Editor's letter · The Fullimedia edit
What Fullimedia covers, why it matters, and how we report it
By Carlos Mendoza, Editor-in-Chief · Updated June 23, 2026 · 10 min read
Fullimedia is an independent daily publication covering business and personal finance, technology, entertainment, wellness, and culture for working adults who want practical reporting they can act on. We launched Fullimedia to fill a specific gap. Most general-interest sites give you either thinly rewritten press releases or commentary so abstract it never lands in your week. The Fullimedia approach is different. Every story leads with what changed, why it matters to a real reader, and what a reasonable person should do about it — with named sources, dated context, and an editorial standard we publish publicly and keep up to date in our editorial guidelines.
What Fullimedia publishes
Each of the five Fullimedia beats has a defined editorial scope and a named editor. The technology desk, edited by Mara Restrepo, covers consumer products, applied AI, and the software that actually ships rather than the demos that don't. Fullimedia Business, edited by Sebastian Ross, covers entrepreneurship, small-business operations, personal finance, and the corporate moves that quietly shape how millions of people earn and spend. Fullimedia Entertainment, edited by Laura Quinn, covers movies, TV, streaming, and music with cultural analysis, not just news aggregation. Fullimedia Wellness, edited by Dr. Andrea Velez, covers preventive care, mental health, evidence-based nutrition, and the health-system decisions that affect what your insurance pays for. And Fullimedia Culture, edited by Miguel Ortiz, covers books, art, design, food, travel, and the ideas that connect them.
The Fullimedia editorial standard
The Fullimedia editorial standard is documented in three living files. Our editorial guidelines describe how we source and verify; our ethics policy defines what reporters can and cannot accept; and our methodology page shows the actual tools and data sources we use. Fullimedia reporters disclose any holding or relationship that could affect a story, and the disclosure sits at the top of the article, not buried in a footer.
We hold ourselves to four rules. Source every claim — external citations link inline to the primary document. Use real authors — every Fullimedia article carries a real human byline with a verifiable track record on our team page. No paid placement — affiliate links are disclosed inline, never sold as coverage. Correct or remove stale work — articles that are wrong get fixed in public on our corrections page, with the original version preserved, and pieces that age out either get a dated refresh or are retired.
How to read Fullimedia
There's no single right way to read Fullimedia. Most readers land here through a single search result and stay for one article — and that's a complete experience; each piece is written to stand on its own. If you'd like more, the Fullimedia daily brief compresses the day's most useful stories into a five-minute email each weekday morning. If you want to follow a specific beat, every Fullimedia category page — Tech, Business, Entertainment, Wellness, Culture — works as a self-contained section with its own editor. And if you care about a specific writer, every Fullimedia author keeps a public profile listing their beat, credentials, location, and a chronological feed of everything they've filed.
The reader contract
We don't ask much of Fullimedia readers. No paywall, no registration wall, no consent gates, and no third-party tracking on article pages. The only thing Fullimedia asks is that if a story changes how you act — what you buy, what you read next, who you call — you let us know. Reader feedback genuinely shapes what we cover. The about page has the longer history of why we started, the team page introduces the editors and their conflict disclosures, and this homepage is rebuilt every weekday morning with the stories the Fullimedia newsroom thinks you'll actually want.
— Carlos Mendoza, Editor-in-Chief, Fullimedia