Remento
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remento is an American online platform specializing in family memory preservation through storytelling and storybooks.[1]
| Remento | |
|---|---|
| Original author | Charlie Greene |
| Developer | Heirloom Media Technologies Inc. |
| Initial release | September 2022 |
| Platform | Web |
| Type | Digital storytelling Personal digital archiving |
| License | Proprietary |
| Website | remento |
History
Remento was founded in 2020 by Charlie Greene and Alex Massonneau in Los Angeles, California, as a project to preserve family memories.[2][3] Greene's interest in memory preservation began in childhood, inspired by home videos of his father, who died when Greene was ten years old.[3] In 2017, following his mother's cancer diagnosis, Greene conducted an oral history interview to capture her voice, uncovering stories and insights he had never heard before.[4][5] The name Remento is a Portmanteau of "remember" and "memento."[4]
In September 2022, Remento announced that it had raised funding from Upfront Ventures, along with a group of angel investors, including Chuck Davis, Emmy Rossum, Sam Esmail, Dan Nova (of Highland Capital Partners), and Sarah Harden to further expand its operations.[5][6]
In November 2023, Remento introduced Remento Book, an AI-based service that generates physical books from recorded family narratives.[7]
In March 2025, Remento appeared in Season 16 of the ABC television series Shark Tank, where it received an investment from Mark Cuban.[8][9][10]
Platform
Remento is a storytelling platform that preserves family histories by converting recorded oral narratives into digital and printed formats.[1] Through its Remento Book service, participants can respond to weekly emailed prompts using a web-based recorder.[7] The recording is transcribed using an AI-based system called Speech-to-Story, which generates written versions of the stories. Over the course of a year, these stories are shared digitally and then compiled into a Hardcover book featuring family photos and QR codes linking back to the original recording.[7]