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Newsweek

Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
69
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Newsweek without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Newsweek from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
69/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.58
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.80
Top associations for Newsweek
strong brand recognition 3 strong brand recognition 3 long-running American news magazine 3 in-depth reporting and analysis 2 not highly specialized 2 sensationalized reporting 2 mainstream news magazine 2 politics coverage 2 long-running American news magazine 2 perceived political bias 2 covers current affairs 1 science and culture coverage 1 current events coverage 1 politics reporting 1 business journalism 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
covers culture and sports 1 articles reports and analysis 1 covers sports news 1 reports world affairs 1 covers business news 1 covers politics 1 reports current events 1 wide range of topics 1 regular updates 1 timely reporting 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Newsweek is firmly in the model's "general news publisher" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Newsweek known for?
Newsweek is known as a long-running American news magazine, especially for weekly political, business, and world-affairs coverage and opinion journalism.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Newsweek known for?
Newsweek is known as a long-running American news magazine that covers current affairs, politics, business, technology, science, and culture. It’s especially recognized for in-depth reporting, analysis, and opinion on major national and global issues.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best general news publishers for business news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for political coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for international news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for culture and arts coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for sports news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for in-depth reporting? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for daily news briefings? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for email newsletters? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for mobile reading? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for weekend reading? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for college students? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for professionals? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for families wanting balanced coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for unbiased reporting? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for fast updates? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for long-form journalism? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for local and national news together? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for opinion and analysis? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best general news publishers for morning news reading? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which general news publishers are best for real-time alerts? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a major general news publisher? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which general news publishers are better than other premium news sites? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to large subscription news publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do the top general news publishers compare for breaking news? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which general news publishers are better for analysis versus speed? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to mainstream general news publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which general news publishers offer better value than expensive news subscriptions? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do general news publishers compare for international coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which general news publishers are better for business readers than other news outlets? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to legacy news publishers? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a general news publisher with balanced coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I get reliable news from a general news publisher? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I avoid sensational news and find a trustworthy general news publisher? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I choose a general news publisher for both local and world news? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I keep up with politics, business, and culture in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a news publisher with good fact-based reporting? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I pick a general news publisher that is worth paying for? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I get daily news without a lot of clickbait? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a general news publisher with strong explainers? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I choose a general news publisher for business professionals? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does a general news publisher subscription usually cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free general news publishers with good coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest general news publisher subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which general news publishers have a free tier? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What do premium general news publisher subscriptions include? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is a general news publisher subscription worth it? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do general news publishers offer student discounts? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which general news publishers have monthly subscription plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which general news publishers have annual subscription deals? #7 not mentioned
transactional Can I get a general news publisher subscription without a long contract? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: Which general news publishers have annual subscription deals? · transactional · recall mode
Yes—many general-news publishers offer **annual subscriptions with a discount vs. monthly**. Common examples: - **The New York Times** — All Access / News subscriptions - **The Wall Street Journal** — WSJ Digital / Print & Digital - **The Washington Post** — Digital subscription - **Financial Times** — Digital subscription - **The Economist** — Digital subscription - **The Atlantic** — Digital subscription - **Newsweek** — Digital/print plans - **USA Today** — Digital subscription - **The Guardian** — Annual supporter/membership options - **The Boston Globe** — Digital Access - **Chicago Tribune** — Digital subscription - **The Los Angeles Times** — Digital subscription If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **cheapest annual deals**, or 2. a **best-value shortlist** for US vs. international news.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best general news publishers right now? 0 0/5
What are the top general news publishers for daily reporting? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers are most trusted? 0 0/5
What are the most popular general news publishers online? 0 0/5
What are the best news publishers for national and world news? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers are worth subscribing to? 0 0/5
What are the most recommended general news publishers? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers have the best coverage overall? 0 0/5
What are the leading general news publishers in the US? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers are best for breaking news? 0 0/5
What are the best digital news publishers to follow? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers have the best reputation? 0 0/5
What are the top-rated general news publishers? 0 0/5
Which general news publishers cover politics, business, and culture well? 0 0/5
What are the best all-around general news publishers? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

What to do next Recommendations for Newsweek

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 6:02 AM

All 210 AI responses for Newsweek

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Newsweek" in the general news publisher category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Newsweek well as a long-running news magazine and digital publisher, including its general editorial focus, broad audience positioning, and historical role in U.S. media."}
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Newsweek well as a long-running news magazine and digital publisher, including its general editorial focus, history, and broad position in the news media landscape."}
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "I know Newsweek well as a long-running news magazine and digital news publisher, including its general editorial positioning and brand history, though not every current business detail." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Newsweek well as a long-running news magazine and digital publisher, including its general editorial focus, legacy brand position, and broad competitor set, though not exhaustive current internal details."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Newsweek well as a longstanding general-news magazine and digital publisher, including its broad editorial focus and market positioning, though not detailed current pricing or business specifics."}
What is Newsweek known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is known as a long-running American news magazine, especially for weekly political, business, and world-affairs coverage and opinion journalism.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is known as a long-running American news magazine that covers current affairs, politics, business, technology, science, and culture. It’s especially recognized for in-depth reporting, analysis, and opinion on major national and global issues.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is known as a long-running American news magazine covering current events, politics, business, culture, and international affairs.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is known for being a long-running American news magazine that covers current events, politics, business, culture, and world affairs, especially through in-depth reporting, analysis, and opinion pieces.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is known for being a long-running American news magazine that covers politics, world affairs, business, science, culture, and current events.
What are Newsweek's main strengths and weaknesses?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Main strengths: strong legacy brand recognition, broad general-interest news coverage, and a reputation that still carries weight in political and current-affairs circles. It also has an established digital presence and can leverage its long history for credibility. Main weaknesses: its prestige is lower than in its peak era, and many readers now see it as less influential than top-tier national outlets. Like much of legacy media, it faces challenges with trust, differentiation, and competing in a crowded, fast-moving digital news market.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek’s main strengths are its strong name recognition, long legacy, broad general-interest news coverage, and ability to publish timely commentary on politics, business, health, and world affairs. It can also be useful for quick, accessible summaries of major topics. Its main weaknesses are inconsistent editorial reputation over the years, perceived decline from its peak influence, and occasional criticism for sensational headlines, uneven quality, and heavy reliance on aggregated or opinion-driven content. Compared with top-tier legacy outlets, it may be seen as less authoritative or distinctive.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek’s main strengths are its strong brand recognition, long history, broad general-interest coverage, and ability to stay relevant through digital publishing. It also has a reputation for accessible, fast-moving news and opinion pieces. Its main weaknesses are a less distinctive editorial identity than some rivals, periodic concerns about accuracy or reliance on formulaic content, and a brand perception that can feel more legacy/magazine-oriented than premium or deeply authoritative. It also competes in a crowded market where many readers can get similar news elsewhere for free.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Main strengths: strong brand recognition, long legacy in news coverage, broad general-interest editorial scope, and credibility for breaking political and world news. It also has a recognizable magazine-style format and a sizable digital footprint. Main weaknesses: it has faced years of financial instability and ownership changes, which hurt trust and consistency. Compared with top competitors, its print influence is smaller, and some readers perceive its reporting as less distinctive or less authoritative than in its peak era.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek’s main strengths are its long-established brand recognition, broad general-news coverage, and strong legacy as a mainstream political and current-affairs publication. It also has decent reach for opinion, analysis, and quick-turn digital content. Its main weaknesses are a diminished reputation versus its peak years, less influence than top-tier outlets, and a history of ownership and editorial changes that have at times hurt consistency and trust. It can also feel less distinctive than competitors in a crowded news market.
Who should use Newsweek? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is best for readers who want general-interest news, politics, business, and culture in a magazine-style format. It may suit people who like quick overviews, opinion pieces, and accessible reporting. Avoid it if you want highly specialized coverage, deeply technical reporting, or a very neutral/breaking-news-only source. Also avoid it if you strongly prefer outlets with a particular editorial stance that matches your own, since it’s a commentary-heavy general news brand.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Use Newsweek if you want a mainstream news magazine with a broad mix of politics, world events, business, culture, and opinion, and you like quick reads that summarize current issues. Avoid it if you want highly specialized coverage, deeply academic analysis, or a consistently nonpartisan source with minimal opinion and editorial framing.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is best for readers who want broad, mainstream news coverage, quick takes on politics, business, culture, and general current events. It can suit casual news consumers, people who like magazine-style reporting, and readers who want a mix of analysis and readable summaries. People who should avoid it are those looking for highly specialized coverage, very deep investigative reporting only, or a source that matches a strongly specific political viewpoint. If you want only hyper-local news, academic-level depth, or niche industry reporting, Newsweek may not be the best fit.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Use Newsweek if you want quick, mainstream news coverage, opinion pieces, and broad U.S./world current affairs in an easy-to-read format. It can also be useful for casual readers who want a familiar, general-interest news source. Avoid it if you want highly specialized reporting, deep investigative journalism on every topic, or a strongly nonpartisan/academic source to rely on by itself. If you’re doing serious research, it’s better as a starting point than a sole source.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Use Newsweek if you want a mainstream news magazine with a U.S.-centric focus, quick headlines, politics/current affairs coverage, and occasional opinion or explainer pieces. It can suit readers who like a familiar legacy brand and broad topic coverage. Avoid it if you want highly technical reporting, deeply investigative longform as your primary source, a strongly neutral/no-opinion style, or coverage tailored to niche professional needs. If you’re especially sensitive to perceived political framing, you may want to compare it with multiple outlets.
