Neil Gaiman recently gave a four hour talk at a Minnesota library. He was paid $45,000. Given that the current economy is a zombie -- brutally slain, raised up again through questionable forces, and likely to go for someone's throat - when the story made headlines, it ruffled a few feathers.

A story that ran in the Star Tribune mentioned the fee paid to Gaiman, which came out of the Legacy Fund, an allocation set aside specifically to support art, culture and historical preservation.
The comments on the story are about what anyone would expect. They range from, "that money could have fed thousands," to "it's the American way to charge what the market will bear for your services."
The story rippled out through Minnesota and eventually reached Gaiman himself, who posted a response on his blog yesterday. He explained that his fee is high in order to keep requests for speaking engagements down, and that often he waives his fee altogether. He also wrote that he asked how a small library came by such a large sum, which shows admirable presence of mind. Most authors would have bitten the hand of the librarian trying to snatch the check with their teeth. Then again, most authors aren't as successful as Neil Gaiman, which again explains the high fee.
He also wrote that there were politics involved. "Apparently the Star Tribune is against the Legacy Fund, and feels the money should go to fund a $790 million dollar stadium instead." This is as disingenuous as saying that the 'money could have fed thousands.' Although Gaiman cited his source, a CityPages article which shows the various expensive public programs that the Star Tribune has come out in favor of, it doesn't follow that the Star Tribune advocates a direct swap. It's possible to be against one public program -- or against one expense of a public program, since the Star Tribune's article compares Gaiman's payment to the much more modest fees for other authors -- and to be for a different public program for different reasons.
The catch is that one of those reasons could be that the Star Tribune may benefit financially from the building of a new stadium, as it admits in its editorial endorsement. The only one who was guaranteed to benefit financially from Neil Gaiman's speaking fee was Neil Gaiman, although he wrote that he passed that particular fee along to selected charities.
Of course the difficulty with arts, entertainment, and sports is that there is no way to quantify their value. I'd much rather have a talk with Neil Gaiman than build a new football stadium, even if a football stadium could be built for $45,000. Then again, I'd rather have a talk with a football than build a football stadium. A football fan might feel otherwise.
Perhaps there is a compromise. I wonder what Neil Gaiman charges to play football.

































Comments:
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Wednesday 12 May
By Franklin
"Of course the difficulty with arts, entertainment, and sports is that there is no way to quantify their value."
Of course there is; you charge admission. I'd gladly pay $50 to hear Gaiman speak. (I might pay more or I might not, but I'm not giving away my entire consumer surplus.) Oh, I know some people will claim there is value in just knowing that something is there, even if they don't patronize it themselves, but those people should put up or shut up.
And I know others will say restaurants and hotels benefit from, for example, a sports stadium. But so what? Why are taxpayers expected to subsidize hotels and restaurants? And how is that any different than a restaurant befitting if, say, a movie theater opens next door? Should taxpayers be in the business of subsidizing movie theaters so as to indirectly subsidize restaurants?
It would be less expensive just to subsidize the restaurant directly, which then begs the question of why you're subsidizing a restaurant that apparently not enough people think is worth patronizing in the first place.
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Thursday 13 May
By braak
I don't know, man. It seems to me that the whole reason that you have a public fund set up in order to support the arts is so that you can provide art to the public. Charging admission would defeat the purpose. The roughly 125% return on spending from tax revenues from the local restaurants and such is an ancillary offset benefit.
Thursday 13 May
By Tui
"Why are taxpayers expected to subsidize hotels and restaurants?"
So taxpayers can get jobs in hotels and restaurants?
While I don't have a problem with the expenditure in this case and concur with Braak that it's as important to fund arts in the community as it is to fund the economic development of a community, the economic health of a community is still important. When work like building sports stadiums is funded by local gvt, when businesses in a community are supported ***within reason*** (does not include tax breaks, offensive roadbuilding, etc - interests must be balanced) by local government, they are likely to feel more part of the community and to give back to the community.
Thursday 13 May
By John Robie
Extravagance like this is why you see so many authors rolling around in Escalades flashing their bling, while poor starving football players try to scrape together enough to make it through the next week. Because it's not about the money, it's about love of the game.
Please Strib. Pull the other one.
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Thursday 13 May
By Andrew Shaffer
John...that is the best comment in the history of the Internets. Nicely done, sir.
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Sunday 16 May
By jm5001jm
In the interview in question, the interviewer eventually asks "$45,000? For a Sci Fi Author? I’ve never heard of you," apparently still incredulous about this fabulous extortion.
So, after complaining that the event only brought in 500 people (into a library that had a 500-seat meeting room), and repeatedly spouting incorrect facts (like that he lives 250 miles away, to what end I'm not sure), they try to mock him. That's real nice.
And their facts are wrong here, too! As far to my knowledge, Neil Gaiman has written a total of ONE science fiction story, a young-adult novel called "InterWorld", which he co-authored with Batman writer Michael Reaves. Out of anything else to say, the Strib is reduced to playground argument tactics.
Also, they point out that it's "public money" that could have been used to "pay a librarian, build a library, or Do Good (like building the Vikings a shiny stadium, wink wink)". What they don't seem to know, though, is that "public money" isn't like a big room full of money that anyone can just take a bit of if they want. Government funds have to be spent on what they were for, and you can't just spend it on something else. If you were able to do that, no government money would be safe, it could just be spent on anything, and widespread financial corruption would quickly happen.
"That's okay, I've never heard of you, either."
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