Junteau Terminal
Sneak peak at something I've been developing for paid members
Over the past few months, I’ve been quietly building what the paid side of Junteau should become. Something different in tone, texture, aesthetic, and overall intent.
Think of it as an exercise in semi-fictional world-building.
A mix of…
• “monitoring the situation” energy
• demand for private, signal-heavy spaces
• 1980s global-operator / light-espionage nostalgia
• and curated content celebrating business, entrepreneurship, and the freedom and independence those paths can create
Layered with reviews, lists, and recommendations — from gear to travel to media — chosen with taste and intention.
Now for the slightly ridiculous part (which is also kind of serious)…
Imagine a global organization nobody knows they’re a member of… until they’re reminded.
GOODS
Global Owners, Operators, and Decentralized Sovereigns.
It’s mostly in good fun — but also not entirely fictional.
High-agency individuals.
People writing their own rules.
Building lives on their own terms for themselves and their families.
Yet recognizing that even independent paths benefit from shared context, guidance, community, and good fun.
Of course, Goods Group is a very real thing. Goods Intelligence and Goods Advisors are real businesses that I run in real life.
Coincidence? Simple wordplay for rhetorical inspiration? Or convenient “fronts” for the real GOODS — a quiet network of like-minded builders and free thinkers?
Paid members have access codes. And logins. And call signs. And entry to Junteau Terminal — a private access layer for people operating outside conventional career, geographic, and institutional paths.
That would be ridiculous… right?…… right?
From the beginning, Junteau has been meant to feel globally inspired but grounded in reality. A content engine that appreciates the world as it actually is.
Think part Monocle, part Bloomberg — but stripped of pretension. More attainable, more lived experience. Something I’ve called “stripped-collar” in that it’s equally legible to blue-collar and white-collar audiences. And to the bootstrapped and silver-spooned alike.
Below are some sneak peaks at what’s inside.
More to come. Let me know what you think.
VEO out.



