Nonsense-Free Kristin

Kristin McTiernan

Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them www.fictionalinfluence.com

  1. Alec Cizak - The Cancel Mob Wants Weakness. Don't Give It to Them

    5D AGO

    Alec Cizak - The Cancel Mob Wants Weakness. Don't Give It to Them

    Alec Cizak has been running Pulp Modern since 2011 and champions a simple but apparently radical idea: writers should be judged on the quality of their work, full stop. That stance, along with a vocal commitment to free speech, made him a target around 2020, when a coordinated smear campaign accused his publication of platforming rapists and pedophiles. Rather than apologize or disappear, he called the bluff, kept publishing, and eventually pivoted Pulp Modern into a film franchise. In this conversation, we dig into why apologizing to a cancel mob is the worst thing you can do, how the “writing community” became one of the most censorious spaces in independent publishing, and what it actually looks like to protect your creative work when people are trying to bury you. We also get into the tribal psychology behind cancel culture, the slow strangulation of crime fiction by social-activist gatekeepers, and why Alec thinks the best indie work tends to come from people who’ve already been told to shut up. In This Episode * The Cancellation, Reconstructed: What actually happened when a small group of writers accused Pulp Modern of publishing rapists and pedophiles, why Alec responded with a $100 challenge instead of an apology, and what the silence of his longtime contributors hurt more than the attack itself. * Never Apologize: Why capitulating to a cancel mob is the single worst move you can make, what the pile-on is actually testing for, and the four-word response Alec recommends over any attempt at reasoned debate. * The Writing Community Problem: How a subset of crime fiction writers decided the genre needed to become a vehicle for social activism, why that gatekeeping broke indie crime fiction, and why Alec isn’t sure the damage has been undone. * No Limits Doesn’t Mean No Standards: What Alec is actually looking for when he says Pulp Modern has no limits — and why it has nothing to do with shock value, profanity, or gratuitous content. * Why Crime Fiction Needs to Be Ugly: What a conversation with an Indianapolis homicide detective confirmed about the gap between fictional criminality and the real thing, and why closing that gap matters more than making readers comfortable. * From Magazine to Film: How the pandemic and the cancellation together accelerated Pulp Modern’s pivot into anthology filmmaking, why procuring short films works the same way procuring stories does, and what the third film is going to do differently. * The Independent Fiction Alliance: Why Alec built a support network for canceled and targeted writers, what its meetings actually feel like, and why one member’s observation — if you haven’t been canceled, you probably aren’t doing anything interesting — is the right attitude to have. * Free Speech Has to Mean All of It: Why Alec thinks the war on free speech was engineered to protect corporations from criticism, what happens when hate speech and free speech get deliberately conflated, and why the people who were cancel-happy in 2020 didn’t learn anything when it happened to them. * AI in the Classroom: Why Alec, as a college literature and composition professor, has stopped trying to catch AI-generated essays and started teaching students how to construct a focused argument instead — and why he thinks the writing professor job has an expiration date. Guest Links * Get Pulp Modern issues as part of your Kindle Unlimited Subscription: https://amzn.to/4qprkqH * Website: https://independentfictionalliance.com/ * X: @AlecCizak Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Pulp Rebels Intro. 02:05 - Meet Alec Cizak. 02:59 - The 2020 Cancellation. 06:37 - Fear And Free Speech. 12:05 - Crime Fiction Gatekeeping. 16:06 - Why Write The Ugly. 20:11 - Tribalism And Community. 23:02 - Staying The Course. 24:39 - No Limits Publishing. 26:31 - Why Horror Now. 27:03 - Pivoting Into Film. 27:43 - Building Pulp Modern Anthologies. 29:06 - Launching the IFA. 30:32 - What makes Indie Spirit. 32:23 - What the IFA Does. 33:23 - Handling Cancellation Attacks. 35:54 - Bullies and Boundaries Online. 39:10 - AI as the New Battleground. 41:01 - Teaching Writing in the AI Era. 44:01 - What’s Next Creatively. 44:55 - Where to Find and Support. 46:37 - Closing Thoughts. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    47 min
  2. Kaylena Radcliff - Christian Fiction Doesn't Have to be Satanic

