FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS about Immunocompromised Times:

1. Are all of your newsletter subscribers immunocompromised?

Nope. Not at all. COVID-cautious and immunocompetent (immunocompetent means: not immunocompromised) people with clinically vulnerable friends and family members subscribe as well as science informed people who want to avoid COVID. There are a few online communities you can find online like COVIDmeetups.com and “Still Coviding” groups on Facebook and the majority of people in these communities are also immunocompetent.

2. Mainstream media outlets have award winning newsrooms and staff reporters covering this beat. How can one human with a reader-subsidized publication compete with them.

High quality, feature stories where peer-reviewed science meets a firsthand account of risk navigation from an immunocompromised perspective is surprisingly rare.

Since an entire 3% of the population is immunocompromised you would think there would more but a lot of immunocompromised people covering this but many of them would rather not publicly share the fact they have a chronic medical condition that compromises their immune system because of job discrimination concerns. I had to weight out the plusses and minuses of disclosing my own immunocompromised story before launching Immunocompromised Times in April 2022 and am still adjusting to the idea that this is a genie I’ll never be able to put back in the bottle again.

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As lack of disability representation in newsrooms is a systemic problem, also I’m hoping to eventually post three articles a month that are reader subsidized.

3. Who are you?

I am Susanna Speier, a Denver-based, immunocompromised journalist. I earned my beat reporting stripes working as Chief Content Officer for the Private Investigation firm Ross Investigators from 2014 to 2020.

Prior to life as a professional Watson, I lived New York and Los Angeles and worked in the film, television and theater industries. I earned my MFA in Playwriting from Brooklyn College, C.U.N.Y my a BA in Cultural Studies from Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. I grew up in Washington, D.C. and in McLean, Virginia.

Susanna Speier crossing the Unicorn 5K finish line in a KN95 mask | photo by Priscilla Blossom

Although I have science journalism bylines, I am not a scientist. Interviewing scientists and making sense of scientific research studies pushes me to cultivate my own critical thinking literacy and challenge previous assumptions. My essay, Vaccinated, boosted and ready to write goes more in depth on this.

4. Are paid subscribers funding the lattes you order on Door Dash?

I wish. In fact just the mention is making me crave one with an almond croissant on the side. My personal expenses draw from an entirely different account, however. Freelance earning and savings cover personal expenses like lattes and that’s an entirely different account.

My business account, Susanna Speier, LLC is registered with the State of Colorado is in good standing. Forest Tax Accounting in Aurora, Colorado helps with my annual tax submissions.

I am researching development grants, partnerships and sponsorship and/or advertising models to generate revenue so that I can pursue podcast and video projects in 2023.

5. If Immunocompromised Times succeeds as self-sustaining, reader supported publication, where would you go next?

(1) pay a graphic design intern (2) hire a freelance editor (3) hire a freelance videographer and video editor (4) produce a podcast with a professional audio producer and editor (5) Pay all writers including myself

6. Why not find people willing to work pro bono in exchange for exposure ?

--Ewwww. Ew ew ew ew ew. No. no no no. “Exposure” gah!! ew ew ew.

7. Do you get free stuff when you write about consumer products?

In adherence to Society of Professional Journalists ethical guidelines I will not accept gifts worth anything over $25

8. What if I can’t afford to be a paid subscriber?

Then become a free subscriber. You can also support my efforts by sharing articles that resonate with you on social media platforms, direct messages and liking and commenting. Word of mouth recommendations are also appreciated.

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An immunocompromised journalist shares ways to make the spaces we share safer and more accessible to everyone

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Prior to this, Susanna Speier was Chief Content Officer for Ross Investigators where her reporting ranked 4th in the US for private investigator bloggers. Freelance bylines include The Daily Beast, Scientific American, Nature, CPR, The Denver Post
Freelance Photojournalist and Cat Lover