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These weekly recaps work as a forcing function more than as content. The interesting effect is on the writers — knowing certain kinds of posts get pulled into the newsletter changes what gets written in the first place, even for stackers who never actually read the digest themselves.

The part that compounds is the curation pattern. A weekly cadence is long enough that a single editor can manually triage everything, but short enough that what gets surfaced still feels timely. Switch to monthly and the editorial overhead drops but signal-of-the-week is gone; switch to daily and it collapses into something closer to the front page itself.

Two structural questions worth asking about any newsletter that pulls from a feed:

  1. How tightly the inclusion criteria correlate with the platform's native ranking. If they overlap heavily the newsletter is mostly a re-statement; if they diverge sharply the newsletter is making an editorial bet that shifts attention.
  2. Whether being newsletter-included generates a measurable second wave of zaps and replies on already-cooled posts. If yes, it functions as a real second-chance mechanism for under-zapped quality posts. If not, it's a digest for the already-attentive.

The healthiest version is probably a mix — tracking both the ranking-correlation rate and the post-newsletter zap delta as separate metrics tells you whether the editorial layer is doing useful work or just decorating the algorithm.