    APR 8

    Kaylena Radcliff - Christian Fiction Doesn't Have to be Satanic

    Kaylena Radcliff is a speculative fiction author, managing editor of Christian History Magazine, homeschool mom, and wife of a church planter. She is also quietly doing what the Christian fiction market keeps insisting can’t be done: writing dark, honest, theologically grounded stories that don’t end in despair and don’t require a sanitized world to feel safe. In this episode we get into why the Christian bookstore market has narrowed itself into a corner, what spec fic offers that Amish romance structurally cannot, and why the supernatural elements of the faith are actually best explored through fantasy and horror rather than avoided. We also cover what 12 years of editing academic history for a general audience teaches you about making hard things approachable, why women writing male characters keep defaulting to two broken archetypes, and what Kaylena learned about finding readers by showing up at craft fairs instead of book festivals. In This Episode * The Christian Market vs. Christian Writers: Why the gatekeeping isn’t coming from outside the faith — it’s coming from inside the bookstore — and how the spec fic community is building an audience anyway. * Realm Makers and the Third Option: The community of Christian writers that aren’t shelved in the Christian aisle, but are still explicitly rooted in a theological worldview, and why that distinction matters for marketing. * Positive Masculinity in Fiction: Why Kaylena builds worlds where men are expected to be virtuous, what she thinks is driving young men toward toxic archetypes, and what fiction can offer that YouTube rants can’t. * How Women Get Male Characters Wrong: The Homer Simpson idiot husband, the impossible romanticized ideal, and why both archetypes are doing the same damage from opposite directions. * Naming the Dragon: Why writing about supernatural evil is a specifically Christian act, what Chesterton understood about dragons, and why fiction that can’t be conquered is not just unsatisfying — it’s dishonest. * History as a Spec Fic Engine: How a decade editing academic Christian history for lay readers quietly loaded Kaylena’s fiction with monastic life, warrior monks, and recurring theological themes she didn’t have to invent. * The Craft Fair Discovery: Why Kaylena outperforms at community craft festivals compared to book festivals, and what that tells you about competition, traffic, and finding readers who weren’t already looking for you. * Substack Over X: Why notes and genuine interaction on Substack are working when the Twitter/X algorithm has become actively hostile to organic discovery. * Write Because You Love It: Why indie authors who are racing generative AI output to become millionaires in two years are playing the wrong game, and what the actual long game looks like. Guest Links * Read the Elmnas Chronicles by Kaylena Radcliff: https://a.co/d/06ybrcfG * Website: https://www.kaylenaradcliff.com/ * Substack: Kaylena Radcliff Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Meet Kaylena Radcliff. 00:30 - Inside Christian History Magazine. 02:31 - Editing for Clarity. 04:06 - From Lit Degree to Editor. 05:38 - Day Job vs Fiction. 07:41 - Genre Fluid Spec Fiction. 09:18 - Realm Makers and Branding. 11:25 - Writing Virtuous Men. 13:40 - Christian Market Pushback. 17:06 - Getting Male Characters Right. 18:41 - Why Fiction Matters. 20:38 - Why Write the Supernatural. 21:33 - Naming Evil to Defeat It. 22:23 - When Horror Feels Hopeless. 23:25 - Discernment and Speculative Worlds. 24:58 - Angels Demons and Theology. 25:57 - Indie Publishing Reality Check. 29:05 - Finding Readers and Platforms. 30:58 - Substack Voice and Notes. 32:07 - Selling Books In Person Again. 34:27 - Rapid Fire Advice and Wrap Up. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    37 min
  3. David Badurina - How to Maximize Your Output with AI (Without Letting It Write for You)

    APR 1

    David Badurina - How to Maximize Your Output with AI (Without Letting It Write for You)

