Maher’s Attacks

CREATOR NEWSLETTER



HOT LABOR SUMMER

Hollywood Strikes Will Come Down to Who Blinks First

hollywood strikes

A legal platform built exclusively for content creators

Creators Legal offers professional-level contracts that safeguard your creative business. Drafted by entertainment and media lawyers, the Content Creator Contracts collection will equip you with tailored agreements to ensure your path to success is legally protected.


IN THE BIZ


MAKE SOME MONEY

Only Have 500 YouTube Subs? You’re Eligible for Monetization

From lowering monetization eligibility requirements to changing its ads, here are the changes at YouTube creators should be aware of.

By Kristin Snyder, Passionfruit Contributor


TIPS AND TRICKS

ftc endorsement guidelines - featured image

Five Things Creators Might Miss In The FTC’s Endorsement Guidelines

We’ve brought a lawyer to help clear things up.

By Veronica Ramirez, Passionfruit Contributor


Content for Creators.

News, tips, and tricks delivered to your inbox twice a week.

Newsletter Signup

Latest Newsletters

  • Y’all are quite busy this year

    Y’all are quite busy this year

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #310 | Jan. 28, 2025 – James Del, Publisher CULTURE Creators Can Now Apply To Cover the White House Leavitt pushed for creators in the briefing room before joining the White House. By John-Michael Bond, Deputy Editor → READ THE FULL STORY SPONSORED Be Your Biggest Stan, Make Your Own Stanley Your logo, your face, your name, your…

  • Bison Coats at The Internet’s Inauguration

    Bison Coats at The Internet’s Inauguration

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #309 | Jan. 23, 2025 This week, I was in DC for both the People’s March and the Inauguration, and it felt like stepping into a parallel universe compared to the last time. Eight years ago, the atmosphere at Trump’s first inauguration was dark and heavy, even for those who had gotten…

  • TikTok Secrets Exposed

    TikTok Secrets Exposed

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #308 | Jan. 21, 2025 January 19 was supposed to be the day TikTok closed forever in the United States. The US government decided that the video-hosting platform threatened national security and must be sold away from Chinese company ByteDance. Before its fond farewell, many creators fearing losing their platforms chose to have one…