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Our society has a division of labour. We can afford to have full-time story tellers, but they need a way to get food, so they sell their stories.
In a society without a division of labour then whoever tells the best story does, but that's after they've gotten everyone fed.
To be clear, I'm not trying to argue against artists getting paid. I just think folk-tales transcend that, you know? I've added to my main post to explain myself a bit better.
I get it - I think I just have a different point of view.
Selling out used to be a sin that real artists would never commit. But we need to eat.
Before money was a thing, that would (probably) mean you gather food before you call your family around to tell the next episode of your magnum opus. But now it means you find a sponsor for your channel, a buyer for your story, or a company to pay while you work on a script.
Again, my point hasn't got anything to do with artists making money.