    David Badurina is an author, music producer, showrunner, and what he calls a multimodal storyteller — someone building an entire creative universe across fiction, concept albums, visual media, and now anime, without asking anyone’s permission to do it. He ran a brick and mortar martial arts school for 12 years before going fully independent, and that experience shapes everything about how he thinks regarding marketing, product quality, and what it actually costs to build an audience. In this episode we get into his framework for using AI as a creative amplifier without letting it touch the writing, why comedy with heart works when pure gag writing doesn’t, what 12 years of physical overhead teaches you about find an audience and why pity marketing is not a business strategy. We also cover why showing up at conventions changed his career trajectory more than any online platform, how he landed four anthology deals simply by being a recognizable presence in the right rooms, and why the introvert excuse is the most expensive story authors tell themselves. In This Episode * AI as a Creative Amplifier: How David uses large language models to manage a brain running at a hundred miles an hour without letting them anywhere near his characters, dialogue, or narrative arc. * The Two Golden Rules: Never let AI write for you. Never let it edit for you. Where the line is and why it matters. * Comedy With Heart: Why humor works as a storytelling device rather than a genre, what incongruity actually means in practice, and why the Passion of the Christ Netflix and Chill scene lands. * Brick and Mortar vs. Author Marketing: What 12 years of physical overhead, postcard campaigns, and newspaper ads that flopped teaches you about testing, iteration, and knowing your numbers before authors figure out what a funnel is. * Stop Being On 40 Socials: Why spreading yourself across every platform is actively shrinking your reach, and the two platform rule that actually works. * Pity Marketing: Why knocking your book to 99 cents and posting about it on X is not a strategy, and what sustainable audience building actually looks like. * The Introvert Excuse: Why introversion means you recharge alone, not that you’re exempt from showing up, and what David got by showing up anyway. * The Convention Opportunity: How being a recognizable presence in the right rooms directly generated four anthology deals and an anime showrunner credit. * Who Are You: Why authors who can’t answer that question in one sentence are invisible no matter how good their book is. * The True Scotsman Fallacy: Why the writing community’s favorite game of “you’re not a real author unless—” is the single most self-defeating thing creators do to each other. Guest Links * Read It Came from the Trailer Park by David Badurina: https://amzn.to/4qmacBY * Youtube: @QuillfireSound * Website: https://davidbadurina.com/ * Substack: @QuillitwithFire * X: @DavidBadurina Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Meet David Badurina. 01:12 - Multimodal Storytelling. 02:09 - AI Tools Not Crutches. 06:27 - Creative Boundaries. 09:34 - Prompt Fail Stories. 11:56 - Anti Gatekeeping Mindset. 14:13 - Comedy With Heart. 18:37 - Writing Humor Tips. 22:16 - Brick And Mortar Marketing. 24:50 - Product Market Fit. 26:00 - Thick Skin Online. 27:14 - Stop Doing Every Social. 29:33 - Cohesive Branding DIY. 32:03 - Using LLMs Smartly. 33:54 - Doing It Yourself. 35:40 - Fear Of Speaking Up. 37:41 - Multiple Income Streams. 39:44 - Networking Beats Introversion. 44:22 - IRL Connections Pay Off. 46:35 - No More Pity Marketing. 47:16 - Where To Find David. 47:50 - Projects And Wrap Up. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    49 min
  4. Nobody Is Coming to Save Conservative Art (And What to Do About It)

    MAR 25

    Nobody Is Coming to Save Conservative Art (And What to Do About It)

