About - The Seat of Loss
2024-12-03
I’m Jaime Brooks. I’m in a band called Elite Gymnastics and have also released music under the name Default Genders. I write a column for The New Inquiry about the music industry called “Streaming Services.” I also write this newsletter now.
I took the name “The Seat of Loss” from some X-Men comics. There’s this mutant governing body called the Great Ring of Arakko, which consists of twelve “seats” that are each kind of like a cabinet position in the executive branch of the U.
About - The Washington Observer
2024-12-03
The Washington Observer tracks Washington State politics, government, and the influence thereof. If you’re interested in how money and power influence politicians, public officials and the policies that affect you and your wallet, subscribe to get full access to the newsletter and website. Never miss an update.
You won’t have to worry about missing anything. Every new edition of the newsletter goes directly to your inbox.
The Washington Observer is for political junkies, policy nerds, and others who want to know hows things really work.
About - The White Pages
2024-12-03
Welcome to The White Pages
Here’s the deal: I write about White people and what it might actually take for us to become true partners in building a better world. So, like an anti-racism newsletter, right? I mean, that’s part of it. The question I’m really interested in is what you do when you’re a member of a group that has been (a). given a whole bunch of power and (b).
About - Tone Glow
2024-12-03
Tone Glow is a newsletter dedicated to showcasing the best in experimental music. Typical issues of the newsletter feature the following two items:
An interview with an artist, always in Q&A format.
A writers panel featuring capsule reviews of the same album(s), accompanied by a rating between 0 and 10. This section of the newsletter is inspired by The Singles Jukebox.
Tone Glow initially existed as a blog but became a newsletter in December 2019.
About - Trying with Emma Barnett
2024-12-03
Hello, I am Emma Barnett - an interviewer, broadcaster and journalist - usually found most weekdays at 10am in a radio studio, one hand clamped around a steaming hot tea and the other grasping for a chewed pen.
I am also trying. Aren’t we all?
Trying to live a good life; trying to be a decent wife, mother, daughter, friend and colleague; trying to eat well; trying to move my body; trying to get enough sleep; trying to dance; trying to paint; trying to discover new music; and trying to book a holiday.
About - UConn WBB Weekly
2024-12-03
I’m Daniel Connolly, a 2020 graduate of UConn who has covered Geno Auriemma’s women’s basketball program since the 2015-16 season at The UConn Blog and Storrs Central. I also work as one of the managing editors at the blog and cover the UConn men’s hockey team.
The UConn WBB Weekly is a newsletter that arrives in your inbox every Thursday at 7 a.m. with everything about Geno and the Huskies that you might’ve missed over the past week.
About - West Coast Media Jobs
2024-12-03
A curated list of California & Pacific Northwest journalism jobs delivered to your inbox.
New York City isn't the only place where journalism lives and thrives.
As a West Coast journalist, it can be hard and even sometimes depressing looking through job board after job description saying a really great opportunity is based in New York City. Most freelance resources are for journalists in NYC. Most journalism organizations only have events in NYC. I’ve been there.
About - Window Light
2024-12-03
The 14th-century Franciscan theologian Peter Auriol once wrote:
The sun spreads the brightness of its rays completely throughout the air; if then, a chamber faces the sun, and yet is not found radiant on the inside, the cause must be an impediment like a wall or the closing of the windows.
The chamber represents the human heart, and the sun represents divine love. Auriol’s point is that God’s love is completely generous and, like the sun, shines on us all.
About - Witchful Thinking from Alythia
2024-12-03
Hi, I’m Alythia. I am a lot of things. I’m an American woman who is also a priestess within the Church of the Knotted Ash, a “wicca-adjacent” tradition of witchcraft. I teach, I blog, I sometimes podcast. Aside from all that, I also do most of the things an ordinary person does — raise a family, hold a job, maintain friendships and support my community. I do what I do because the Craft is growing very fast, and there are lots of folks out there interested in doing magic.