From fan page to full-blown profit machine — Club Chalamet is cashing in on Substack.
When Club Chalamet first emerged, it looked like just another celebrity stan account dedicated to Timothée Chalamet. But here’s where things get interesting — what started as casual fandom has now turned into a legitimate side business. According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, creator Simone Cromer, the powerhouse behind the account, has transformed her passion project into a successful newsletter venture on Substack. With only a few hundred paid subscribers, she’s already earning enough to fund something as indulgent as a summer trip to Italy.
It’s a fascinating shift: the line between fan culture and professional content creation keeps getting thinner. Online communities once powered purely by obsession are now finding ways to monetize attention. But here’s the controversial twist — is this evolution a sign of healthy digital entrepreneurship, or has fandom itself become too transactional?
Cromer’s story sparks a bigger conversation about what it means to “make it” online. Platforms like Substack give superfans not just a voice, but a business model. And yet, as followers start paying for what was once free, some wonder if the heart of fandom — that shared, passionate connection — risks getting lost along the way.
What do you think? Is Club Chalamet’s success an inspiring example of turning passion into profit, or a sign that online devotion is slowly being commercialized? Share your take in the comments below — this debate is just getting started.