Weekender #246

The Assist Newsletter
July 3, 2026
An illustrated quote card features a black-and-white portrait of Fred Rogers surrounded by colorful geometric shapes on a light blue background. The quote reads, “Often when you think you're at the end of something, you're at the beginning of something else.”

🤔 Brainteaser of the day: Using only addition, how can you use eight 8s to total exactly 1,000?

Click here to see the answer.

Today’s Checklist:

  • The honest breakdown on sunscreen
  • A wild true crime to add to your watch list
  • Pet of the week: Greg

🗓️ Mapping out your Q3? Join our free training Thurs 7/9 @ 9am PT / 12pm ET for the weekly and quarterly goal system that keeps a whole team moving. Save your seat.

QUICK LINKS

✈️ Headed abroad this summer? How much to tip, everywhere.

💵 When tapping into a pension or roth IRA early makes sense.

💬 What your coworkers really mean when they just reply “Noted.”

🤖 91% of marketers edit AI copy to make it sound human again.

SUN CHECK

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The Sunscreen Situation Is… Complicated

 

I showed up to a charity event last week and came home with the most embarrassing sunburn. I didn’t even think to put it on; it just wasn’t part of my mental checklist for that kind of event. I’m a Latina with a lot of melanin and a good base tan, and applying SPF isn’t always top of mind when I’m not planning extended time in the sun. SPF 15 on a regular day, SPF 50 when I’m at the beach actively trying to tan my butt off. Otherwise? I lean into the idea that some direct sun without sunscreen has real benefits.

But the sunburn sent me down a rabbit hole, because I’ve been noticing there’s a lot of conflicting noise around sunscreen right now — some people saying it’s toxic, others saying skipping it is reckless. I wanted to actually figure out where the truth is, so here’s what I found.

The “sunscreen is toxic” conversation has real science behind it

Sunscreen doesn’t cause cancer (the evidence doesn’t support that). The real worry is specific chemical ingredients and whether they’re safe to absorb into your body.

The FDA has flagged 12 common chemical sunscreen ingredients (including oxybenzone, avobenzone, homosalate, and octinoxate) as not yet “generally recognized as safe and effective.” That doesn’t mean they’re banned, but it means manufacturers haven’t submitted the safety data to prove they’re fine. The CDC found oxybenzone in the urine of over 90% of people tested, and a 2025 review noted concerns about its link to reproductive harm. Oxybenzone is now banned from sale in Hawaii, Palau, and Thailand over reef damage.

Of the full sunscreen ingredient library, only two have been FDA-recognized as safe and effective without reservations: zinc oxide and titanium dioxide. Both mineral, and the ones that leave the white cast.

Is getting some direct sun without sunscreen actually okay?

For me personally, yes, in moderation because melanin functions as a natural sunscreen. Darker skin has a built-in SPF equivalent of about 13, which provides meaningful protection for short exposures. And direct sunlight is how your body produces vitamin D, a nutrient that supports your immune system, bone health, and more. Sunscreen, even when applied correctly, reduces that production.

The British Skin Foundation recommends 25–40 minutes of unprotected sun exposure for people with darker skin tones to get adequate vitamin D. For lighter skin, it’s 10–15 minutes. After that window, protection matters because melanin is not a substitute for sunscreen on extended exposure, and skin cancer affects people of all skin tones (just gets diagnosed later in darker skin, which is its own problem).

So the hybrid approach isn’t wrong. A short daily window of direct sun, then SPF for anything longer. The mistake is treating melanin like a full shield and skipping protection entirely, which is exactly what I did at that charity event.

How to pick sunscreen that isn’t full of stuff you don’t want

The short answer: go mineral, look for zinc oxide and/or titanium dioxide as the active ingredients, and verify the rest of the label.

A few things that actually help:

  • Check EWG’s sunscreen database. The Environmental Working Group reviews thousands of sunscreens for safety every year. In their 2025 guide, only about 1 in 4 met basic safety standards. The EWG Verified seal is a reliable shortcut: Best daily SPFs + Best recreational SPFs + Best Kid/Baby SPFs
  • Don’t trust “reef-safe” on the label. That term is completely unregulated; a 2020 analysis found nearly half of all sunscreens labeled reef-safe actually failed NOAA’s environmental standards. Check the ingredients yourself. If it lists oxybenzone, octinoxate, or octocrylene, it’s not reef-safe, whatever the label says.
  • Avoid spray and powder formulas with titanium dioxide. Titanium dioxide is safe on skin, but the International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies it as a possible carcinogen when inhaled, so the spray and powder versions are a different risk profile.
  • Broad-spectrum zinc oxide is your best all-around bet. It covers both UVA and UVB, it’s FDA-approved as safe, it doesn’t absorb into your bloodstream, and it won’t kill the coral reef. The white cast issue is real, but tinted formulas and newer mineral sunscreens have gotten significantly better.