    Every year conservatives complain that Hollywood hates them, point to a handful of companies as proof that right wing art is thriving, then wait for a billionaire to fund the revolution. Every year nothing changes. This episode is the reality check that conversation never gets. We go through what the Daily Wire, Angel Studios, and Taylor Sheridan are actually doing — and why none of them are discovering new talent, funding independent creators, or building anything resembling a conservative artistic infrastructure. We also cover the Oliver Anthony moment, what it revealed about how conservatives actually relate to art they claim to love, and why the Heritage Foundation spent decades actively fighting arts funding before noticing the culture had been captured by the other side. The good news is that the three models that actually work have nothing to do with patronage, billionaires, or permission. Matt Dinniman built Dungeon Crawler Carl at cat shows during his lunch breaks. Seth Ring crossed seven figures without a traditional publishing deal. The Philippou brothers started on YouTube and ended up at A24. The tools are available. The question is whether you are going to use them or keep waiting for someone who is never going to show up. In This Episode * The Clifton Duncan Article: Why an actor’s excoriation of conservative culture warriors cut through the noise, and why the predictable response to it proved his point entirely. * The Daily Wire Film Breakdown: A project by project look at what the Daily Wire has actually produced, who made it, and why there is not a single example of them developing new independent talent. * Angel Studios, Same Pattern: Why every success story in the conservative film space traces back to Hollywood castoffs, nepo babies, and finished films they acquired rather than built. * Taylor Sheridan, Accidental Icon: Why the man carrying Paramount Plus on his shoulders never set out to make conservative art, and what that tells you about what actually works. * The Oliver Anthony Moment: What happened when conservatives found their mascot, what happened when he rejected the label, and what the fallout revealed about whether they actually care about the art. * Conservative Publishing, Where Is It: Why right wing imprints exist almost entirely in nonfiction, who they serve, and why epic fantasy with wholesome values is nowhere on their radar. * The Y Combinator Problem: Why the tech incubator model cannot be transplanted into the arts, and why buying 7% of a novelist is not a viable investment strategy. * The Three Models That Work: The Sheridan model, the Dinniman/Ring model, and the Philippou model — all three have one thing in common. * Nobody Is Coming: Why right wing billionaires have never funded independent artists, why they never will, and why waiting for them is the single most self-defeating thing a creator can do. * What You Can Do Today: The tools available right now, the creators who used them to build something real, and the only question that actually matters. Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Super Bowl Culture Wars. 01:04 - Clifton Duncan Callout. 02:37 - Patronage Reality Check. 03:34 - Meet the Host Mission. 04:37 - Why Creatives Get Blackballed. 05:35 - Defeatism in the Comments. 07:20 - Stop Waiting for Billionaires. 09:30 - Conservative Media Examples. 10:38 - Daily Wire Breakdown. 13:19 - No New Talent Pipeline. 16:45 - Angel Studios Pattern. 18:40 - Taylor Sheridan Exception. 20:10 - Conservative Publishing Gap. 21:57 - Culture Wars Old News. 22:49 - Why Conservatives Ignore Art. 24:12 - Oliver Anthony Mascot Fight. 28:38 - Indie Authors Build Empires. 32:11 - YouTubers Turn Filmmakers. 34:27 - Why Art Incubators Fail. 35:58 - Three Models To Win. 40:01 - Stop Complaining Start Building. 42:07 - Art Matters Final Push. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    43 min
  5. Seth Ring - How to Turn Web Serials Into a Seven Figure Indie Business