How does Newsweek compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is generally seen as a long-running mainstream news magazine with strong brand recognition, but it is usually less influential than top-tier competitors like Time, The Economist, and Forbes. Compared with Time, Newsweek has a similar general-news format but typically less cultural reach and prestige today. Compared with The Economist, it is broader and more U.S.-focused, but less analytical and globally authoritative. Compared with Forbes, Newsweek is less business- and wealth-focused and has a wider current-affairs orientation. In practice, Newsweek competes more on legacy brand, accessible reporting, and broad news coverage than on deep specialization or market leadership.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is generally seen as a legacy news magazine that competes more on broad, mainstream news coverage and brand recognition than on depth or exclusivity. Compared with The Economist, it’s less internationally focused and less analytical; compared with Time, it’s similar in heritage but usually feels more digital-first and more light on original long-form journalism; compared with US news sites like CNN, Fox News, or Politico, it has less real-time authority and insider influence. Its strengths are a familiar brand, accessible reporting, and wide topic coverage. Its weaknesses are that competitors often have stronger editorial distinctiveness, faster breaking-news coverage, or more premium investigative journalism.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is a legacy news magazine that competes mainly with Time, The Week, and digital-first news outlets. Compared with Time, Newsweek is generally seen as less influential today but still recognizable and broader in general-interest news coverage. Compared with The Week, it is more traditional and news-magazine-like, while The Week is shorter, more curated, and often easier to skim. Against digital competitors like CNN, Reuters, AP, and major online publications, Newsweek is less dominant in breaking news, but it still has strong brand recognition and a mix of news, opinion, and analysis. In short: Newsweek’s strength is its established name and broad editorial scope; its weakness is that competitors often beat it on speed, depth, or digital reach.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is generally seen as a legacy U.S. news magazine with strong brand recognition, but it is smaller and less influential today than its biggest competitors, especially The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and major digital news brands. Compared with The Economist, it is broader and more U.S.-focused, but The Economist is usually regarded as more authoritative and analytically strong. Compared with Time, Newsweek is similar in format and audience, but Time has historically had a larger presence and stronger cultural visibility. Newsweek’s strength is recognizable name and broad general-interest coverage; its weakness is less distinctive editorial identity and less market power than the top-tier competitors.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Newsweek is generally a broad, mainstream news magazine with a legacy brand name, but it’s less influential than its biggest historical peers. Compared with TIME, it has a similar general-news format but usually less cultural weight and readership prestige. Compared with The Economist, it is less analytical and less international/business-focused. Compared with The Week, Newsweek is more traditional and original-reporting oriented, while The Week is more curated and digest-driven. Compared with U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek is less specialized in rankings and service journalism. Overall, Newsweek competes as a general-interest news brand, but its main advantage is name recognition; its main weakness is that it no longer leads the market in reach, authority, or distinct editorial identity.
What do people typically complain about with Newsweek?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that Newsweek is too sensationalized or clickbaity, with headlines that can feel exaggerated. Others criticize its perceived political bias, inconsistent quality, and a tendency to publish shallow or recycled reporting rather than deeply original journalism.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Newsweek has, at times, published clickbait-style or sensational headlines, shown political bias, and relied on recycled or thinly sourced stories. Some also criticize its editorial quality and occasional factual errors, especially in comparisons to its older reputation as a more serious news magazine.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Newsweek is overly sensational, uses clickbait-style headlines, and sometimes feels politically biased. Some also criticize its quality control, saying articles can be thin, repetitive, or occasionally inaccurate.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Newsweek can be clickbaity, sensationalized, and inconsistent in quality. Some also say it has had issues with credibility, repetitive content, and overly political or opinion-heavy coverage.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that Newsweek is too clickbaity or sensationalized, with headlines that feel optimized for traffic rather than depth. Others criticize it for perceived political bias, inconsistent fact-checking or editing, and a decline in the prestige and rigor it once had as a print magazine. Some also dislike heavy ads or paywall-related friction on the site.
What is a typical general news publisher known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A general news publisher is typically known for producing and distributing current, broad-coverage reporting on politics, business, world events, culture, and other timely topics.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical general news publisher is known for covering a wide range of current events—such as politics, business, world news, culture, sports, and local stories—usually with timely reporting and regular updates.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical general news publisher is known for reporting current events, politics, business, world affairs, sports, and culture to a broad audience.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical general news publisher is known for reporting current events, breaking news, and broad coverage of topics like politics, business, world affairs, sports, and culture.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A general news publisher is typically known for covering a broad range of current events and topics—such as politics, business, world affairs, sports, technology, and culture—through articles, reports, and analysis.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best general news publishers for business news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top general news publishers for business news: - **Reuters** — Best overall for fast, neutral, global business coverage. - **Bloomberg** — Best for markets, finance, and business intelligence. - **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — Best for U.S. business, markets, and corporate reporting. - **Financial Times (FT)** — Best for international business, economics, and policy. - **CNBC** — Best for market-moving headlines and live business news. - **Associated Press (AP)** — Good for straightforward, broad business news. - **The Economist** — Best for analysis and big-picture business/economics. - **NPR Business** — Good if you want clear, accessible business coverage. - **The New York Times Business** — Strong for major business stories and investigations. - **Axios Pro / Axios Markets** — Good for concise, business-focused updates. If you want just the safest picks: **Reuters, Bloomberg, WSJ, and FT**. If you want, I can also rank them by **credibility**, **speed**, or **best free access**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Top picks: - **Reuters** — best all-around if you want fast, global, mostly neutral business coverage. Reuters says it’s the world’s leading independent news agency and covers the most important economic, corporate, and banking news. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg** — best for real-time markets, companies, and financial news. Bloomberg describes itself as a global leader in business and financial information and says Bloomberg Business is its business-news destination. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/company/press/bloomberg-to-host-inaugural-africa-business-summit-in-johannesburg-as-official-b20-south-africa-sideline-event/?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — best for deeper analysis and international business context. FT describes itself as one of the world’s leading business news organizations. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — best if you want broad general news with solid business coverage mixed in. AP says its business reporters cover companies and economic trends, plus industries like technology, travel, and retail. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/business-and-finance/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest recommendation: **Reuters + Bloomberg** for day-to-day business news, and **FT** for analysis.
What are the best general news publishers for political coverage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **general political coverage**, the best publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-spin political reporting. - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable, broad U.S. and world political coverage. - **BBC News** — strong international political coverage with good context. - **Financial Times** — excellent on policy, geopolitics, and government/economic intersections. - **The New York Times** — deep U.S. political reporting and analysis. - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and government. - **Politico** — best for day-to-day political insider coverage in the U.S. - **Bloomberg Government / Bloomberg News** — strong policy and political reporting, especially where markets and government meet. If you want the **most neutral / least opinionated**, start with: **Reuters, AP, BBC**. If you want the **best U.S. political depth**, add: **NYT, Washington Post, Politico**. If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-country list** or a **bias/leaning guide** for these publishers.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general news publishers with strong political coverage**, my top picks are: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama political reporting; it explicitly emphasizes facts-first, unbiased politics coverage. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/politics/)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for election results, state-by-state coverage, and wire-style reporting with a strong focus on in-depth, unbiased political coverage. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/politics)) - **The Washington Post** — very strong on U.S. politics, White House, and accountability reporting; its current White House team says it aims to cover the administration with rigor, ambition, and independence. ([img.washingtonpost.com](https://img.washingtonpost.com/pr/2025/01/20/post-announces-new-white-house-team/)) - **NPR** — good for context-heavy political explainers and daily politics coverage via its dedicated politics reporting and podcasting. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510310/npr-politics-podcast?utm_source=openai)) - **POLITICO** — best if you want insider Washington/policy coverage and fast-moving political news. ([politicopro.com](https://www.politicopro.com/pro-features/exclusive-news/)) If you want **one balanced mix**, I’d use: **Reuters + AP + NPR** for breadth, then **Washington Post** or **POLITICO** for deeper U.S. political coverage. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/politics)) If you want, I can also give you: - the **most neutral** ones, - the **best by ideology/bias profile**, - or a **“news diet” stack** of 3 sources.
Which general news publishers are best for international news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good general news publishers for international coverage: - **Reuters** — excellent for fast, straight international reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — broad global coverage, very reliable - **BBC News** — strong worldwide reporting and context - **The Economist** — great for analysis of global politics and business - **Al Jazeera English** — strong coverage of the Middle East and beyond - **France 24** — solid international news, especially global affairs - **DW News (Deutsche Welle)** — good international perspective - **The Guardian** — strong global reporting and opinion - **New York Times** — deep international desk, especially major events - **Financial Times** — best for global economics, markets, and geopolitics If you want the most neutral/straight reporting, start with **Reuters, AP, BBC News, and DW News**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **international general news**, the safest “best overall” picks are: - **Reuters** — strongest for fast, global breaking news; Reuters says it has **2,600 journalists in 165 countries**. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/)) - **AP (Associated Press)** — excellent for straight, nonpartisan global reporting; AP says it is **independent, nonpartisan and factual**, with journalists in **nearly 100 countries**. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/)) - **BBC News / BBC World Service** — very strong for international context and breadth; BBC says it has journalists in **more countries than any other international news provider** and broadcasts in **42 languages**. ([bbcnews.bbcstudios.com](https://bbcnews.bbcstudios.com/home/)) - **AFP** — another top wire service for world coverage; AFP says it provides **fast, comprehensive and verified coverage** and has correspondents in **116 countries**. ([afp.com](https://www.afp.com/en/international-news-agency?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — best if you want international news with especially strong business/politics analysis. ([ftstrategies.com](https://www.ftstrategies.com/en-gb/insights/ft-strategies-and-google-news-initiative-extend-partnership?utm_source=openai)) - **Al Jazeera English** — especially useful for Middle East/global south perspectives. ([network.aljazeera.net](https://network.aljazeera.net/al-jazeera-english?utm_source=openai)) **If you want one simple shortlist:** **Reuters + AP + BBC**. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/)) If you want, I can also rank these by **bias risk**, **depth**, or **best free apps/sites**.
