'all. That sucks. I'm so sorry. Versus like,
I am a participant of something bigger, more beautiful. It's connected in my day-to-day routine.
Churches, they call it tithing, right? Like religious communities, they ask for a certain percentage
of your income. They pass the bucket. They give you the gifts of God, right? And I'm not saying you have to have the stakes of
Like, God.
I think I get it.
I think I get it.
Her point is, if you're always talking about the baking powder, the sugar, the flour, the eggs, nobody's mouth is watering.
You have to talk about the delicious, gooey, brownie that people will get to eat.
Like, say you have a fundraising campaign to save the aquarium.
If you're focusing on the recipe, you're going to talk about saving the staff, you've got to pay rent, property taxes.
But Haley says the brownie would be talking about the jellyfish and the cool sharks.
Like that's why people are going to give to save the aquarium.
I understand.
I get what this makes perfect sense.
I do think that like me talking about the difficulties and stuff is very in line with my like constant apologizing for doing it.
It's like me being like, I'm sorry, but we really need this because of this important thing.
Whereas I think what you're saying is I should just be like, hey, here's the great benefit of doing this.
My mind was blown by this and I was not entirely convinced.
But let's just go with it for a bit.
Alex, do you have a proudest or favorite moment from Hyperfixed?
I don't know if I necessarily have a proudest moment.
But there's like these little, I feel like there's always just like little touches where I'm just like, oh, I love this.
I'm so glad that I get to be a part of this thing.
a perfect example would be the most recent episode we did it was a guy who came to us and was like hey i have a fantasia which is the inability to create images in your mind's eye like if someone says imagine an apple you see nothing abstractly you know what an apple is you don't you can't visualize an apple and this guy had this condition but the thing that the thing i really liked about that conversation was this this incredibly human fear this guy had that if his dad died he would
would forget his dad.
But, like, I feel like I should be able to think about his face, and I just can't, you know.
The whole reason Mitchell wanted to fix his A Fantasia was because he wanted to do that
magical thing everyone else seemed to be able to do, to carry their loved ones around with
them.
And in particular, he wanted to carry his dad.
I was just like, oh, that's really touching and so utterly relatable.
What would be the brownie here for the listener?
that's tough more episodes like that one um what is that episode doing for people oh man you're you're
really putting me through the paces today uh i'm only speaking for myself here it presents like a
worldview that makes me feel a little less alone if it makes you feel any better i was also
just like i don't know how to answer that haley because like you know it's like fundamentally
hard to put yourself in someone else's shoes right and also
It feels like a little egotistical.
That is hard.
It feels like you're writing a grant.
Like, here's all the impact, the measurable ways that this show is helping people.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't think about the show as like helping people.
I'm sure that I've done some service journalism here and there that's made a difference.
But I think of the show more in terms of like, this will make them feel something.
And I suppose that's helpful.
For me, if I had to first talk about a moment, a favorite moment.
a favorite moment. It's hard to choose one, but I would say in every successful proxy conversation,
there's this like moment where the tension in the room gets released just a bit. And it can come from
someone saying, I'm sorry that happened to you. That shouldn't have happened to you. Or, you know,
someone sharing a similar experience to be like, I see you. I get it. Jesus fucking Christ is my first thought here.
because like I have terrible layoff stories that I've been told that I've seen where people just like show up and their emails are disabled or the doors locked or like they come and you know their fate is decided by which color card they pull out of a box like there's crazy shit that I could tell you about your story is the least human story I've ever fucking heard like that is horrifying and I am so sorry that this is what happened to you because this is just like a series of four decisions.
where this company decided that you were not a person and that you didn't matter.
And that's not okay.
But I just honestly want to apologize on behalf of all people professionals for how that person acted and how the company empowered that person to act.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
So Haley is saying, if you can remind people of these.
rare special moments and things that you're doing for listeners that exist exclusively because of
the podcast, then thinking about it not existing might be more painful to listeners.
As if you were to say suddenly, no more brownies for life.
