OLD Media Moves

When a writer isn’t paid by Consumers Digest

November 28, 2017

Posted by Chris Roush

Consumers DigestBusiness journalist Chuck Jaffe, the editor of RagingBull.com, writes about how he hasn’t been paid for stories he wrote for Consumers Digest.

Jaffe writes, “I wrote for Consumers Digest in the past; payment wasn’t always prompt, but it always arrived. So I took on one story last fall for the January issue, and then a second story due in the spring; normally, I don’t accept second assignments until the first is been paid, but the work was timely and Consumers Digests’ editors said there was no reason to believe my missing payment was anything but late.

“I promised to deliver, and did; I was taught that good journalists don’t accept assignments and leave editors hanging, no matter the reason.

[You can find the stories on the ConsumersDigest.com web site here and here.]

“Consumers Digest publisher Randy Weber tried to convince me that payment was coming; in e-mails he acknowledged the debt, promised payment, and volunteered to pay interest at a clip of 1 percent per month. He said in phone calls that this was a temporary cash-flow situation, and promised a plan for partial payments.

“The magazine owes me $7,400 for the two pieces, without interest. More than half of that money was owed, contractually, as of last January; the rest was due in mid-July.

“I paid roughly 10 percent of what I am owed to hire an attorney and file suit; Consumers Digest has not responded to the court paperwork, and my lawyer expects us to have a default judgment soon.”

Read more here.

Subscribe to TBN

Receive updates about new stories in the industry daily or weekly.

Subscribe to TBN

Receive updates about new stories in the industry.