What are the best general news publishers for culture and arts coverage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Some of the best general-news publishers for **culture and arts** coverage are: - **The New York Times** — strong arts criticism, museum coverage, theater, books, film - **The Guardian** — very good culture section; broad, lively coverage of art, music, film, TV, and books - **The New Yorker** — excellent long-form arts writing and criticism - **The Atlantic** — thoughtful essays on culture, media, and the arts - **BBC Culture** — solid international arts and culture reporting - **Financial Times (How To Spend It / arts coverage)** — strong for design, luxury, art market, and culture trends - **The Washington Post** — good theater, books, and museum coverage - **Los Angeles Times** — especially strong for film, entertainment, and West Coast arts - **NPR** — good interviews and accessible coverage across books, music, and visual arts - **Artnet News** — best if you want art-world and market news more than general culture If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free options**, 2. the **best international outlets**, or 3. a **ranked top 10 for culture coverage only**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general-news publishers that are especially strong on culture/arts**, my top picks are: - **The Guardian** — probably the best all-around for breadth: film, TV, books, music, art, stage, plus sharp criticism. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/culture?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — best for reliable, fast, widely syndicated arts/entertainment coverage and big event reporting. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/entertainment/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — excellent for concise, global arts/lifestyle coverage with strong international context. ([reutersconnect.com](https://www.reutersconnect.com/item/lifestyle-leisure/dGFnOnJldXRlcnMuY29tLDIwMjY6bmV3c21sX01UMVpVTUEwMDAwTDBWVjY?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — especially good if you want culture coverage with a business, design, and market angle. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/305e9e92-fbc0-11e1-87ae-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **The New Yorker** — best for long-form culture writing, criticism, and arts essays rather than daily news. ([newyorker.com](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/goings-on/2025-spring-culture-preview?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - Want **daily breadth** → Guardian - Want **clean wire coverage** → AP / Reuters - Want **smart, premium arts commentary** → FT / The New Yorker If you want, I can also rank them by **best film coverage, music coverage, books coverage, or visual arts coverage**.
Which general news publishers are best for sports news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good general-news publishers for sports coverage: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight sports headlines and results - **Associated Press (AP)** — broad, reliable coverage across major leagues and events - **BBC News** — strong international sports reporting, especially soccer/football - **The New York Times** — good feature-style sports journalism and major-event coverage - **The Guardian** — strong soccer coverage and opinion/analysis - **Washington Post** — solid U.S. sports reporting and commentary - **USA Today** — easy-to-read, broad sports coverage - **Financial Times** — useful for sports business/news angle If you want the most dependable mix of speed and accuracy, I’d start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general news publishers** that are reliably good on sports, start with: - **Reuters** — best for fast, global, straight reporting. Reuters says it covers breaking sports news across major leagues worldwide. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/sports?utm_source=openai)) - **AP News** — very strong for broad U.S. and international sports coverage, with dedicated sports and college-sports hubs. ([apnews.com](https://apnews.com/article/c148b67d38d8fcea69cd628e8769ea80?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC** — good for international coverage, especially football/soccer; BBC also has a dedicated BBC Sport team and sports newsletters. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/48211825274131-How-do-I-sign-up-for-BBC-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — best if you want sports news plus sharper analysis and opinion. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/sport/sport?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - For **facts and speed**: Reuters, AP. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/sports?utm_source=openai)) - For **deeper reads**: The Guardian. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/sport/sport?utm_source=openai)) - For **global/football-heavy coverage**: BBC. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/48211825274131-How-do-I-sign-up-for-BBC-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **NFL, NBA, soccer, or fantasy sports**.
What are the best general news publishers for in-depth reporting? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Some of the best general news publishers for in-depth reporting are: - **The New York Times** — strongest on broad national/international coverage, investigations, and long-form features. - **The Washington Post** — excellent for U.S. politics, government, and investigative reporting. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and policy, with strong general news too. - **Reuters** — very reliable, fast, and global; great for straight reporting with less opinion. - **Associated Press (AP)** — highly trusted wire service; good for concise, factual coverage. - **The Guardian** — strong international reporting and analytical pieces, especially on politics and society. - **Financial Times** — outstanding for economics, business, and global affairs. - **BBC News** — solid global coverage and clear explainer journalism. - **The Economist** — not daily news, but excellent weekly depth and analysis on world affairs. - **ProPublica** — one of the best for investigative journalism, especially in the U.S. If you want a good “starter set,” I’d pick: **Reuters, AP, NYT, WaPo, WSJ, and BBC**. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **most objective** 2. **best investigative reporting** 3. **best international coverage** 4. **best free sources**
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general news outlets that are usually strong on depth**, I’d start with: - **Reuters** — excellent for fast, clean, global reporting and strong standards. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — broad, straight-ahead reporting; very solid as a baseline source. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and long-form investigations. Pew also finds it among the more trusted major national outlets. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/journalism/feature/news-media-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and investigations. Pew places it among major national sources people use and trust. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/journalism/feature/news-media-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong for business, policy, and enterprise reporting; Pew has it among the more trusted cross-party sources. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/10/30/which-news-organization-is-the-most-trusted-the-answer-is-complicated/?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — good global coverage and explainers. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/journalism/feature/news-media-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR / PBS News** — strong explanatory journalism and interviews; both score well in Pew trust data. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/journalism/feature/news-media-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Economist** — not a daily wire service, but great for analytical depth and global context. Pew has it among the higher-trust brands in its trust research. ([pewresearch.org](https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/10/30/which-news-organization-is-the-most-trusted-the-answer-is-complicated/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall mix:** Reuters + AP for baseline coverage, then NYT / WaPo / WSJ / BBC / NPR for depth and interpretation. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **least partisan**, **best investigations**, or **best for U.S. politics/world news/business**.
Which general news publishers are best for daily news briefings? discovery 170/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best general-news publishers for **daily briefings**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral, straight news - **Associated Press (AP)** — similar to Reuters; very reliable and broad - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and easy-to-digest updates - **Financial Times** — excellent if you want business/economy mixed into daily news - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong on U.S. business and politics - **The Economist** — best for concise context and analysis, not just headlines - **Axios** — very brief, email-friendly daily summaries - **NPR** — good for U.S. news with a clear, readable style - **Politico Playbook / Politico newsletters** — best for politics-heavy briefings If you want the safest “all-purpose” mix, I’d start with: **Reuters + BBC News + Axios + The Economist**. If you want, I can also recommend the **best morning email newsletters** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
For a **daily news briefing**, the safest “best bets” are usually: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, globally useful reporting; Reuters says it’s built around independent, fact-based coverage and broad international reach. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/press-releases/2024/november/sally-buzbee-joins-reuters-as-news-editor-for-the-united-states-and-canada?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — best for clean, nonpartisan breaking news; AP describes itself as fast, accurate, unbiased, and it now offers the weekday **AP Morning Wire** briefing. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/media-center/press-releases/2025/ap-debuts-new-multiformat-content-delivery-platform?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — best for a polished global overview; its **News Briefing** is explicitly designed to “bookend your day with top headlines and expert analysis.” ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/48211825274131-How-do-I-sign-up-for-BBC-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — best for a quick U.S.-leaning morning wrap with context; its **Up First** newsletter is “the stories you need to start your day,” delivered every weekday. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/newsletter/news?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — best if you want business/economy-heavy daily briefing. ([infiniteglobal.com](https://infiniteglobal.com/our-insights/reuters-institute-digital-news-report-2024-trump-tech-and-trust-transforming-media-consumption/?utm_source=openai)) If you want a simple stack, I’d do: **Reuters + AP + BBC** for a balanced general-news briefing. Those brands also rank among the more trusted news outlets in Reuters Institute survey data. ([pressgazette.co.uk](https://pressgazette.co.uk/north-america/us-news-trends-2024-trust-pay-interest-recovering/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best free daily briefings”** list or a **U.S.-focused** list.
What are the best general news publishers for email newsletters? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **general news email newsletters** from major publishers: - **The New York Times – The Morning** Strong all-around daily briefing; polished, broad coverage. - **Reuters – The Daily Briefing** Very clean, fast, and low-opinion; great if you want straight news. - **BBC News – BBC Global News / News Daily** Good international coverage and balanced tone. - **The Washington Post – The 7** Short, smart daily roundup with major U.S. stories. - **The Wall Street Journal – The 10-Point** Excellent for business, markets, and major national news. - **The Guardian – First Edition** Good mix of world, U.S., and politics with a more conversational style. - **AP News – AP Morning Wire** Reliable wire-service summaries; very factual and broad. - **NPR – Up First** Excellent for a quick morning digest, especially if you like audio plus email. If you want, I can also recommend the **best 5 newsletters by style** (most neutral, most concise, best international, best U.S. politics, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general news newsletters**, my top picks are: - **Reuters** — best for straight, high-signal global news and business coverage. Reuters now publishes curated newsletters, including a flagship **Daily Briefing** and newer topic/regional newsletters. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/media-centre/reuters-expands-must-read-newsletter-lineup-with-curated-news-and-analysis-for-todays-world?utm_source=openai)) - **The Washington Post** — strong if you want a polished morning briefing plus broader daily curation like **The 7**, **Early Brief**, and **Today’s Headlines**. ([washingtonpost.com](https://www.washingtonpost.com/newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — good for a clean, readable daily roundup; **Up First** is their main “start your day” newsletter. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC** — solid for international coverage and a balanced daily briefing; options include **News Briefing** and **The Essential List**. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/48211825274131-How-do-I-sign-up-for-BBC-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — best if you want lots of choices and strong editorial voice; they offer **48 newsletters** including **Breaking News US** and **First Thing**. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/email-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **shortest “best of the best” stack**, I’d pick: 1. Reuters 2. NPR Up First 3. Washington Post The 7 4. BBC News Briefing 5. Guardian First Thing If you want, I can also rank them by **most objective**, **best morning briefing**, or **best international coverage**.
Which general news publishers are best for mobile reading? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best for mobile reading: - **Reuters** — clean, fast, minimal clutter; excellent on mobile. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — straightforward layout, easy to scan. - **BBC News** — strong mobile app, good section organization. - **The Guardian** — readable articles, good app, lots of free content. - **Financial Times** — polished mobile experience, but paywalled. - **The New York Times** — excellent app and typography, though busy. - **Washington Post** — solid mobile app, good article reading mode. If you want the **best overall mobile-first experience**, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP News** 3. **BBC News** If you want **best premium reading app**, go with: - **The New York Times** or **Financial Times** If you want, I can also rank them by **free access**, **load speed**, or **least annoying ads**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **mobile reading**, I’d start with these: - **AP News** — best for a clean, text-first feed with minimal fuss. The AP’s official app page emphasizes reading news on mobile, and the App Store notes UI updates made reading easier. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/solutions/platforms/ap-news-app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — great if you want fast, straightforward world/business coverage with a simple app experience. Reuters’ app listing is built around “breaking world news.” ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reuters-news/id602660809?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — strong for broad international coverage, plus useful reading features like saved articles, font-size controls, and dark mode. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bbc-news/id364147881?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — best if you want a polished reading experience with offline reading and ad-free options for subscribers. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/the-guardian-us-world-news/id409128287?utm_source=openai)) - **USA TODAY** — good for a mainstream U.S. news app with breaking alerts, personalized topics, and offline reading. ([help.usatoday.com](https://help.usatoday.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall mobile reading:** AP News - **Best international:** Reuters or BBC - **Best premium reading experience:** The Guardian - **Best U.S.-focused:** USA TODAY If you want, I can also rank them for **least ads**, **best offline reading**, or **best free options**.
