
Tabloid money Guardian editor plays on as his Titanic sinks On the other hand, like, I suspect, many readers, I'd put more faith in astrologers than I would in economists. It's certainly true that many powerful people have been addicted to the stars I remember Nancy Reagan studying them avidly before key dates were put in her husband's diary. A "grand water time" (I don't know what it is either) begins then, and will unveil a period of good fortune. Horrible, says Miller, predicting a "bloody fight".
#Susan miller astrology full#
So what does the future hold? The coming year has some rough patches, not just in July or October the US budget expires on 27 March, the day of a "monstrous full moon". Her friends think "she's gone a bit kooky", she says, but at a recent dinner in New York a gaggle of professional women "sheepishly" revealed their AstrologyZone habits "then buzzed with excitement on learning they weren't alone". Now, on the first day of every month, she opens the AstrologyZone app before "I've fully opened my eyes", often adding lucky dates to her calendar. For example, she forecast last May as a "glorious month" for Steel, and so it turned out: it was the month she was hired by the FT.

But she was struck by Miller's "level of accuracy". Until a friend recommended the AstrologyZone to her, Emily Steel had never given astrology much thought. Altogether her media operation costs $400,000 a year to run, but while it's profitable thanks to subscriptions, advertisements and promotions, Miller says she isn't "rolling in dough".