Never again.
Here's the last thing that Haley told me that I want to talk about.
She said to watch the vibes.
What does that mean?
Okay, so Alex, one of your hangups was worrying about being egotistical,
feeling bad about asking when people don't have as much money these days,
that whole hangup of like, do I deserve money?
Haley is like, that is just faux modesty, and it's not helping.
I think when we have fears of embarrassment, we prepare for ourselves for rejection ahead of time, and we try to shortcoat it for people to reject us.
She compared it to asking people to go to a party.
So, Alex, if I were to ask you, hey, there's this party happening this Friday, but it's probably not going to be that fun.
I don't know how many people are going to be there.
And, like, you probably have more important things to do.
Would you want to come to my party?
Uh, okay, fine, fair, fine.
No.
Okay.
Besides being insecure, Haley said that we both seem very sad, and that is also not the right energy to bring to fundraising.
Okay, yeah, but I mean, that's also just like my default.
I got to get over that, I think.
Haley says sadness is not the right way to ask.
You have to tap into what is the thing that made you, Alex, want to go into debt to make hyperfixed?
Like, what lights you up about the show?
Untangling problems is so exciting for me.
I love doing it.
So being able to answer questions that people have and being able to make the world feel a lot.
little more mapable. All of that is very exciting to me. For me, you know how you said earlier that
your journalism isn't really about helping people? For me, I would say that is my kink. Like,
I love to be useful. And I am convinced that emotional investigative journalism is special
and important. And I love helping people report on their feelings. It feels like a magic trick.
Like, yes, you can go to therapy.
Please keep going to therapy, everybody.
But, you know, your therapist isn't going to scour the world of social science
to see if there's an insight that would be useful for you.
They're not going to look for the exact right stranger who has shared experience
that would be useful for you to talk to.
And then on a more macro level, I just feel like we're not taking emotions seriously enough.
I feel like we've reached the point in the culture where we're like,
yes, we have feelings and we need to regulate them.
But what are the specific underlying emotional dynamics, driving personal problems, relationship problems, social problems, political problems?
I feel like that's a lens and layer that often gets overlooked in journalism.
That's my thing.
Yeah. Okay.
I feel like a little nerdy when I say these things.
No, I think that this is all very useful.
I'm feeling for the first time, like, okay, maybe I should just swallow all of this goofiness and be a normal person.
After the break, any progress we've made goes out the window.
We have a fundraising catastrophe.
That's when proxy returns.
Alex. How you doing?
How you doing? Okay, so the other day you said something scary happened with fundraising.
We talked briefly about it, but walk me through what happened because I don't really understand.
All right. Well, let me try and explain it to you. So, like, I have talked to people who tell you how to raise money. And I've been doing it a variety of ways. You know, I ask on social media every once in a while. I will put maybe a minute long thing at the beginning of the podcast reminding people that we're independent and asking them to support as if they can. I'll put things in the credits about what kind of bonus stuff they will get. Another way I've been trying to monetize and I hate, God, it feels
so icky in my very soul to talk about monetizing. But I mean, that's just like where we're at
as an industry. So another thing I've been trying to do to monetize is we've partnered with a
company called Podroll. And basically they say, hey, what if we throw an episode of another
show down your feed that will appear after your most recent episode? So it's basically like
you're giving ad space to other podcasts in the form of having them be the second episode.
episode on your feed. And then the rest of the feed continues normally. And the feedback from our
listeners on all of this has been resoundingly negative. We released the second part of a three-part
series earlier this month. And I put an ask at the beginning of that. And like, the hostility for
that, it wasn't anything that I hadn't done before, but the hostility to it was like really
strong. And it really spooked me. And I don't know what I did differently necessarily.