What are the best general news publishers for weekend reading? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For weekend reading, the best **general news publishers** are usually the ones with strong long-form pieces, analysis, and good weekend editions: - **The New York Times** — best all-around mix of news, features, and opinion - **Financial Times** — excellent for smart, concise global coverage and analysis - **The Economist** — great for deep weekly roundups and international affairs - **Reuters** — best for clean, fast, low-noise reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — solid straight news, very reliable - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, easy to skim - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigations - **The Guardian** — good for world news and weekend features If you want the **best single pick for weekend reading**, I’d choose **The New York Times** or **The Economist**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free options**, or 2. the **best print/ebook weekend editions**.
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If you want **weekend-reading-friendly** general news sources, these are strong picks: - **The Economist** — best for long, synthesized analysis of world affairs; it’s built around weekly current-affairs reading. ([mediadirectory.economist.com](https://mediadirectory.economist.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-noise global news; its standards emphasize accuracy, balance, and impartiality. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — best for concise, fact-first coverage; AP describes itself as timely, relevant, and grounded in news values and principles. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — best for readable context and explainers, especially if you like news plus culture and audio-friendly storytelling. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — best if you like longer features, investigations, and a more opinionated but still broad news mix; it also has dedicated “weekend reading” and long-read curation. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/about/journalism?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best 3 for U.S. politics**, 2. the **best 3 for international news**, or 3. a **“weekend reading stack”** by subscription/free options.
What are the best general news publishers for college students? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For college students, the best general news publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for clear, factual news summaries - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and explainers - **NPR** — good for U.S. news, culture, and longer-form context - **The New York Times** — broad coverage and great student discounts - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigative reporting - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, economy, and markets - **The Economist** — smart global analysis and opinion - **Politico** — useful for politics and policy - **The Guardian** — solid global and U.S. coverage, often free to read Best combo for students: 1. **Reuters + AP** for baseline news 2. **NPR or BBC** for context 3. **NYT or WaPo** for deeper reporting If you want, I can also give you: - the **most unbiased options** - the **best free options** - or a **student-friendly news app setup**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most college students, my top picks are: - **AP** — best for fast, straight, nonpartisan breaking news. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — best for concise global and business/world coverage with a strong independence ethos. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — best for deeper context, explainers, and audio-friendly coverage. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios** — best if you want short, skimmable summaries. ([help.axios.com](https://help.axios.com/hc/en-us/articles/36222626161435-What-is-the-Axios-Smart-Brevity-style?utm_source=openai)) If you want just one balanced setup, I’d do **AP + Reuters + NPR**. If you want, I can also give you a **“best news stack for college”** by topic: politics, world, science, campus life, and finance.
Which general news publishers are best for professionals? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For professionals, the best general news publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral, high-signal news - **Associated Press (AP)** — solid straight reporting, very reliable - **Financial Times (FT)** — excellent for business, policy, and global markets - **Bloomberg** — strongest if you want markets + business + policy - **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — great for business, politics, and U.S. corporate coverage - **The Economist** — best for analysis and big-picture international context - **The New York Times** — strong general coverage, especially U.S. politics and culture If you want the most practical professional setup, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** for day-to-day headlines 2. **FT** or **Bloomberg** for business/professional context 3. **The Economist** for weekly analysis If you want, I can also rank these by **best for executives, founders, finance, or policy professionals**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most professionals, the best **general news** picks are: - **Reuters** — strongest for fast, fact-focused global news; widely used by other newsrooms and professionals. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/media-centre/reuters-launches-pure-news-straight-from-the-source-brand-campaign-to-reach-consumers-seeking-accurate-unbiased-news-in-an-era-of-growing-misinformation?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — great for straight, nonpartisan breaking news and broad coverage. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — best if your work touches business, markets, policy, or geopolitics. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **The Economist** — best for higher-level analysis and context on world affairs. ([mediadirectory.economist.com](https://mediadirectory.economist.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg** — best for business leaders who want markets plus executive-level context. ([bloombergmedia.com](https://www.bloombergmedia.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the shortest practical answer: **Reuters + AP** for daily general news, and **FT or Bloomberg** if your job is business-heavy. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/media-centre/reuters-launches-pure-news-straight-from-the-source-brand-campaign-to-reach-consumers-seeking-accurate-unbiased-news-in-an-era-of-growing-misinformation?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **speed, depth, bias-resistance, or business usefulness**.
What are the best general news publishers for families wanting balanced coverage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **balanced, family-friendly general news**, these are strong picks: - **Reuters** — very straight reporting, low opinion, excellent for unbiased headlines. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — clear, concise, and widely trusted for fact-based coverage. - **BBC News** — broad international coverage with a calm, explanatory style. - **NPR News** — generally thoughtful and accessible, especially on politics, science, and culture. - **PBS NewsHour** — one of the best for balanced TV/news analysis with less sensationalism. - **The Economist** — more analysis-heavy, but usually measured and policy-focused. - **USA Today** — easy to read, broad coverage, good for a general family audience. If you want the **safest “balanced stack”**, I’d start with: **Reuters + AP + PBS NewsHour + BBC News**. If you want, I can also suggest the best **news apps**, **newsletters**, or **family-friendly local news options**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **balanced general news**: - **Reuters** — AllSides currently rates it **Center**. Good for straight, low-drama reporting. ([allsides.com](https://www.allsides.com/news-source/reuters-media-bias)) - **BBC News (online)** — AllSides rates it **Center** and notes generally balanced story choices. ([allsides.com](https://www.allsides.com/news-source/bbc-news-media-bias)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — very strong for fast, broad coverage; AllSides currently rates AP **Lean Left**, though it previously had a Center rating for general/world news. ([allsides.com](https://www.allsides.com/news-source/associated-press-media-bias)) If you want a simple family-friendly setup: 1. **Reuters** 2. **BBC** 3. **AP** 4. Add **one local newspaper** for neighborhood issues. I’d be more cautious with **PBS NewsHour** and **NPR** if your main goal is “as centered as possible,” since AllSides rates both **Lean Left**. ([allsides.com](https://www.allsides.com/news-source/pbs-newshour)) If you want, I can also make you a **balanced family news diet** with 3–5 specific outlets by age group (adults/teens/kids).
Which general news publishers are best for unbiased reporting? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
No outlet is perfectly unbiased, but these are generally among the most even-handed for straight news: - **Reuters** — very strong for fast, fact-focused reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — concise, widely used by other outlets - **BBC News** — broad coverage, generally careful and sober - **AFP (Agence France-Presse)** — good international coverage - **PBS NewsHour** — more context, usually low-partisan tone - **The Wall Street Journal (news section)** — good reporting; opinion page is separate and more ideological Best simple combo: **Reuters + AP + BBC**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **least biased U.S. political news sources**, or 2. a **ranked list by topic** (politics, world news, business, science).
retrieval Not mentioned
No outlet is perfectly unbiased, but the **best general-news bets** are usually: - **Reuters** — very strong on straight, fact-first reporting and strict newsroom standards. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — a major wire service that says its standards safeguard stories from bias and inaccuracies. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/news-values-and-principles/?utm_source=openai)) - **AFP (Agence France-Presse)** — describes its coverage as accurate, balanced, and impartial, with nonpartisan verification methods. ([factcheck.afp.com](https://factcheck.afp.com/about-afp?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — its editorial guidelines emphasize impartiality, accuracy, and fairness. ([downloads.bbc.co.uk](https://downloads.bbc.co.uk/guidelines/editorialguidelines/pdfs/bbc-editorial-guidelines-section-4-impartiality.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **most neutral day-to-day news feed**, I’d start with **Reuters + AP**, then use **AFP** and **BBC** as cross-checks. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best U.S. news shortlist**, or 2. a **bias-aware news diet** (left/center/right + wire services).
What are the best general news publishers for fast updates? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For fast, reliable general news, these are the best picks: - **Reuters** — usually the fastest and most neutral for breaking news. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — excellent for quick, straight reporting. - **BBC News** — very strong for global updates and context. - **Bloomberg** — especially good if you want speed plus business/markets. - **CNBC** — fast for finance, economy, and major U.S. breaking news. - **The Guardian** — good live coverage, especially for major world events. - **CNN** — fast on U.S. breaking news, though more opinion-heavy than AP/Reuters. - **NPR** — slower than Reuters/AP, but very solid for trustworthy updates. Best combo: - **Fastest + least biased:** Reuters + AP - **Best global coverage:** BBC + Reuters - **Best business/news mix:** Bloomberg + Reuters If you want, I can also give you the **best news apps/newsletters** for getting these updates fastest.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **fast general-news updates**, the strongest picks are usually: 1. **Reuters** — best for speed + global breadth; it’s a wire service built around “breaking news as soon as it happens” with a large global newsroom. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **AP (Associated Press)** — excellent for quick, factual breaking alerts and broad U.S./world coverage; AP emphasizes real-time breaking news and alerts. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/solutions/platforms/ap-news-app/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **BBC News** — very good for fast international coverage and live reporting, especially if you want a global, non-U.S.-centric feed. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/42343579768851-Can-I-watch-the-BBC-News-channel-online-via-BBC-com-and-or-BBC-app?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Bloomberg** — best if you also care about markets, business, and policy moving fast. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/series/bloomberg-markets?utm_source=openai)) **If you want just one or two:** - **Reuters + AP** for the fastest general breaking-news combo. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **speed**, **accuracy**, **U.S. coverage**, or **best free apps**.
