Edit: I'm not interested in culture war crap. I'm interested in resource recommendations that might better appeal to a certain audience. Please, if your only point of replying is to complain that I asked the question, please refrain, because its off-topic.
She ran a podcast about Emacs for a while, which might be relevant:
Then again, looking "Emacs tutorial" on YouTube I re-encountered a particular weird character I saw before, he's got a homepage where he solicits Patreon donations to ask him a question, he does YouTube streams where maybe 5 people show up where he talks about what you'd expect a "neckbeard nerd" to talk about, he seems to have been unable to find employment for many years, and he's also talked about women in weird way. I would not want my daughter to learn Emacs from him.
https://dev.to/viglioni/how-i-set-up-my-emacs-for-typescript...
Org-mode and Org-Roam for Scholars and Researchers https://emacsconf.org/2020/talks/17/
* headlines
** in a hierarchy
* and back to level 1
1. and numbered lists
2. [ ] and clickable items
...and all the other features, but I would be interested in seeing what kind of improved workflows or routines are enabled by using org-mode in some actual work.
However, I find the nature behind your request interesting and would like to better understand where exactly you are coming from.
> In the interest of my colleagues not getting the impression that its just a tool for a certain well-established crowd of male nerds
Where exactly would they get this impression from? Over the last decade I've seen so many different people nerding about Emacs (or Vim for that matter) that I'd never nail it down to be one coherent, well-established crowd. Especially with the rise of VSCode and its underlying complexity a lot of people join and leave that community every day.
> I was hoping to get help finding resources that portrayed it more inclusively
Which resources did you find that portrayed Emacs to be exclusive / non-inclusive in any way. Okay, you'll have a hard time if you are missing some fingers, but that's not what you are getting at.
I'm afraid that the rest of the responses were not constructive. Worse, they've painted a picture that is not very flattering of the HN community, I'm afraid. I'm not some woke holy warrior--not by a long shot--but you all have convinced me that sexism is a bigger problem in tech than I'd given credence to thus far. Sad.