the AI newsletter you'll actually open on monday.
Hey friend,
You get too many newsletters. I know. I have the same problem.
Most of them are some guy who read a TechCrunch article twenty minutes ago, stuck bullet points under it, and called it "curation." Or worse, it's an AI newsletter written BY an AI. You can tell. It sounds like a LinkedIn post that went to therapy.
This one is different. And I'll tell you why in about 90 seconds.
or if you're already sold... sign up now
so what is this, actually?
Every Monday I send one email.
It's the AI updates worth changing your workflow for. Turns out that's about 5% of what gets posted about AI in a given week. The other 95% is recycled tweets, rebranded ChatGPT wrappers, and someone trying to sell you a course.
I read all of it so you don't have to. Then I send you the part that mattered.
okay but is it good
I think so (if I do say so myself). A few thousand people on the internet seem to agree. Here are the actual numbers from the last 90 days, which you can go verify on X right now if you want:
That last one is not a typo. I hate courses. Don't get me started.
reader mail
Things people have said that I didn't pay them to say:
"Every email so far has been absolutely incredible. Every email makes me glad I signed up. Keep it up man."
"Your emails give me daily goosebumps and a dopamine hit while valuable lessons, bro. Keep giving the value."
"bro I've been reading ur emails man, good work fr"
"HELL YEAH GOOD EMAIL BRO"
"goated email, thanks a lot man."
"Your emails have gotten so much better from when you first started in terms of wording, sentence structure and flow keep it up man 💪"
"This is the best newsletter ever, thank you so much."
"always replied when I asked for anything. Also gives great advice and consistent asf."
"Brooo this email's flow is sooo good 🔥"
what actually shows up in your inbox
Every issue, you get the same structure:
- What actually changed this week. The three or four AI updates that matter. Everything else was noise.
- A tool breakdown. I use the tool, then I tell you whether it's worth the money. Somehow this is a rare format.
- A workflow you can steal. Not theory. Something you could ship by Tuesday.
- Occasionally, a rant. Last week I went after a SaaS tool that charges $97 a month for a feature you could build in an afternoon. People liked it.
If that sounds like a fair trade for five minutes of your week, you know what to do.
the deal
It's free. It's weekly. It's 5 minutes. You can unsubscribe whenever and I won't be weird about it.
See you Monday.