Which general news publishers are best for long-form journalism? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **strong long-form journalism**, these are some of the best general-news publishers: - **The New Yorker** — arguably the gold standard for long-form reporting and narrative features. - **The Atlantic** — smart, essay-driven, often excellent deep dives. - **The New York Times Magazine** — strong investigative and narrative long reads. - **The Washington Post** — very good long-form political and investigative journalism. - **ProPublica** — top-tier investigative reporting, though less “magazine-style” than others. - **Reuters** — not usually long-form-heavy, but very strong for deeply reported, clean journalism. - **BBC News** / **BBC Magazine** — solid broader-context features and explanatory pieces. - **The Guardian** — good long-form reporting, especially on politics, society, and global issues. If you want the **best single pick**, go with **The New Yorker**. If you want the **best mix of serious news + long reads**, **The Atlantic** and **The New York Times Magazine** are great starts. If you want, I can also rank these by **investigative depth**, **writing quality**, or **free vs paid access**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for long-form journalism: - **The New Yorker** — probably the strongest all-around choice for reported features, profiles, criticism, and narrative essays. It explicitly focuses on in-depth reporting and long-form storytelling. ([newyorker.com](https://www.newyorker.com/about/us?utm_source=openai)) - **ProPublica** — best if you want deeply reported investigative pieces with public-interest impact. It’s a nonprofit newsroom built around sustained investigations. ([propublica.org](https://www.propublica.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Washington Post** — especially its **Deep Reads** collection, which is dedicated to immersive, narrative longform journalism. ([washingtonpost.com](https://www.washingtonpost.com/pr/2023/05/14/introducing-deep-reads-washington-posts-home-longform-narrative-journalism/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Atlantic** — strong for essay-length reporting and analysis, with a long magazine tradition and a stated emphasis on “high-quality journalism.” ([cdn.theatlantic.com](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/media/files/the_atlantic_-_2023_diversity_report.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **most literary**, **most investigative**, or **best free access**.
What are the best general news publishers for local and national news together? discovery 320/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **one source for both local and national news**, these are usually the best bets: ### Best overall - **The New York Times** — strongest national coverage; local coverage is best if you’re in/near NYC. - **The Washington Post** — excellent national politics and U.S. news; local coverage mainly DC. - **USA Today** — broad national coverage with a lighter, more local-feeling regional format. ### Best for broad local + national reach - **The Associated Press (AP)** — not a newspaper, but many local outlets use AP for national/world news. - **NPR** — strong national news, plus local member stations for regional coverage. - **Gannett / USA Today Network papers** — lots of local papers with shared national content. - **McClatchy newspapers** — strong local papers plus national wire coverage in many markets. ### Best if you want a single local paper with national depth Look for your city’s major daily, such as: - **Los Angeles Times** - **Chicago Tribune** - **Houston Chronicle** - **Boston Globe** - **Philadelphia Inquirer** - **Miami Herald** ### Simple rule If you want: - **Best national news + some local**: **NYT** or **WaPo** - **Best local news + decent national**: your **major city newspaper** - **Best balanced mix across many places**: **USA Today Network** or **NPR + local station** If you tell me your **country or city**, I can name the best specific publishers for your area.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **one source family that covers both local and national news well**, my top picks are: 1. **AP (Associated Press)** — best for straight, high-volume national news with strong state/local support and local-news partnerships. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/media-center/press-releases/2024/ap-to-launch-sister-organization-to-fundraise-for-state-local-news/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **NPR / NPR Network** — especially good if you want national reporting plus a real local-news footprint through member stations across the country. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/network/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **USA TODAY Network** — probably the strongest “local-to-national” newspaper network in the U.S., with hundreds of local properties tied to a national flagship. ([pantheon-marketing.usatoday.com](https://pantheon-marketing.usatoday.com/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Reuters** — excellent for national/international hard news; less local than AP or NPR, but very strong if you want a clean, fast general-news wire. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Best overall for local + national:** **NPR** or **USA TODAY Network** - **Best for unbiased straight news:** **AP** - **Best for fast global/national wire coverage:** **Reuters** ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/network/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **bias/neutrality**, **paywall**, or **best free options**.
Which general news publishers are best for opinion and analysis? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good general news publishers for **opinion + analysis**: - **The New York Times** — strong columnists and deep analysis; very influential. - **The Washington Post** — especially good on U.S. politics, policy, and commentary. - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent editorial pages and business/policy analysis. - **The Economist** — probably the best single source for clear, high-level global analysis. - **Financial Times** — strong for economics, markets, geopolitics, and thoughtful commentary. - **The Atlantic** — long-form opinion and cultural/political analysis. - **Foreign Affairs** — best if you want serious foreign-policy analysis. - **Reuters** — less opinion-heavy, but very solid for straight analysis without much spin. If you want a quick “best combo”: - **U.S. politics:** NYT + WaPo - **Business/economy:** FT + WSJ - **Global analysis:** The Economist + Reuters - **Long-form essays/opinion:** The Atlantic If you want, I can also rank these by **least biased**, **most insightful**, or **best bang for subscription**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **general news publishers that are strongest on opinion + analysis**, my short list is: - **The Economist** — probably the best single pick for sharp, global analysis and big-picture argument. ([mediadirectory.economist.com](https://mediadirectory.economist.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg Opinion** — excellent for markets, economics, policy, and fast-moving business analysis. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — very strong on business, economics, geopolitics, and measured commentary/analysis. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Wall Street Journal Opinion** — especially strong on business, markets, and political opinion. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Washington Post Opinions** — broad opinion coverage with prominent columnists and editorials. ([washingtonpost.com](https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/opinions?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian Opinion** — more ideological and debate-driven, with lots of commentary and essays. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/us/commentisfree?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — not an opinion destination, but one of the best for straight, fact-based reporting and analysis without a strong editorial voice. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall:** The Economist for analysis; Bloomberg Opinion for markets/policy; FT for polished business analysis. ([mediadirectory.economist.com](https://mediadirectory.economist.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by ideology”** or **“best by topic”** version.
What are the best general news publishers for morning news reading? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **general news publishers** for a solid morning read: - **Reuters** — best for fast, clean, unbiased hard news - **Associated Press (AP)** — concise, reliable, broad coverage - **BBC News** — strong international and U.S. coverage, easy to scan - **The New York Times** — best all-around depth and coverage mix - **The Wall Street Journal** — strongest for business, markets, and politics - **The Washington Post** — excellent U.S. politics and national news - **NPR** — great for calm, readable summaries and audio options - **Financial Times** — best if you want global business/economics in the morning - **Axios** — very efficient “what you need to know” style - **The Guardian** — strong global perspective and readable format If you want a simple morning combo, I’d suggest: - **Reuters + AP** for quick facts - **NYT or WaPo** for deeper reading - **Axios** for fast summaries If you want, I can also give you the **best free-only options** or the **best apps/newsletters** for morning reading.
retrieval Not mentioned
For a **morning news read**, the best general publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — best all-around if you want fast, straight, low-drama global coverage. It brands itself as the world’s leading independent news agency with 2,600 journalists in 165 countries, focused on unbiased, factual reporting. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/en/about/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — great for concise, reliable breaking-news updates. AP emphasizes “real news in real time” and a large global reporting footprint. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/solutions/platforms/ap-news-app/?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — strong for international context and broader world coverage, especially if you like a more explainer-style homepage mix of major news, business, tech, science, and culture. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/39027623773331-What-types-of-news-content-will-be-available?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — best if you want thoughtful U.S. news plus context and analysis in a readable format. NPR describes its mission as informing the public and increasing understanding, with news across the country and world. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Economist** — excellent for a compact, analytical morning briefing on world affairs, politics, business, and economics. ([mediadirectory.economist.com](https://mediadirectory.economist.com/people/oliver-jones/?utm_source=openai)) **My simplest recommendation:** - **Best single default:** Reuters - **Best U.S.-friendly mix:** AP + NPR - **Best international breadth:** BBC + Reuters - **Best analysis-heavy read:** The Economist If you want, I can also give you a **“best morning news stack”** by reading time: **5 min, 15 min, or 30 min**.
Which general news publishers are best for real-time alerts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **real-time alerts**, the best general news publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight-to-the-point breaking news - **Associated Press (AP News)** — very fast and reliable for broad U.S./world coverage - **Bloomberg** — excellent for markets, business, and major breaking news - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and good mobile alerts - **CNN** — fast U.S. breaking news alerts - **The New York Times** — good for major developing stories, less immediate than Reuters/AP - **The Wall Street Journal** — best if you want business/finance-driven alerts - **Sky News** — strong for UK and global breaking news **Best overall for speed:** Reuters, AP News **Best for broad breaking alerts:** BBC News, CNN **Best for business/markets:** Bloomberg, WSJ If you want, I can also rank the **best news apps for push alerts** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks for **real-time general-news alerts**: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, straight breaking-news pushes. The Reuters app offers **customizable push notifications** for breaking news. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reuters-breaking-world-news/id602660809?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Associated Press (AP)** — best all-around for clean, reliable breaking alerts. AP says its news app now supports **notification customization** so you only get the topics you want. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/ap-news/id364677107?utm_source=openai)) 3. **CNN** — best if you want **more frequent, topic-based alerts** (e.g. Breaking News, US Politics, Climate). CNN’s help pages show you can turn on real-time notifications by topic in the app or web. ([help.cnn.com](https://help.cnn.com/us/Answer/Detail/000001024?utm_source=openai)) 4. **BBC** — good for **global coverage** and newsletters, though it’s more “news briefing” than pure alert firehose. BBC offers newsletters and live news access through the BBC app and site. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/48211825274131-How-do-I-sign-up-for-BBC-newsletters?utm_source=openai)) **If you only want 2 apps:** install **Reuters + AP**. They’re the safest default for fast, general breaking-news alerts. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reuters-breaking-world-news/id602660809?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **best push alerts on iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best alternatives to a major general news publisher? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want alternatives to a big general-news publisher, the best picks depend on what you want more of: speed, depth, or less opinion. **Good all-around alternatives** - **Reuters** — clean, fast, very factual. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — straightforward breaking news. - **BBC News** — broad coverage, strong international reporting. **For deeper analysis** - **The Economist** — global politics/business, more interpretation. - **Financial Times** — excellent business and world news. - **The Atlantic** — long-form and commentary. **For digital-first news** - **Axios** — short, skimmable, big-picture summaries. - **Semafor** — newer, well-edited, global/politics focused. - **Politico** — strong on U.S. politics and policy. **If you want more independent/alternative perspectives** - **The Guardian** — broad, often more progressive. - **ProPublica** — investigative reporting. - **The Lever** — investigative, anti-corporate angle. If you tell me which publisher you’re trying to replace and what you want instead (less bias, more local news, more analysis, etc.), I can narrow it down to the best 3.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want alternatives to a big general-news publisher, these are the strongest picks: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, global breaking news. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/media-centre/reuters-and-gannett-launch-bundle-content-offering?utm_source=openai)) - **AP (Associated Press)** — best for independent, nonpartisan wire reporting and broad U.S./world coverage. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **PBS News** — good for public-media reporting and deeper context. ([pbs.org](https://www.pbs.org/ombudsman/mission.html?utm_source=openai)) - **The Conversation** — best for expert-written explainers and analysis. ([umass.edu](https://www.umass.edu/pep/sites/default/files/introducingtheconversation/index.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **ProPublica** — best for investigative journalism and accountability reporting. ([propublica.org](https://www.propublica.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **least biased**, 2. **best for breaking news**, or 3. **best free apps/sites**.