That fucking sucks. I'm sorry. Have you guys?
gotten negative feedback like this before about asking for money? No, I don't feel like I had. I feel like
I had six months of runway or something. And then people were just sort of like, I don't really want to hear
about this anymore. And I'm wondering if it's just like they find me grading, which I don't know if
there's a cure for that. Let's not go there yet. And I mean, for what it's worth, we can see how many
people sign up on what day so we can roughly calibrate what's working and what's not. And if it had been a
thing where, like, we got massive conversion at that moment. Like, it was like suddenly a bunch of
people signed up. I would be like, well, okay, there's a vocal minority of people who are
annoyed, but also I am proving materially that this works. Yeah. But I did not see that. And what are
they saying exactly? They're saying like, I can't believe I had to sit through another hyper-fixed
ask for money. I wish that it wasn't so long or I wish that it was this or that. Wow. Your
listeners take a lot of ownership over your feet. I generally think that like people who feel passionately about a show, even if it's like they're really mad about something, it means they care. Yeah. And so have you asked for money since, since getting this response? I said, you know, sign up to get bonus episodes and Discord access in the credits of this week's episode, but not really. And what are you going to do about the next episode? Are you going to ask?
Not going to ask.
You're not going to ask.
No.
Damn.
Okay, this is spooking me a little bit too.
I'm sorry.
No, no, no.
It's okay.
This is where we're at.
And do you know what you're going to do?
I haven't exactly figured out what I'm going to do.
Right now I'm in a holding pattern.
Okay.
I am sorry.
This is happening.
And I am going to try to find something useful for you.
Well, thanks so much.
Yeah, wait.
Let me know if you need anything, okay?
Hello.
You.
So, Alex, last time we talked, you told me about this fundraising debacle where you got spooked by listeners getting mad at you for asking money.
And you were holding off on fundraising,
because you didn't know how to, like, proceed,
even though you need to keep asking for money.
Yes.
Well, since then, I ended up having a really illuminating conversation
with someone about exactly the dilemma that you're having.
And I think I have answers.
Oh, my God, I'm very excited because I feel like I'm bad at this.
So, funny story.
But when I was talking to Haley, at one point she said,
said, well, I can tell you anecdotally why Alex's pitch isn't working. And that's because my
spouse is a big hyper-fixed fan and has not been moved to give to the show. Like, he doesn't
understand why he needs to. Oh, my God. Come on. Okay. So Haley's spouse, his name is Danny Hen.
Okay. And I didn't even know if he would say yes to talking because it's like a fundamentally kind
of awkward ass. But Danny was down to be honest about it all. Well, it is.
kind of an interesting situation of being the person who's not doing the quote-unquote good thing.
Look, as much as I am anxious about what it means to be honest about my ask, I really want to know the answer here.
Okay. So Danny is a small business owner. He manufactures pots and pans. And he says he's actually thought quite a bit over the years about why he hasn't given to any podcast yet, even though he listens to them a lot. And he has a couple of theories.
Okay.
Number one, podcasts are free.
It's a free rider problem.
It's a free good out there.
So Danny doesn't live under a rock.
He's noticed that there have been a lot of changes in our industry in the way podcasts can and can't be funded.
But he's been getting podcasts for free all these years.
And he hasn't been trained to put podcasts in his monthly budget yet.
Right.
He does support two patrons right now, two extremely small niche projects.
a data visualization project and a cookbook reviewer.
But when it comes to podcasts, Danny says it's hard to tell who is big podcasting and who is small podcasting because they can sound really similar and they all show up on the same app.
And he doesn't want to give his few extra bucks a month to podcasts that are already massively successful and raking in the profits because they don't need him.
He wants to give to small podcasts where he feels like if he didn't give, they might go away.
And who could blame him?
When I heard Danny say this, it felt like kind of the curse, a curse for us, because like we have these standards and years of training from working at Invisibilia and reply all and other places.
So we make podcasts that sound like they could be big podcasting and sound like we have a lot of resources, even though we don't.
Yeah.
When really like we're the lemonade stand of podcasting.
Basically, yes.
So Danny says, yeah, just be clear about that.
I would also sort of approach it from a, like, marketing perspective of, like, we are the little guy that needs your support.