    MAR 18

    Seth Ring - How to Turn Web Serials Into a Seven Figure Indie Business

    Seth Ring has written 46 books, built a seven figure indie author business without an agent or a traditional publishing deal, and cracked the code on how to move readers from free content to a loyal paying ecosystem. In this episode he breaks down exactly how he did it, and what most indie authors get wrong before they ever get started. We dig into what LitRPG actually is and why it has captured a voracious male readership that traditional publishing abandoned, the funnel Seth built from Royal Road to Patreon to Amazon that generated his first $50K, and why the actions that get you to each income threshold have to completely change to get you to the next one. Seth walks through each inflection point from $50K to $100K to $250K to seven figures, what he changed at each stage, and why community and relationships became the lever that moved him past the ceiling he kept hitting alone. We also get into hybrid publishing, why Seth sublicenses his audio and physical rights while keeping his ebook rights, how to negotiate with traditional publishers when you already know your own numbers, and why the single most repeated mistake he sees from talented authors is having too much attachment to book one. In This Episode * What LitRPG Actually Is: Why LitRPG isn’t a genre but a stylistic choice, how it differs from progression fantasy, and why the game element changes everything about how stories deliver information. * Why Men Only Read LitRPG Now: The real reason male readers are abandoning every other genre for this one, and what it says about what modern men are actually hungry for in fiction. * The Funnel Nobody Talks About: How Seth moved readers from free web serials to Patreon to Amazon and built a loyal paying ecosystem before most authors know what a funnel is. * The $50K Inflection Point: What gets you there, why it’s achievable part-time, and why the exact same strategy will cap you out and stop working. * Books Sell Books: The single phrase that changed Seth’s business, and why most authors are too attached to book one to let it work for them. * The $250K Ceiling: Why marketing levers and Facebook groups stop working at a certain point and why the only thing that moved Seth past it was walking into rooms with people who made more than him. * Why Traditional Publishers Can’t Touch LitRPG: How the indie community built something trad publishing wanted a piece of and why the LitRPG crowd said no thanks. * The Hybrid Model Explained: How Seth sublicenses audio and physical rights while keeping ebook rights, why that math works, and how knowing your own numbers changes every negotiation. * Seven Figures and What Comes Next: Why distribution is the singular problem indies can’t solve alone, and how hybrid publishing fills that gap without surrendering creative control. * The Most Common Mistake Seth Sees: Why talented authors stall out — and it has nothing to do with their writing. Guest Links * Read Iron Tyrant by Seth Ring: https://amzn.to/4qrJmsq * Website: https://sethring.com/ * Youtube: @SethRingWrites Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Welcome and Guest Intro. 01:49 - Seth Ring Origin Story. 03:52 - Web Serials to Indie Publishing. 05:27 - Building the Reader Funnel. 08:09 - What LitRPG Really Is. 12:51 - Why LitRPG Hooks Readers. 15:33 - Best LitRPG Entry Reads. 19:05 - Trad Publishing Meets LitRPG. 21:33 - Indie Community and Success Metrics. 23:20 - Hybrid Without An Agent. 25:15 - Sublicensing Audio Rights. 26:36 - Ebooks Versus Print Strategy. 27:27 - Scaling Reach With Publishers. 29:48 - Income Inflection Points. 32:57 - From Ads To Networking. 37:08 - Hybrid In A Shifting Market. 39:50 - Biggest Author Business Mistake. 44:34 - New Series Iron Tyrant. 45:50 - Where To Find Seth Ring. 46:29 - Final Thanks And Wrap. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    47 min
  6. Echo Chamberlain - Literary Fiction Lost the Plot (And the Readers)

    MAR 11

    Echo Chamberlain - Literary Fiction Lost the Plot (And the Readers)

