186 paid from a village in Thailand

186 paid from a village in Thailand

Issue #3 profiles PERFECT HUNGER by Dr. Dana Leigh Lyons (DTCM) — a Traditional Chinese Medicine newsletter at 4,200 total / 186 paid subscribers from rural Thailand, plus two near-miss candidate spotlights. Closes with a niche scan of Ayurvedic medicine, naturopathic medicine, and certified fraud examination.

Substack Black Horse Weekly
2026. 6. 6. · 01:45
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One confirmed case this week. A Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor living in a rural village in northern Thailand — 186 paid subscribers, $40/year, publishing twice a week. That's roughly $1,300/month from a practice no Western health influencer could credibly replicate.
Two other candidates came close but didn't clear the qualifying bar: a funeral-industry trade newsletter that may already exceed 5,000 total subscribers, and a European theater newsletter sitting just under 100 paid. Both are profiled honestly below with the data gaps flagged. The research found what it found.
NewsletterNicheTotal subsPaid subsPriceStatus
PERFECT HUNGERTraditional Chinese Medicine + personal dispatches from Thailand~4,200186$7/mo · $40/yr✓ Confirmed
On DeathcareFuneral industry trade news and analysis"thousands" (possibly >5K)Not publicly disclosedPaid tier existsNear-miss: unconfirmed milestone, possible over-cap
Café EuropaEuropean theater — criticism, interviews, festival coverage"thousands""Just under 100"Paid tier existsNear-miss: milestone not yet crossed

PERFECT HUNGER — TCM in the free/paid split that actually works

Milestone: 186 paid subscribers, disclosed publicly on May 30, 2026, in a Reddit thread asking Substack writers to share their niche and subscriber numbers. 1 The newsletter's homepage confirms "Over 4,000 subscribers." 2
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Niche: Traditional Chinese Medicine integrated with personal dispatches from rural Thailand — TCM clinical knowledge made accessible to people who cannot afford or access one-on-one practitioners. The About page frames it directly: "for many of us, working one-on-one with a practitioner — or investing in programs, herbal medicines, or supplements — isn't always an option. And even when it is, no external treatment can replace what we do every day." 3
Author: Dr. Dana Leigh Lyons holds a Doctor of Traditional Chinese Medicine (DTCM) from a five-year program and is licensed in both the United States and Canada. She served as President and instructor at Pacific Rim College in Victoria, British Columbia — a licensed college of acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine. She also holds a master's degree in Middle Eastern Politics from Georgetown University and a Primal Health Coach certification, and lives in a rural village in northern Thailand. 3 The credential stack is not decorative: she spent years in institutional TCM education before writing for a public audience.
Cadence and structure: Two posts per week, most weeks. 1 The newsletter divides into named series:
  • My Soulful Life — personal letters from Thailand; free
  • SoberStack™ — a curated directory of sober authors on Substack; free
  • TCM Deep Dives — clinical knowledge: herbal medicine, acupuncture theory, diagnostic frameworks; paid
  • The Practice — applied daily health practices rooted in TCM principles; paid
  • Link-Ups — monthly resource roundup; paid
  • Transformative Eating — a complete eating guide based on TCM nutritional philosophy; paid
Free/paid split: The free layer handles the personal and the relational — the dispatches from Thailand that make a reader trust the author before they've read a word of clinical content. The paid layer holds the professional depth: the TCM Deep Dives and The Practice series are the reason a reader with a genuine interest in Chinese medicine would convert. The split is clean. Free content builds the audience; paid content justifies the price. 3
Conversion lever: No milestone announcement post exists — the public record of 186 paid is a single Reddit comment in a thread, not a celebration.
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What's observable: the conversion rate is approximately 4.4% (186 ÷ 4,200), 1 which runs above the 2–3% baseline that most paid newsletters see from cold-audience subscribers. The explanation is almost certainly the specificity of the niche. Readers who find a newsletter about TCM written by a licensed doctor living in rural Thailand have already self-selected twice — they want TCM content, and they want it from a practitioner, not a wellness influencer. The subscriber who converts at $40/year is not impulse-buying; they have already decided this is the voice they want on this subject.
Revenue math: At the current 186 paid subscribers and $40/year pricing, annual revenue runs approximately $7,440. 1 At 500 paid — the channel's benchmark — that's $20,000/year on the annual plan, or $42,000/year if the mix shifts toward the $7/month option.
Reader application: Any licensed TCM practitioner, licensed acupuncturist (L.Ac.), or naturopathic doctor with clinical training in Chinese medicine who is writing for a general health audience is in directly comparable territory. The model also works for credentialed practitioners of other clinical traditions that are underrepresented in English-language professional media — Ayurvedic medicine, homeopathy, anthroposophic medicine — where the gap between professional depth and public-facing content is similarly large.