Which general news publishers are better than other premium news sites? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want the **best general news publishers**, these are usually the standouts: **Top-tier for straight news** - **Reuters** — fastest, cleanest, least opinionated - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable, broad coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, good balance **Best premium general-news subscriptions** - **The New York Times** — best all-around mix of breaking news, politics, culture, and features - **The Washington Post** — excellent U.S. politics and investigative reporting - **The Wall Street Journal** — strongest for business, markets, and policy - **Financial Times** — best for global business and economics - **The Economist** — best for analysis and international context **If you want one subscription** - **NYT** for general coverage - **WSJ** for business/markets - **FT** for global economy - **Reuters** if you mostly want facts over commentary If you want, I can rank them by **reliability, depth, or value for money**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **straight, broadly useful general news**, the best “premium-like” publishers are usually **Reuters** and **The Associated Press**—both emphasize independence, nonpartisanship, verification, and fact-based reporting. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/about-us/trust-principles?utm_source=openai)) For **U.S. public-interest news**, **PBS News** is also strong: its standards stress accuracy, fairness, transparency, and multiple independent sources before controversial reporting. ([pbs.org](https://www.pbs.org/standards/accuracy/?utm_source=openai)) My practical ranking would be: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **PBS News** 4. **BBC News** if you want a more global lens and can access its coverage. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/about-us/trust-principles?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best news sources by use case”** list (fast breaking news, politics, business, world news, etc.).
What are the best alternatives to large subscription news publishers? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best alternatives to big subscription news publishers: - **Reuters** — fast, clean, global reporting; no heavy opinion. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — excellent straight news and wire coverage. - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and explainer pieces. - **NPR** — good for U.S. politics, culture, and audio. - **Al Jazeera English** — especially good for international and Middle East coverage. - **Axios** — very concise summaries if you want quick reads. - **Semafor** — useful for broader context and multiple viewpoints. Good free aggregators/tools: - **Google News** — best all-around free news aggregator. - **Apple News** — good if you use iPhone/Mac; mix of free and paid. - **Flipboard** — customizable topic feeds. - **Ground News** — shows how different outlets cover the same story. - **Feedly** — best if you want to build your own news feed from sources. If you want newsletters instead of a full subscription: - **Morning Brew** - **1440** - **Tangle** - **The Generalist** (for business/tech) Best “free but high quality” combo for most people: **Reuters + AP News + Google News + Ground News** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the best alternatives for **U.S. politics**, 2. **business/finance**, or 3. **international news**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want to avoid big subscription news brands, my best alternatives are: - **AP News** — fast, straight news coverage, with a consumer app and global reporting network. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/solutions/platforms/ap-news-app/?utm_source=openai)) - **ProPublica** — excellent for investigations and accountability reporting; nonprofit and donation-funded. ([propublica.org](https://www.propublica.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Conversation** — free, public-interest explainers written by academic experts. ([donate.theconversation.com](https://donate.theconversation.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **States Newsroom** — strong statehouse/local-government coverage, free with no paywall. ([statesnewsroom.com](https://statesnewsroom.com/strategic-initiatives/?utm_source=openai)) - **Grist** — nonprofit climate and environment coverage, free to read. ([grist.org](https://grist.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Semafor** — good if you want a newer general-news outlet with a different format/voice. ([semafor.com](https://www.semafor.com/about?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best free alternatives by category**: general news, local news, politics, business, science, or tech.
How do the top general news publishers compare for breaking news? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **breaking news**, the top general-news publishers usually stack up like this: ### Best for speed + reliability - **Reuters** — often first on the wire, very strong on accuracy and global coverage. - **Associated Press (AP)** — similarly fast, widely trusted, especially for U.S. and international basics. - **Bloomberg** — excellent for business, markets, and policy breaking news; very fast. ### Best for live coverage / TV-style immediacy - **CNN** — fast, strong live updates, good for major U.S. events. - **BBC News** — very strong global breaking-news coverage and quick context. - **Fox News** / **MSNBC** — fast for U.S. political breaking news, but more opinion-driven. ### Best for depth after the first alert - **New York Times** — slower than Reuters/AP on first report, but strong follow-up and analysis. - **Wall Street Journal** — excellent for business, politics, and corporate breaking news. - **Washington Post** — strong U.S. political coverage and reporting depth. ### Best overall picks - **If you want the earliest accurate headline:** Reuters or AP - **If you want the best global live coverage:** BBC News - **If you want business/markets breaking news:** Bloomberg or WSJ - **If you want TV/live event coverage:** CNN ### Simple ranking for breaking news 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **Bloomberg** 4. **BBC News** 5. **CNN** 6. **WSJ / NYT / Washington Post** depending on topic If you want, I can also rank them by **bias, depth, or speed on U.S. politics specifically**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here’s the quick take: **Reuters and AP are the best “first-stop” breaking-news wires**; **BBC is excellent for global live coverage and verification-heavy updates**; **CNN is strongest when you want breaking news in a live-TV / video-first format**. That’s my synthesis from their current positioning and product offerings. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) | Publisher | Best at | Tradeoff | |---|---|---| | **Reuters** | Fast, global, real-time text/photo/video feed; huge international footprint | Less “in-depth” than magazine-style outlets | | **AP** | Fast, broad, straightforward breaking coverage with strong U.S. + global reach | More wire/service style than personality-driven | | **BBC** | Global live coverage, context, and verification | Often a bit less instant/flashy than wires | | **CNN** | Live breaking-news video and continuous on-air coverage | More broadcast-led; less neutral “wire” feel | Reuters says it has **2,600 journalists in 165 countries** and emphasizes breaking news “in real-time.” AP says it delivers breaking news in all formats and has journalists on the ground in **nearly 100 countries** (and its app highlights **235 locations**). BBC’s U.S./Australia live stream and “Live” tab are built around continuous coverage, while CNN’s live stream is explicitly positioned around “live breaking news.” ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want one default choice:** - **Speed/accuracy first:** Reuters - **Best all-around general breaking coverage:** AP - **Best live global context:** BBC - **Best live video breaking coverage:** CNN ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them for **U.S. politics**, **world news**, or **business/markets**.
Which general news publishers are better for analysis versus speed? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A good rule of thumb: **Best for speed** - **Reuters** — usually the fastest for straight news, very clean and low-drama. - **Associated Press (AP)** — fast, broad coverage, solid on breaking news. - **Bloomberg** — very fast for markets/business; good general breaking coverage too. **Best for analysis** - **The Economist** — strong long-form analysis and context. - **Financial Times (FT)** — excellent for business, geopolitics, and policy analysis. - **The New York Times** — strong explanatory reporting and longer reads. - **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — especially good for business, politics, and investigation. - **The Washington Post** — strong political analysis and reporting depth. **Quick take** - If you want **what happened first**: **Reuters / AP** - If you want **why it matters**: **FT / Economist / NYT / WSJ** If you want, I can also rank them by **bias, paywall, or best overall mix**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Broadly: - **Best for speed / breaking news:** **Reuters**, **AP**, **Bloomberg**. Reuters explicitly emphasizes live, first, fast reporting and says accuracy comes before speed; AP says it delivers factual, fast news; Bloomberg positions itself around timely news and insight. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/en/about/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for analysis / context:** **The Economist** and **Financial Times**. The Economist Group emphasizes analysis, forecasting, and “clear analysis” for readers, while FT describes itself as providing news, comment, data, and analysis for the global business community. ([impact.economist.com](https://impact.economist.com/projects/infrascope/about/?utm_source=openai)) **Simple rule of thumb:** - If you want **what happened first**, start with **Reuters/AP**. - If you want **what it means**, go to **The Economist/FT**. - If you want a mix of both, **Bloomberg** is a strong middle ground. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank **U.S.-focused** publishers separately.
What are the best alternatives to mainstream general news publishers? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Some strong alternatives to mainstream general-news publishers: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama reporting. - **Associated Press (AP)** — very neutral, broad coverage. - **The Guardian** — strong international coverage and investigations. - **Al Jazeera English** — excellent global and Middle East coverage. - **Financial Times** — if you want business, markets, and geopolitics. - **Bloomberg** — great for economics and breaking business news. - **The Economist** — concise, global analysis-heavy coverage. - **NPR** — clear, public-interest reporting in an easy-to-follow format. - **ProPublica** — top-tier investigative journalism. - **Semafor** — useful for “what’s happening” summaries and media/politics coverage. If you want a good non-mainstream but still credible mix, I’d start with: **Reuters + AP + ProPublica + The Guardian + The Economist**. If you want, I can also give: 1. **left/center/right-leaning alternatives**, or 2. **the best news apps/newsletters** from these outlets.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **non-mainstream but still high-quality general news**, my short list is: - **Reuters** — best for fast, global, low-fluff reporting; it emphasizes independence, integrity, and freedom from bias. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Associated Press (AP)** — great for straight news and breaking coverage; AP says its standards are designed to safeguard stories from bias and inaccuracies. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/news-values-and-principles/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — good if you want public-radio style reporting with strong U.S. coverage and context; NPR describes itself as an independent, nonprofit media organization. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **ProPublica** — best for deep investigative journalism rather than daily headline churn; it’s a nonprofit newsroom focused on exposing abuses of power. ([propublica.org](https://www.propublica.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — useful for international news and long-form reporting with a global audience. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/info/about-guardian-us?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to: 1. **most objective**, 2. **best left-leaning alternatives**, 3. **best right-leaning alternatives**, or 4. **best free news apps/sites**.