    Traditional publishing isn’t just an American problem anymore. Gatekeepers have gone global, and authors in the UK, Australia, and New Zealand are starting to feel it too. In this episode, I sit down with Nicholas Sheppard, AKA Echo Chamberlain, a traditionally published literary fiction author from New Zealand navigating the painful transition to indie publishing. Nicholas has 80,000 YouTube subscribers, has appeared on The Critical Drinker, and writes the kind of unflinching literary fiction that agents claim to want—but then quietly pass on. We also talk about grief, zeitgeist, male trauma in fiction, and what it actually takes to build an audience that crosses over into book sales. In This Episode * The Liminal Space No One Talks About: What it feels like to be a traditionally published author forced into indie publishing. Not by choice, but by a shifting market. * When Rejection Is Personal: How detailed, thoughtful rejections can actually hurt more than form letters, and what they reveal about the current state of literary agencies. * The “Not My Cup of Tea” Wall: Why male-centered literary fiction keeps hitting the same invisible ceiling, and why it has nothing to do with quality. * Where Is the Zeitgeist?: Why men aren’t reading literary fiction anymore, and why the publishing industry is psychologically incapable of admitting it’s the problem. * Literary Fiction vs. The Algorithm: The unique grief of a “prestige” writer discovering that Amazon doesn’t care about your Booker Prize aspirations. * Audience Mismatch: What happens when you have 80,000 YouTube subscribers and your book video barely moves the needle. * The Review Threshold: Why you should never drive traffic to a new book before you have at least five written reviews, and how to get them without begging. * The Hugh Howey Model: How one indie author kept his ebook rights, signed a print-only deal, and changed the hybrid publishing conversation forever. * Amazon’s 180-Day Assessment Window: Why a slow start doesn’t have to be a death sentence, and how to use that window strategically. * Cream Still Rises: Why good writing still matters in an algorithmic world, and why word of mouth hasn’t actually died. * Variations on a Theme: Nicholas’s Amazon-exclusive novel exploring how cultural attitudes toward abuse shift over a lifetime. Guest Links * Read Variations on a Theme by Nicholas Sheppard: https://amzn.to/4sBE9QO * Youtube: Echo Chamberlain * X: @EchoChamYT * Substack: @echochambaerlainwriter Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Meet Echo Chamberlain. 05:20 - Submission Rejections Explained. 07:27 - Grief and Going Indie. 09:27 - Ideology and Agent Tastes. 12:22 - Male Trauma in Fiction. 14:51 - Where Are Young Male Authors. 17:24 - Zeitgeist and Men Reading. 20:33 - Platform First Marketing. 22:11 - Audience Conversion Struggles. 24:01 - Open Bar and YouTube Growth. 26:30 - Why Media Commentary Not Writing. 28:10 - YouTube Pile On Culture. 28:45 - Fragmenting Your Audience. 29:44 - Star Trek Aesthetics Rant. 31:27 - When To Plug Your Book. 32:50 - Ads Inside Novels. 34:23 - Indie Marketing Reality Check. 34:57 - Reviews And Social Proof. 36:39 - Getting Early Reviews. 37:58 - Amazon Algorithm Fears. 40:35 - Hybrid Deals With Publishers. 43:19 - What Comes Next Writing. 45:44 - Where To Find You. 46:22 -Book Pitch And Wrap Up. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    49 min
  7. Serial Storytelling in the Age of Saturation

    MAR 4

    Serial Storytelling in the Age of Saturation

    The Twitter Crush is available in its entirety on Amazon and wherever books are sold: https://buy.bookfunnel.com/i2x75bx6hv Web novels are not fan fiction. They are not Wattpad cringe. And they are definitely not a niche hobby for teenagers. They are a $34 billion industry growing at 15% year over year—and most traditional authors aren’t even paying attention. In this episode, we tackle the elephant in the room: if you’re unhappy with your author career, it might be because you’re forcing yourself into a publishing model that doesn’t serve you. Amazon is not the only game in town. Men didn’t stop reading. Readers didn’t disappear. They just migrated to platforms built for screens, serial storytelling, and mobile-first consumption. Web novels are exploding, but serial fiction isn’t new at all. If you’ve been feeling stuck, invisible, or boxed in by “the way publishing works,” this episode might shift your entire perspective. In This Episode * The Most Confining Author Is You: Why many writers are miserable because they’re forcing themselves into a model they don’t actually enjoy. * Men Are Still Reading: They’re just not at Barnes & Noble. A look at where male readers have migrated and why. * The $34 Billion Web Novel Market: The explosive growth of platforms like Royal Road, WebNovel, Inkitt, Patreon, and more. * Amazon Saturation Reality Check: When 11,000–20,000 books drop daily, discoverability becomes a structural problem, not a personal failure. * Serial Fiction Isn’t New: Uncle Tom’s Cabin was originally published as a serial. Format shapes storytelling, and it always has. * Mobile-First Storytelling: Why writing for screens requires shorter chapters, tighter pacing, and structural adjustments. * Community vs. The Void: The dopamine and feedback loop of chapter-by-chapter publishing versus throwing a novel into algorithmic obscurity. * Why Web Novels Get Sneered At: The TikTok attention span myth and why it misunderstands how serial readers actually consume. * The Twitter Crush Case Study: Kristin’s own mobile-first serial thriller built specifically for online readers—and for a male audience.Stop * Constricting Yourself: Writing isn’t one thing. Publishing isn’t one path. If traditional novels serve you, great. If not, experiment. Kristin’s Links * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Writers Trap Themselves. 00:23 - Men Still Reading. 01:14 - Web Novels Beyond Wattpad. 01:59 - A Massive Market. 02:25 - Amazon Saturation Reality. 03:40 - What Web Novels Are. 04:12 - Mobile First Formatting. 06:12 - Serial Fiction History. 07:34 - Why Readers Are Switching. 08:30 - Community And Feedback. 09:50 - My Substack Web Novel. 10:23 - Twitter Crush Premise. 12:46 - Read Subscribe And Share. 13:14 - Final Takeaways. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    14 min
  8. Phil Marshall: Ethical AI Audiobook Creation with Spoken