We are different from these other big podcasts or podcasting companies or whatever.
We are doing this project in a different way.
So that was his second reason for why he doesn't give.
Third reason, and this is where shit kind of gets controversial, Danny was like, I want to know all about the rest.
for the brownie. He wants to know about how much ingredients cost, your signature way of baking the
brownie, what pan you're using. How much are you selling the brownies for? How do you even make it
in the cold, hard brownie business? Oh my God, I'm more lost than ever now. I was like, Danny,
you do know that you're directly contradicting the fundraising expert in your family. And he was like,
yeah, I'm sorry. I'm just telling you what I think and feel. And the other thing that happened was
like, when Danny said this, I was like, what more transparency do you want from Alex?
He just did that earnings report email in May.
And I was kind of getting annoyed, honestly.
On your behalf, I was like, come on, come on, man.
Yeah, Danny.
Get his ass.
And it turns out Danny had missed your email.
Oh, well, that I may have missed.
So I sent him your email.
Did it move him?
Before I tell you his reaction, I'm going to tell you my honest reaction to your email, which I have not told you yet.
Okay, so I was very impressed and grateful for your transparency as a fellow podcaster.
But I have to tell you, I was kind of like, this is pathetic.
To be like, woe is me, poor me.
Yeah, well.
And personally, I've been trying to get away from that vibe,
trying to get away from like all the numbers and being a bummer.
So I asked Danny, didn't you find the vibes annoying or kind of pathetic in Alex's email?
Sorry about that.
Yes, a perfectly reasonable question.
And he was like, no, if anything, it made me want to give more.
I think he's being open.
He's being vulnerable.
He's being like, eh, I don't know if it's all going to work.
And that's a little scary.
which is perfectly reasonable.
I hashed this out with Danny
because I think that I'm having an outsized
negative reaction to your email.
You know, like, when something bothers you about you
and then you see someone that reminds you of your wound
and then you're like, oh, get me away from this person.
Yes, I know exactly what you're saying.
But Danny was like, no, this exactly scratches my itch.
this is exactly what I needed.
Huh.
He got to the end of the email and he was like, yeah, I'll sign up.
I've never been closed off to it.
It's not like I'm trying to like, you know, viciously protect my pocketbook from any of these expenses.
But it is kind of like without some real impetus and like maybe right now, this is my real impetus, right?
Right.
Being interrogated about why you don't give.
Yeah, and that's not typical for a listener.
Oh, now I'm working.
It was very confusing for me because my real question this whole time is like, how transparent should I be with where my show is at and my feelings about it?
You know, like in this fundraising campaign I'm doing right now, should I be realistic with my Patreon member goal?
Or should I ask for what I actually need to make the show sustainable?
I talked about all this with Danny, you know, that I'm willing to do almost anything to make the show work because I love it so much.
I believe in it. Also, I'm working all the time. And it's like really hard. I work almost every night, every weekend. And I never see my friends and family. And I feel like I'm definitely taking years off of my life because of the toxic stress and lack of sleep. I've used all my savings. I'm really shooting my shot here. And I'm scared. And for Danny, he was like, that's what I needed to hear. For me personally, giving like, this is my last big shot. I think that.
does help push.
And, you know, if you can start your fundraising drive here with one, I mean, that's, you know, I value your podcast.
And now obviously, you know, not everyone gets to talk with the podcaster and talk through these, you know, thoughts and fears.
But like having that full context, you know, sure, yeah, convinces me.
Wait a minute.
Did I just get your vote?
You got my vote.
Oh my God. Wow. I wasn't even going to try to get you to sign up for my patron. I was just going to try to get you to give to Alex's show.
That's very kind of you. Basically, the way that I've been dealing with the vibes question is to just not be real about my feelings on the show when I make my fundraising asks and to do it sideways with like a wink because I'm like, I don't want to be a bummer. But like talking to Danny, I'm like, oh, me being real about my feelings, what I'm not even like.
making a pitch to you, that was the thing that did it.