Which general news publishers offer better value than expensive news subscriptions? comparison
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Yes—if you want broad, high-quality coverage without paying for pricey big-paper subscriptions, these usually give the best value: **Best free/cheap value** - **Reuters** — excellent straight news, very low bias, great for daily updates. - **Associated Press (AP News)** — similarly solid for breaking news and core reporting. - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, free in many markets. - **NPR** — good US news, politics, and culture, often free. - **PBS NewsHour** — slower, more in-depth, and free. **Best paid value** - **The Economist** — one of the best “all-in-one” news subscriptions if you want world + business + analysis. - **Financial Times (FT)** — best value if you care about business, markets, and global policy. - **The Wall Street Journal** — worth it mainly for business/markets, less so for general news. **If you want the simplest answer:** - For **general news**: **Reuters + AP + BBC** - For **one paid subscription**: **The Economist** If you want, I can rank these by **lowest cost**, **least bias**, or **best for US news**.
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If you want **value**, these are the best bets: - **AP News** — strong general-news wire coverage, and AP says it offers journalism direct to consumers via an **advertising-supported website**. ([apnews.com](https://apnews.com/article/0b57bcf8c80dd406daa9ba916adacfaf?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — broad, fast world/business coverage; its consumer plan was launched at **$1/week**, which is far cheaper than premium news subscriptions. ([axios.com](https://www.axios.com/2024/10/01/reuters-cnn-website-paywalls?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — its network describes itself as **free and independent journalism**, and standard listening remains free; NPR+ is only for perks. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/network/?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios** — most articles are **free** with an account; only Axios Pro is paid. ([help.axios.com](https://help.axios.com/hc/en-us/articles/36222603919515-Are-Axios-articles-free-or-do-I-need-a-subscription?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC** — good general-news coverage if you want a major international source; BBC says free users get **limited access**, while full access requires a subscription. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/42331755973139-Why-do-I-have-to-subscribe-to-continue-using-BBC-com?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** Best free value: **AP + NPR + Axios**. Best cheap paid value: **Reuters**. ([apnews.com](https://apnews.com/article/0b57bcf8c80dd406daa9ba916adacfaf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **US politics**, **world news**, or **business/markets**.
How do general news publishers compare for international coverage? comparison
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If you mean **breadth + reliability of international coverage**, the usual ranking is roughly: ### Best all-around wire services - **Reuters** — arguably the strongest for *global breadth, speed, and neutrality*. - **Associated Press (AP)** — very solid worldwide, especially for straight reporting. - **AFP (Agence France-Presse)** — strong international reach, especially in Europe, Africa, and Francophone regions. ### Best mainstream news brands - **BBC News** — excellent global coverage, especially outside the U.S.; strong explainers and regional bureaus. - **Financial Times** — best for global economics, business, and geopolitics. - **The New York Times** — deep reporting, strong foreign desks, but more U.S.-centered overall. - **The Guardian** — good international perspective, especially politics and human rights, though less comprehensive than Reuters/BBC. ### Strong regional / perspective-driven outlets - **Al Jazeera English** — very strong Middle East, Global South, and conflict coverage. - **Deutsche Welle (DW)** — useful international coverage with a European lens. - **France 24** — good global TV/news coverage, especially Europe/Africa. ### Most limited for international coverage - Many national newspapers and TV networks are strong domestically but have thinner foreign bureaus and rely more on wire copy. ### Simple takeaway - **Most comprehensive + neutral:** Reuters - **Best general public-facing global coverage:** BBC - **Best business/international economics:** Financial Times - **Best alternative global perspective:** Al Jazeera English If you want, I can also rank them by **bias**, **depth**, or **best subscription value**.
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Broadly: - **Reuters**: best for **speed, breadth, and neutrality**. It’s a global wire service with about **2,600 journalists in 165 countries**. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **AP**: also excellent for **fast, broad world coverage**, with journalists in **nearly 100 countries** and operations in **100+ countries / 300 locations**. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/breaking-news?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC**: strongest for **contextual international reporting** and explainers, especially outside the U.S.; its international news platforms are designed for global audiences. ([downloads.bbc.co.uk](https://downloads.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/world-news.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Al Jazeera**: often strongest on the **Middle East, Africa, and Global South** perspectives, with **70+ bureaus** and very wide international distribution. ([aljazeera.com](https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2013/1/3/facts-and-figures-2?utm_source=openai)) - **CNN**: very strong for **global video coverage and live breaking news**, reaching audiences in **200+ countries and territories**. ([cnnpressroom.blogs.cnn.com](https://cnnpressroom.blogs.cnn.com/2025/12/18/cnn-closes-out-2025-as-a-global-multiplatform-leader-in-news-across-tv-streaming-and-digital-platforms/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - Want the **widest, most wire-style international coverage** → **Reuters or AP**. - Want **deeper reporting/context** → **BBC**. - Want **non-Western/global-south angles** → **Al Jazeera**. - Want **live TV-first international coverage** → **CNN**. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **best for Africa, Asia, Europe, or Latin America**.
Which general news publishers are better for business readers than other news outlets? comparison
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For business readers, the best **general news publishers** are usually: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, clean, market-relevant reporting with very little fluff. 2. **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — strongest U.S.-focused business and markets coverage. 3. **Financial Times (FT)** — excellent for global business, policy, and economics. 4. **Bloomberg** — great for markets, companies, and finance-heavy coverage. 5. **Associated Press (AP)** — good for straightforward breaking news, less business depth than the above. 6. **The Economist** — not a daily news wire, but very strong for business context and analysis. If you want the short answer: **Reuters + WSJ + FT** is the best combo for business readers. If you want, I can also rank them by **accuracy, speed, depth, and bias**.
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For **business readers**, the best general-news publishers are usually: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, global business and market news. It’s built around financial industry coverage and gets access from policy makers, corporate leaders, and market makers. ([lseg.com](https://www.lseg.com/en/reuters-news?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Bloomberg** — best for markets, corporate finance, and real-time business intelligence. Bloomberg says it “quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world.” ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/industries/finance?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Financial Times** — best for global business context and analysis. The FT describes itself as a leading business news organization providing news, comment, data, and analysis for the global business community. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) 4. **The Wall Street Journal** — best for U.S.-focused business, companies, and markets. It’s widely regarded as a top business and financial news source. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wall_Street_Journal?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Associated Press** — best as a broad, neutral general-news wire with solid business coverage, especially if you want business news embedded in a wider news diet. AP says it covers companies, financial markets, and major industries. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/business-and-finance/?utm_source=openai)) **Simple rule:** - **Need speed:** Reuters or Bloomberg. - **Need insight:** FT. - **Need U.S. business focus:** WSJ. - **Need broad, neutral general news with business included:** AP. ([lseg.com](https://www.lseg.com/en/reuters-news?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-purpose list** (e.g. “best for investing,” “best for executives,” “best free options”).
What are the best alternatives to legacy news publishers? comparison
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If you want alternatives to legacy news publishers, the best options are usually: - **Curated news apps**: **Ground News**, **Flipboard**, **SmartNews** - **Independent newsletters**: **Substack**, **The Dispatch**, **Commonplace** - **Public/mission-driven outlets**: **ProPublica**, **The Markup**, **NPR**, **BBC** - **Podcast-first news**: **The Journal** (WSJ), **Today, Explained**, **The Daily** - **Verified social/news feeds**: **Bluesky** + trusted journalists, or **LinkedIn News** for business topics Best picks by use case: - **Best balanced perspective:** **Ground News** - **Best for deep reporting:** **ProPublica** - **Best for curated reading:** **Flipboard** - **Best newsletter ecosystem:** **Substack** - **Best broadcast-style daily update:** **NPR** / **BBC** If you want, I can also give you the best alternatives by category: politics, business, tech, local news, or international news.
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If you want alternatives to legacy news publishers, the best picks usually fall into 3 buckets: - **Investigative/public-interest:** **ProPublica** — independent nonprofit, strong on accountability reporting. ([propublica.org](https://www.propublica.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Tech/accountability:** **404 Media** — journalist-founded, independent, reader-supported, focused on tech, privacy, AI, cybersecurity, and consumer rights. ([404media.co](https://www.404media.co/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Public-service local/state news:** **AP-syndicated nonprofit locals** like **The Texas Tribune, VTDigger, MinnPost, The Nevada Independent, Honolulu Civil Beat** — AP has expanded collaborations with nonprofit local outlets to increase access to fact-based reporting. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/media-center/press-releases/2024/ap-announces-3-new-content-collaborations-with-nonprofit-newsrooms/?utm_source=openai)) - **Indie broadcast/news hour:** **Democracy Now!** — audience-supported, independent, with a global daily news format. ([democracynow.org](https://www.democracynow.org/about.aspx?utm_source=openai)) - **If you want to compare coverage across outlets:** **Ground News** — built around source-bias/factuality comparisons and ownership data. ([ground.news](https://ground.news/about-bias-ratings?utm_source=openai)) **My quick shortlist:** 1. **ProPublica** 2. **AP + strong local nonprofit outlets** 3. **404 Media** 4. **Democracy Now!** 5. **Ground News** for triage/comparison If you want, I can tailor this to **politics, business, tech, or local news** and give you a tighter top 10.
How do I find a general news publisher with balanced coverage? problem
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Look for **straight-news wire services** first: - **Reuters** - **Associated Press (AP News)** - **BBC News** - **NPR News** (often balanced, but check opinion vs reporting) What to check: - **Separate news from opinion** clearly - **Correction policy** and visible corrections - **Multiple sources** in each story - **Consistent language** without loaded wording - **Coverage across politics, business, world, science, and local** Quick way to test: 1. Read the same topic on **Reuters** and **AP** 2. Compare with a broadcaster like **BBC News** 3. If they match on facts and differ only in framing, that’s a good sign Best single starting point: **Reuters**.
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Look for these signs: - **Broad mix of topics**: politics, business, world, science, culture. - **Clear separation of news and opinion**. - **Multiple named sources** in hard-news stories. - **Corrections policy** and visible corrections. - **Avoids sensational headlines**. - **Covers the same issue from more than one angle**. Good practical filters: - Read the publisher’s **about page** and **editorial standards**. - Check whether they label **analysis/opinion** clearly. - Compare one story across **2–3 outlets** with different leanings. - Prefer outlets that cite **primary documents** and direct quotes. - Use a **media bias/fact-checking site** as a rough guide, not the only guide. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a short list of generally balanced publishers, or 2. a quick method to evaluate any news site in 60 seconds.