    FEB 25

    Phil Marshall: Ethical AI Audiobook Creation with Spoken

    Phil Marshall is not your typical tech founder. He’s a former surgeon, a sci-fi author, and the founder/CEO of Spoken, an AI-powered audiobook platform built to break the two biggest gates in audio publishing: cost and complexity. Today Phil joins us to discuss the economics of audiobook creation, why multi-voice and full-cast audio has been inaccessible for almost everyone, and how Spoken’s model (free to use, pay when perfect) changes the risk calculation for indie authors. He also explains Spoken’s ethical approach to voice options (including paid voice-actor libraries and custom character voices), why audio can’t be treated as an afterthought, and why distribution is expanding beyond the usual giants. If you’ve been avoiding your audiobook project for fear of spending tens of thousands of dollars, this conversation is for you! In This Episode * A surgeon turned sci-fi author turned founder: Phil’s path into tech, and why he built Spoken in the first place. * The “audio gate”: why traditional audiobook production costs price most authors out. * Multi-voice without the $25,000 bill: what full-cast audio normally costs, and how that’s changing. * “Free to use, pay when perfect”: Spoken’s pricing model and why fixed cost per word matters. * Audible, Spotify, and the shifting landscape: where AI narration is being accepted, and where friction remains. * Voice ethics and the pitchfork problem: how voice actor libraries, cloning, and custom voices actually work. * Audio-first audiences: which readers demand audio now and why authors can’t ignore it. * Serial fiction and audio: how to publish chapter-by-chapter without re-rendering everything. * Audio-friendly writing: dialogue tags, tables, file lists, and what breaks in audio. * A sobering truth about publishing: “You can do everything right and it still might not sell,” and why your art still matters. Guest Links Phil Marshall * Sign up for Spoken: https://www.spoken.press/ * Web: drphilmarshall.com * Youtube: @philmarshallmd Kristin’s Links * Services & Content * Editing Services: nonsensefreeeditor.com * Newsletter: https://www.fictionalinfluence.com * YouTube: https://youtube.com/@nonsensefreekristin Timestamps 00:00 - Meet Phil Marshall. 04:54 - 9/11 Physics Origin. 06:57 - Why Spoken Exists. 12:07 - Audible and Distribution. 14:37 - Spotify Listening Limits. 16:34 - Ethical Voices Explained. 20:33 - AI Backlash and Art. 24:37 - Audiobook Pricing Shift. 28:05 - Pay When Perfect Pricing. 29:37 - Genres Where Audio Wins. 35:09 - Learning From Indie Authors. 37:44 - Serial Fiction Workflow. 39:34 - Make Manuscripts Audio Friendly. 42:55 - Unspoken Network Sharing. 44:18 - Pricing Strategy by Channel. 46:27 - Author Entrepreneur Reality Check. 49:26 - Where to Find Spoken. 51:43 - Final Thanks and Wrap. About This Podcast Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Music. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.fictionalinfluence.com

    52 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Nonsense-Free Kristin is where independent authors and creators learn to build their platforms, master their craft, and create on their own terms—without begging for permission from gatekeepers who hate them www.fictionalinfluence.com

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