On Deathcare — candidate spotlight

Near-miss: total subscriber count likely exceeds the 5,000 cap; no paid milestone publicly confirmed. Profiled here for the editorial model, not as a qualifying case.
Newsletter: On Deathcare, run by Tony Russo (ondeathcare.substack.com). 4
Niche: Trade journalism for funeral directors and end-of-life care professionals — covering industry regulation, cremation trends, technology adoption, and consumer behavior shifts. Russo frames the positioning clearly: "Deathcare is changing rapidly and forever. While the catalysts seem obvious — technology, the rise of cremation, shifting consumer habits — the reality goes much deeper." 4
Author: Tony Russo is an independent journalist and podcast host based on Maryland's Eastern Shore with years of deathcare industry reporting. He publishes a Friday news digest and original reporting for free subscribers; paid subscribers receive a Sunday preview, a subscriber chat, and full archive access. Founding members get podcast access.
Why it didn't qualify: The homepage lists subscribers as "thousands" — a Substack-generated description that suggests total subscribers may already exceed the 5,000 cap this channel uses. No paid-subscriber count or milestone announcement was found in the public record. Both gaps are unresolvable without author disclosure. 4
Why it's worth watching: The funeral industry operates under state-by-state licensing requirements, and the trade press — Funeral Business Advisor, NFDA Funeral Home & Cemetery News — is largely behind association paywalls or print-first. A solo practitioner-journalist serving that community with a direct-to-reader paid model is structurally sound. If Russo's total count lands under 5,000 and he discloses a milestone, On Deathcare would be a straightforward qualifying case for a future issue.

Café Europa — candidate spotlight

Near-miss: paid subscriber count publicly disclosed as "just under 100" — milestone not yet crossed. Profiled here as the strongest known candidate for a near-term qualifying announcement.
Newsletter: Café Europa, run by Natasha Tripney (natashatripney.substack.com). 5
Niche: European theater — weekly criticism, artist interviews, festival coverage, and the cultural politics of European stages from an editor with two decades of access to the continent's main venues and companies.
Author: Tripney is the international editor of The Stage, the British theater trade paper, and previously its reviews editor and joint chief theater critic. She co-founded Exeunt, an online theater magazine, in 2011, and has written for The Guardian, BBC Culture, and The New York Times. She also edits SEEstage.org, a platform for theater criticism from Southeast Europe. 5 The professional access is real: Tripney reviews shows across Europe that English-language audiences rarely see covered by any outlet.
Why it didn't qualify: In a recent post, Tripney noted she has "just under 100 paid subscribers" — the milestone threshold is 100. The total subscriber count is listed as "thousands," which raises the same potential over-cap question as On Deathcare, though unconfirmed. 5
Why it's worth watching: European theater is nearly invisible in English-language arts coverage outside of London and Edinburgh. No competing paid solo-author Substack newsletter covers European stages. If Tripney crosses 100 paid — a conversion that would require fewer than ten additional subscribers from her existing readership — Café Europa qualifies cleanly.

Niche scan: three verticals that appear wide open

PERFECT HUNGER earned Substack Bestseller status in August 2025 — one of the few health-niche newsletters to do so with under 5,000 total subscribers
Substack's Bestseller badge for PERFECT HUNGER, first awarded August 2025 — the milestone was live before the May 2026 Reddit subscriber disclosure. 2
This week's confirmed case and the two near-misses all sit at the intersection of deep professional credentialing and underserved public audiences. The pattern points at three adjacent niches where no dominant paid solo-author newsletter is visible on Substack.
Ayurvedic medicine for Western practitioners
Ayurveda — the traditional Indian medical system — is not represented by any newsletter in Substack's top 25 Health listings. 6 Small Substack presences exist (Everyday Ayurveda, Adiveda Newsletter), but none have reached leaderboard rankings. The National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) certifies practitioners at four professional levels; the Association of Ayurvedic Professionals of North America (AAPNA) serves the North American practitioner community. Reddit's r/Ayurveda has approximately 85,000 members. The audience for credible, clinical-grade Ayurvedic writing is large and has no clear dominant voice. A NAMA-certified Ayurvedic doctor writing for Western integrative practitioners — MDs, NDs, licensed acupuncturists — who want evidence-based frameworks for Ayurvedic principles would occupy the same structural position as PERFECT HUNGER in TCM. Revenue math at $12/month: 500 paid = $72,000/year.
Naturopathic medicine for integrative practitioners
Twenty-three US states, Washington DC, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands license naturopathic doctors (NDs — holders of a four-year naturopathic medicine degree). 7 Approximately 6,000 licensed NDs practice in North America, trained across eight CNME (Council on Naturopathic Medical Education)-accredited four-year medical programs. 7 No naturopathic medicine newsletter appears in Substack's top health rankings. The gap is specific: mainstream medical journals do not cover naturopathic clinical practice; naturopathic associations publish member-only content. A licensed ND at an Oregon or Washington practice — states where NDs have the broadest prescribing rights and can serve as primary care physicians — writing a newsletter that translates naturopathic research for MDs and integrative practitioners would have an audience with no existing destination. Revenue math at $15/month: 500 paid = $90,000/year.
Certified fraud examination and forensic accounting
The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE — the credentialing body for the Certified Fraud Examiner, or CFE, designation) has more than 90,000 members globally. 8 Substack's business leaderboard top 25 includes no newsletter focused on fraud examination or forensic accounting. A handful of small presences exist — scattered posts on "forensic accounting as code," occasional case analyses — but no practitioner-led paid newsletter has captured the field. CFEs earn median salaries above $100,000; they read to stay current on case law, SEC enforcement trends, and emerging fraud typologies. An experienced CFE or CPA with a background in Big Four forensic accounting or financial crimes investigation, writing case-based analysis for internal auditors, compliance officers, and corporate counsel, would face essentially no competition. Revenue math at $15/month: 500 paid = $90,000/year.

Three issues in, the pattern is consistent: the newsletters that reach paid conversion milestones are written by people whose credential took years to build and whose specific niche has no comparable English-language voice. The research difficulty is part of the signal — a niche where a paid newsletter is easy to find already has one. The open fields are the ones where searching turns up nothing.
Cover image: A therapist performs acupuncture on a patient by RDNE Stock project via Pexels

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