My Hot Ass Neighbour Issue 7 Apr 2026
At select indie newsstands, or via the My Neighbour subscription service (which, fittingly, includes a “pass-it-on” card to give the issue to a neighbor when you’re done). Review by: A satisfied subscriber from Apartment 2B.
The result is a 98-page glossy that feels like a cross between Kinfolk (for its quiet aesthetic) and a retro TV Guide (for its genuine love of shared entertainment). The theme this quarter is – a metaphor for the spaces where our lives intentionally overlap. Lifestyle Section: Home, Hustle, and Humanity The lifestyle half of the issue is anchored by a stunning photo essay titled “The Doorstep Diaries” (p. 22-35). Photographer Elena Marchetti captures front porches from Tokyo to Toledo – not the manicured ones, but the lived-in ones with wilting plants, forgotten sneakers, and half-empty coffee mugs. It’s a masterclass in finding poetry in the mundane. My Hot Ass Neighbour Issue 7
⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4.5/5)
My Neighbour continues to prove why it’s the sleeper hit of community-centric publishing. Issue 7 trades the usual gossipy neighbor tropes for a sophisticated, heartfelt exploration of how we live, laugh, and wind down. It’s less about who parked badly and more about the mixtape playing in their garage. The Concept: From Noise Complaints to Shared Joy Let’s be honest: most “neighbor” publications focus on disputes, HOA horror stories, or passive-aggressive notes. My Neighbour Issue 7 refreshingly pivots. The editorial team clearly asked, “What if we celebrated the things that connect us instead of the walls that separate us?” At select indie newsstands, or via the My
Beyond the Fence: A Deep Dive into My Neighbour Issue 7 – Lifestyle & Entertainment The theme this quarter is – a metaphor