Whoa... Printernet Teamed Up with Sublime
We made a limited edition print issue with 10 remarkable interviews
If you don’t know, I run a company called Printernet. We let anyone create their own magazine subscription with reading perfectly suited for them. Think of it like Readwise, Matter, or Pocket… but the medium for reading the interesting articles and essays you save is a beautiful print issue without the distraction of the internet, delivered right to your door.
With Printernet, I also love doing special collaborations with the right folks… Sublime definitely meets the criteria. Sublime is building a more human “second brain”, a more intentional, creative, quieter side of the internet. You can read all the cool stuff they do here.
We teamed up to share 10 delightful and vulnerable conversations with wonderfully creative people. We are only doing 100 issues and I’ve just heard there are only 25 left… so get yours today!
Featuring Sublime's Alex Dobrenko in conversation with:
Anjan Katta of Daylight Computer on building humane tech without losing your humanity
Douglas Rushkoff on the case for not knowing—mysticism, machines, and why the future is human
Yancey Strickler of Kickstarter and Metalabel on escaping the algorithm to build a creative career that actually sustains you
Leandra Medine Cohen on starting over after Man Repeller’s public fall from grace
Melanie Masarin of Drink Ghia on how to build a brand, the costs of authenticity, and the realities of founder life
Mason Currey on all the ways artists, himself included, have balanced making art with making a living
Isabel on what happens when you let go of cynicism and trust yourself enough to be positive
Adam Mastroianni on what’s making us all so unhappy and what to do about it
Plus a special conversation between Alex Dobrenko and
Sari Azout (founder of Sublime)
You can read more from Alex on what motivated these conversations here.
Have a great weekend,
Jake
Very interesting idea!
Please check your homepage, the Try it! button at the bottom leads to https://readprinternet.com that returns just 404.