I mean, I guess a question I would ask you is like, if at the end of this you don't find a
sustainable path, would you be more upset that you didn't share the whole thing, right?
That you didn't put it all out there when it was your chance to put it all out there.
But you know, I was like, Danny, were you already going to support our shows when you said yes to
this interview? Well, I think I wouldn't, I wouldn't agree to it unless I was open to it, right? I also
like, I don't want to be that person who's like, you know, the freeloader. Danny was like,
I was probably predisposed to give. Okay. But he said, so are your listeners. They are also
predisposed to support your shows because they're listening to you. They're signing up for this
experience. That's a good point. Damn, Danny's bringing sage wisdom.
Give it up for Danny. Okay. So, Alex, let's zoom out. Where are you at now?
I mean, still terrified. I still hate asking for money. But like, I feel like I have a
direction, at least. Really? I do feel like there's a component of trying to be honest about
where I'm at, not sounding desperate, but being realistic, but then also maybe reminding people
of the reasons why they listen, as opposed to just being like, if you don't do this, it's the end
of my career's journalist. And as for your fundraising debacle, the listeners who got mad
at you, I talked to Danny about what happened and how you got spooked. And he was like,
fuck the haters or in his words ignore them i think if you really like let those people govern how
you approach this you're like i don't know that's really scared there's going to be naysayers
there's going to be people upset about whatever and uh let them all right yeah uh yes i will
just be more resolute and maybe like a little more positive
Okay. So here's where I'm at at the end of all this. I feel less bad about asking for money. Haley's reframes have helped me. Though I think it's still hard to think about I'm giving listeners a gift by asking. I think the gift is the actual podcast, but whatever. I think I am going to be more transparent about the recipe and where things are and not worry so much about being a bummer. I also try to talk about the brownie more.
And because of that, I don't feel like a terrified mouse telemarketer anymore.
Yeah, I think that the brownie thing actually is really helpful.
Ring, ring. Ring.
Hello.
Oh, Alex, I think you're getting a call.
Yeah, hi, this is Alex.
Hi, is this Alex Goldman?
Yeah.
This is Yo-Wei Shah from Proxie.
How are you doing today?
Oh, my God, I'm doing great. Thank you so much.
You're a fan of the show, right?
Yes, I am.
Okay, and you know how you were feeling alone and panicked with your feelings about asking for money?
Well, the whole point of the show is to help you report on these confusing feelings and help you get a little less stuck.
Oh, okay.
Listen, we've started to sell some ads, but they're a drop in the bucket.
And we do have around 400 paying Patreon members right now, which is amazing.
But that doesn't cover the costs of making the show, which is why we need to get to 1,500 paying Patreon members this month to keep the show sustainable for year two.
So, Alex, what do you, what do you think?
Oh, my God, Yoie, you're very good at this.
Hold on, I'm signing up.
Wait, wow, I really didn't have to try that hard.
I was going to try to.
No, you gave it.
It was good, and like, I'm predisposed, right?
I guess for all the listeners out there, the question is, imagine if both hyperfixed and proxy exploded in the sky, never to be heard from again.
Wouldn't that be a sad, cold world?
It would be a sad cold world.
But also we'd go out with a bang because we tried.
Okay.
I think my work here is done.
Wow, damn.
Good work, dude.
Thank you very much, Joie.
I feel much better now.
I mean, not much better.
I feel 30% better, which is a massive improvement over what I was feeling.
us advice. She's the co-author of the book, Accidental Fundraiser. We'll have that link in her show notes.
And thank you to Haley's spouse, Danny Henn, for deciding to not be a podcast freeloader anymore.
And if you get something out of this show, consider joining the proxy Patreon, starting at $5 a month.
Just go to patreon.com slash proxy podcast.
Okay, guys, I'm going to give it to you straight. As some of you know, I started proxy last year because I got laid off.
and NPR canceled my old show, Invisibilia.