A few brands that consistently rate well with EWG: Thinksport, ATTITUDE Mineral, and 4ocean Reef Safe.

‘It depends’ is the takeaway here

Some direct sun is fine, especially for those of us with more melanin who need more of it to produce vitamin D. The mistake is treating “I probably won’t burn” as the only reason sunscreen exists; UV damage accumulates without you feeling it, and skin cancer doesn’t discriminate by skin tone.

For what you do put on: ditch the chemical filters and go mineral. Zinc oxide. Read the ingredient list. Don’t let a pretty “reef-safe” label do your homework for you.

And, unlike me, remember to apply it before the event!

circle image of Thania (Sr. Mgr Content Systems)

Thania (TA Content Mgr)

This article is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a dermatologist for guidance specific to your skin.

WEEKEND PREP

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If You Experience The Sunday Scaries, Read This

 

It’s 9pm Sunday. Instead of winding down, you’re running tomorrow’s calendar in your head, remembering the follow-up you dropped, and wondering how Tuesday already looks impossible.

That dread usually means the whole week is still living in your head. A system you trust takes it out and gives it a home.

Here are four worth knowing, sorted by how your team actually works:

  • monday.com: for teams who need to stay aligned without a meeting to get there. Build the week in visual boards, set priorities, automate the nudges, and start Monday seeing what’s moving and what’s stuck.
  • Quickbase: for operations-heavy teams running complex workflows across departments. If your week is full of “wait, where does that handoff live,” it pulls the whole thing into one customizable system.
  • ClickUp: for the everything-in-one-place crowd: tasks, docs, goals, time tracking, and automations in a single workspace you build around how you work.
  • Zoho Projects: for growing teams who want real structure before enterprise pricing: full project tracking, time logs, and collaboration without the big spend.

👉 Find the one that fits your week and give Sunday night back to actually resting.

STAFF PICKS

An image displays three Polaroid-style recommendation cards on a yellow grid background. They feature the novel Magnolia Parks labeled "Read," the documentary Maternal Instinct labeled "Watch," and a GlowLab with Susan Yara podcast episode titled "Relationship Skills for Better Intimacy" labeled "Listen."

📚 Read: Magnolia Parks by Jessa Hastings.

A messy, addictive London-set romance about first love that won’t let go. Pure weekend escapism if you want something that reads fast and pulls you under.

📺 Watch: Maternal Instinct on Netflix

This new true-crime documentary unpacks the disturbing case of Taylor Parker, who faked a pregnancy and killed an expectant mother in a crime almost too dark to believe. If you can handle a heavy one, it’s a gripping, well-made watch.

🎧 Listen: Relationship Skills for Better Intimacy & Communication

Sex therapist Dr. Mindy DeSeta walks through the practical skills behind staying connected, from how to actually talk about sex to keeping intimacy alive over the long haul. Save it for your next walk if your relationship could use a little tune-up.

ON CAMERA

 

You’d Post More Video If Editing Didn’t Eat Your Night

 

You’ve watched someone with half your expertise blow up on social media with a 30-second video and thought, I could do that, if I had three hours and an editor.

Showing up on video grows your visibility faster than almost anything, which is exactly why it keeps sliding down your list. The editing, the captions, the part where you hate how you sound.

VEED turns a rough idea or a phone clip into a polished, on-brand video right in your browser. You type what you want, and the AI handles the cuts, captions, and cleanup. Auto-subtitles in 100+ languages for the sound-off scrollers, Magic Cut to strip the ums and dead air, your fonts and logo applied in one click. No download, no camera required.

It’s a G2 Best AI Software pick with 1,500+ five-star reviews, trusted by teams at Google, Netflix, and Meta.

👉 Start making videos free with VEED (no card needed)

JUST FOR FUN

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COMMUNITY

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PET OF THE WEEK

An illustrated "Pet of the Week" graphic features a gray tabby cat lying on its back with its paws in the air on a blue carpet. The light blue background is decorated with brown paw prints and dog bone icons surrounding the cat's framed photo.

Pet of The Week: Greg

 

Greg looks like quiet sophistication, but he’s actually a mildly offended gremlin with strong opinions. He growls at grandkids, sprints to his human at the first clap of thunder, and treats every Zoom call as his personal runway, finishing with a deeply unimpressed yawn. Brave when convenient, scared when it counts, and always, always the main character.

🐾 Got a cute fur baby? Submit them to be our pet of the week in an upcoming issue.

SPILL THE TEA

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