PicoBlog

REDmoney is a newsletters designed by Qortor dedicated to sharing stories, insights, and updates on our mission to democratize community commerce. The term "red money” or “being in the red” holds a negative connotation, but it represents a concept that is essential to our community. REDmoney represents both passion and pain that drives our community of creators, brands, and partners. It displays risks for ventures that are necessary to create value and opportunities in the world.
I’m Rosie Knight, a writer, journalist, author, and podcast host. I love recommending brilliant books, cool comics, and fantastic films to people. I also really like alliteration - I grew up on old Marvel Comics -  in case the newsletter name didn't already clue you into that, so apologies in advance.  Sharing my love of stuff that I've read and watched is one of the things I miss most about my years in comics and book retail.
Founded in July 2020, the School of Thought Blog continues to grow from a weekly email newsletter to a community that gathers readers both online and in real life. School of Thought shares actionable insights and ideas on listening, learning, leading and loving. Our blog’s engaged subscriber list is strong and growing (join us!). Our organization’s engaged collective has started in real life (check us out!) We are a community of learner leaders.
A psychological look at the individual’s place in the collective from Jungian psychotherapist and author of “Quarterlife: The Search for Self in Early Adulthood.” I’m Satya Doyle Byock. I’m a psychotherapist with a focus on Jungian Psychology, the journey of individuation, and the time of life I call Quarterlife. I’m the author of Quarterlife: The Search for Self in Early Adulthood and the founder of The Salome Institute of Jungian Psychology, where I teach online.
I’m Jesse Singal, a Brooklyn-based journalist and podcaster. My webpage is embarrassingly out of date and needs to be rebuilt, so I’m using this as a temporary placeholder in the meantime. I’m a former senior editor and writer-at-large at New York Magazine, where I ran the Science of Us vertical. I’ve also written for The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Boston Globe, and a bunch of other outlets. My first book, The Quick Fix: Why Fad Psychology Can’t Cure Our Social Ills, was published in April of 2021.
As a co-founder of Snobette (and before that High Snobette), I’ve been writing about the space for over two decades and my analysis is unique because it’s a blend of business and culture. I can crunch the numbers and I also really like sneakers. Snobette’s weekly newsletter covers the latest and most relevant streetwear and fashion news stories, which often include my very abbreviated opinions on the topics. There’s also highlights from the world of finance plus coverage of what’s popping in the world of social media.
I’m Kent Beck & my mission is to help geeks feel safe in the world. Help. I can’t make anyone else feel anything but I can help. Geeks. I speak first to people like me, geeks, who care about mechanisms & puzzles & surprising ideas. Feel. Living in my head most of the time divorced me from my emotions, which came back to bite me later. Hard. So I talk about emotions but also ideas from the perspective of how they affect & are affected by feelings.
If you’re reading this, you are thinking about signing up for my newsletter. Why not? You can always cancel it. You will get an email every time I publish a story, with a little backstory from me on how I got the idea for the story and what the reporting process was like. I’ll also tell you a little about what’s in the story, but not too much, because really, you should read the story, not the Cliff Notes.
My name is Claire Stapleton. I started working at Google the summer after I graduated from college. From 2007-2012, I was in the Communications Department and sent around incredibly earnest/quirky company-wide emails that earned me the sobriquet “The Bard of Google.” Things took a turn in 2018 when I helped call for the 20K-person Google Walkout, which set off a chain of events that led to the stunning dénouement of my Google career six months later.