From the beginning, I knew it was going to be a long shot.
In fact, a bunch of people I respect in the industry, even some friends, told me I couldn't
make an independent podcast work today for a couple reasons.
Number one, advertising revenue for podcasts and media is down hugely.
And to sustain a podcast with ad dollars, we'd need to reach hundreds of thousands of people.
Which brings me to number two.
It's notoriously hard for audio-first podcasts to find their audience.
There isn't a good recommendation algorithm, and I don't have bags of marketing cash to spread the word about the show.
But here I am, a year later, and we're doing it.
I used my savings.
I got a loan.
I started to Patreon.
And since last May, we've made 20 episodes and 13 exclusive premium episodes.
episodes about the mental toll of layoffs, the emotional dynamics of support groups.
WTF is up with the inner narrator in our heads, band drama, caring for a loved one with dementia, on and on.
And against all odds, we are finding our people.
We've charted at number two in science on Apple Podcasts.
We've made it into the top 200 podcasts in the world.
I believe in this show.
I know lots of other people do too.
Emotions rule our world.
and we need to rigorously report on them.
But in order to make a year two, in a way that's sustainable for me,
we need to get to 1,500 paying Patreon members.
Currently, we're at 400, which is amazing.
And recently we got some grants, which is also amazing.
But it still doesn't come close to what we need.
This year of proxy was possible because I had part-time production help early on,
and you'll get to hear an ambitious project we did to get to get.
coming up that I'm really excited about. But for most of this year, it's been mainly me making
the show with an editor who edits a handful of hours a week, and I make my husband mix the show for
free. So that's me doing the research, looking for proxies and experts, scheduling and
prepping questions, and conducting interviews, cutting audio clips, writing scripts, producing, editing,
and scoring and pro tools, and a million other tasks. In any halfway normal podcast, this is work
done by several people. And for me to continue this work, I need help. This is why we need to get
to 1,500 paying Patreon members, because with grants, that'll cover the cost of making a year
two and allow me to get some part-time production help. It's an ambitious goal for us. I'm not
going to lie. I was told that maybe it's too ambitious. But I'm taking Danny's advice and being
honest about what we need.
All right, that's enough recipe.
Let's talk about the brownies.
If you join our Patreon, starting at $5 a month, your first brownie is, well, you've already
tasted your first brownie.
If Proxy has helped you feel less alone, made you laugh, cry, feel things, helped you move
through the world a little lighter, with a little less confusion, that is the delicious
gooey brownie you'll get to keep eating if you sign up.
Second Brownie.
Patreon members get exclusive premium episodes and ad-free episodes.
Plus, you get to join our chat.
Third, Brownie, anyone who has an annual membership by the end of this month-long campaign
will get an original magnet made by me.
I love making magnets.
If you are able to, annual memberships really help us because more of your support goes directly to us than monthly credit card fees.
You got to eat all those brownies at patreon.com.
proxy podcast. And of course, to our early Patreon supporters, thank you for getting us here so far.
This episode was edited by Tim Howard, mixed by Kyle Pooley and produced by me, with help from Charlie Klein.
Music in this episode by Tim Howard, and our theme music is by Brighmaster Cylinder.
Special thanks to the Independent Media Initiative, the Berkeley Greater Good Science Center, and the John Templeton Foundation for supporting the show.
Proxy and Hyperfixed are proud members of Radiotopia from PRX, a network of independent, creator-owned, listener-supported podcasts.
Adriamartovich is the executive producer of Radiotopia.
Uri Lozordo is the director of operations.
Discover Audio with Vision at Radiotopia.fm.
As always, you can follow us on Instagram at ProxyPodcast, and I'm at Yo-A-Shaw.
Get in touch at Proxie the pod at gmail.com.
Thanks for listening.
I am so grateful to everyone who's been tuning in,
who's commented, shared, rode in.
And we've got some real bangers coming up for you during the drive
about estrangement, doppelgangers, and more.
See you next episode.
Radiotopia from PRX.