How can I get reliable news from a general news publisher? problem
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For reliable news from a general news publisher, use sources known for strong editing and low sensationalism, like: - **Reuters** - **Associated Press (AP)** - **BBC News** - **NPR** - **Financial Times** (best for business/world news) Quick checklist: - Prefer **straight reporting** over opinion pieces. - Check whether the story **names sources** and links to original documents. - Compare the same story across **2–3 outlets**. - Be cautious with headlines that feel **emotional or clickbait**. - Look for **corrections policies** and visible updates. - If you use an app, try **Apple News** or **Google News** but follow only trusted publishers inside them. If you want, I can also give you a **short “trusted news sources” list by topic** (world, politics, tech, business).
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To get reliable news from a general news publisher: - **Check the outlet’s track record**: Look for corrections, transparent ownership, and clear editorial standards. - **Prefer reporting over opinion**: Separate news articles from commentary, editorials, and headlines meant to provoke. - **Look for named sources**: Reliable stories usually cite documents, direct witnesses, official records, or multiple independent sources. - **Cross-check important claims**: Verify the same fact with 2–3 other reputable outlets. - **Watch for precise language**: Good news avoids loaded wording and clearly distinguishes facts from allegations. - **Follow primary evidence when possible**: Original documents, court filings, government data, transcripts, and full interviews are stronger than summaries. - **Be cautious with breaking news**: Early reports are often incomplete and may change. - **Use diverse sources**: A mix of mainstream, local, and specialist outlets gives a fuller picture. Quick rule: if a story makes a big claim but doesn’t show where the information came from, treat it skeptically. If you want, I can also give you a **simple 5-step checklist** for judging any news article in under a minute.
How do I avoid sensational news and find a trustworthy general news publisher? problem
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Look for publishers that are: - **Nonpartisan / wire-service style**: **Reuters**, **Associated Press (AP)** - **Strong editorial standards**: **BBC News**, **NPR** - **Transparent corrections and sourcing**: check their corrections page and article citations - **Low headline drama**: headlines should describe events, not provoke emotion Good general-news picks: - **Reuters** - **AP News** - **BBC News** - **NPR News** Best way to avoid sensationalism: 1. **Use an RSS app** like **Feedly** or **Inoreader** and subscribe only to those outlets. 2. **Avoid “trending” tabs** on social apps and news aggregators. 3. **Cross-check big stories** with at least 2 of the sources above. 4. **Prefer articles over video clips**, since clips are often framed more aggressively. 5. **Read the byline and source**: anonymous sources + dramatic language = caution. Quick rule: - If the headline feels like it’s trying to make you angry or afraid, skip it. If you want, I can give you a **short list of the best trustworthy news apps** for iPhone or Android.
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A good rule: **pick outlets that optimize for verification, corrections, and transparency—not outrage**. Reuters says its Trust Principles require integrity, independence, and freedom from bias, and AP says it uses standards designed to safeguard stories from bias and inaccuracies. AP also emphasizes verification, multiple independent sources, and corrections/contact pathways. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/about-us/trust-principles?utm_source=openai)) **How to spot sensational news** - Headline feels emotional, absolute, or scary. - Story relies on unnamed sources or one side only. - No clear author, date, corrections policy, or sourcing. - Heavy opinion/analysis mixed with straight reporting. **How to find a trustworthy general news publisher** - Look for a published standards page and corrections policy. - Prefer outlets that separate news from opinion. - Check whether they explain sourcing and verification. - Cross-check the same story with 2–3 reputable outlets. **Good starting points** - **Reuters** - **AP (Associated Press)** If you want, I can give you a **short list of trustworthy U.S. general news outlets** by category: straight news, business, or left/center/right-leaning but still factual.
How do I choose a general news publisher for both local and world news? problem
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Pick a publisher that’s **strong on both “wire” coverage and local reporting**. ### What to look for - **Local newsroom size:** more local reporters = better city/state coverage. - **Global wire use:** outlets that rely on **Reuters** or **AP** usually have solid world news. - **Corrections / standards page:** shows accountability. - **Low bias or transparent bias:** look for straight reporting, not just opinion. - **Formats you like:** website, app, newsletters, podcasts. ### Good options - **Reuters** — best for world news, very neutral; weaker on local. - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent general news and U.S./world coverage. - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, decent U.S./global perspective. - For local + world together, choose a **major local paper** plus one global source: - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **Los Angeles Times** - **The Guardian** (more global, less local) - Your top local paper (e.g., **Chicago Tribune**, **Dallas Morning News**, **Miami Herald**) ### Easiest formula - **Local:** your best city/regional newspaper - **World:** **Reuters** or **AP** If you tell me your country/city, I can suggest the best specific publisher.
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Pick a publisher that’s strong in **both coverage breadth and editorial standards**. **What to look for:** - **Local presence:** actual reporters/editors in your area - **World coverage:** staffed foreign bureaus or strong wire service partnerships - **Reputation for accuracy:** corrections policy, fact-checking, clear sourcing - **Balanced coverage:** separates news from opinion - **Useful format:** app, alerts, newsletters, archive/search - **Transparency:** ownership, funding, and editorial standards are public **Good approach:** 1. Choose **1 local outlet** for community news. 2. Pair it with **1 national/international outlet** for world news. 3. If you want one “all-in-one,” look for a major paper or broadcaster with both strong local and global reporting. **Examples by type:** - **Local-first:** your city’s major daily paper - **World-first:** Reuters, AP, BBC, Financial Times - **General publisher with both:** major metro newspapers like *The New York Times*, *Washington Post*, *Los Angeles Times* (varies by region) **Quick rule:** If you care most about **local accountability**, choose a strong local paper. If you care most about **world news**, choose Reuters/AP/BBC plus a local source. If you want, I can suggest **specific publishers** based on your city or your budget.
How can I keep up with politics, business, and culture in one place? problem
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Use a **single news hub** with a mix of **aggregated headlines + curated briefings**. Best options: - **Apple News** — easy all-in-one feed for politics, business, culture. - **Google News** — strong personalization and broad source coverage. - **Flipboard** — best if you like magazine-style topic sections. - **The New York Times app** + **The Economist app** — great if you want more depth in one place, especially for politics/business/culture. - **Axios** — very concise daily briefings across politics and business. Good setup: 1. Pick **one aggregator**: Apple News or Google News. 2. Follow 5–10 sources: - Politics: **Reuters**, **AP News**, **Politico** - Business: **Bloomberg**, **Financial Times**, **Axios** - Culture: **The New Yorker**, **Vulture**, **The Guardian Culture** 3. Add one daily email: - **Axios AM** - **Morning Brew** - **The Economist Espresso** If you want, I can build you a **one-app setup** depending on whether you prefer **free, premium, or no-fluff** news.
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If you want **one app**, I’d start with **Apple News** if you’re in the Apple ecosystem: it combines curated, human-edited journalism with personalization, and it includes daily audio briefings plus local news collections. ([apple.com](https://www.apple.com/apple-news/?utm_source=openai)) If you want **better balance/less echo chamber**, try **Ground News**—it compares how different outlets across the political spectrum cover the same story. ([ground.news](https://ground.news/bias-quiz?utm_source=openai)) If you want **maximum control** over politics, business, and culture sources, **Feedly** is great for following specific outlets/topics and using AI summaries. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) If you want a **more visual, magazine-like feed**, **Flipboard** lets you follow thousands of topics and has a curated daily edition. ([about.flipboard.com](https://about.flipboard.com/inside-flipboard/the-new-flipboard-gets-personal-with-over-30000-topics-to-follow/?utm_source=openai)) **My simple pick:** - **Best all-around:** Apple News - **Best for media balance:** Ground News - **Best for power users:** Feedly If you want, I can also give you a **free-only setup** or a **best 3-app combo**.
How do I find a news publisher with good fact-based reporting? problem
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Look for publishers that have: - **A clear corrections policy** and visibly correct mistakes - **Straight news vs. opinion separated** - **Named reporters and editors** - **Heavy sourcing**: documents, direct quotes, data - **Low sensationalism** in headlines - **Ownership/mission transparency** - **Consistent, boring coverage** of routine facts Good fact-based options to start with: - **Reuters** — very strong for straight, low-spin reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — solid wire service, usually very factual - **BBC News** — generally reliable, broad international coverage - **Financial Times** — strong business/economic reporting - **NPR** — good for explanatory news, though some opinion/perspective content exists - **The Wall Street Journal** — news side is strong; separate it from editorial page Quick test: 1. Read the same story from **Reuters**, **AP**, and one outlet you already use. 2. Compare: do they agree on the core facts? 3. If one has more emotion than evidence, be skeptical. If you want, I can also give you a **“most reliable news outlets” shortlist by topic** (politics, business, science, world news).
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Look for these signs: - **Clear corrections policy**: they publish corrections and update errors. - **Named sources**: reporting cites documents, experts, or primary records. - **Straight news vs opinion separation**: facts and opinions are labeled differently. - **Transparent ownership/funding**: you can tell who runs it. - **Track record**: other reputable outlets cite them. - **Low sensationalism**: headlines match the article, not outrage bait. - **Multiple viewpoints**: important claims are corroborated, not one-source only. Good habits: - Compare the same story across **2–3 outlets**. - Prefer **primary sources** when possible. - Be cautious with sites that rely on anonymous claims, vague sourcing, or clickbait headlines. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **checklist** for judging any article in 60 seconds, or 2. a list of **generally reliable news brands** by category.
How do I pick a general news publisher that is worth paying for? problem
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Pick the one that gives you **unique value, not just more headlines**. ### Good signs it’s worth paying for - **Original reporting** you can’t get elsewhere - **Consistent quality** on topics you actually care about - **Strong editors / fact-checking** - **Useful depth**: explainers, analysis, data, newsletters - **Low annoyance**: no bait-clicking, no endless clutter - **A habit you’ll use daily** or at least several times a week ### Quick test Ask: 1. **Would I miss this if it disappeared tomorrow?** 2. **Do I read it more than 3x a week?** 3. **Does it save me time or help me make decisions?** 4. **Can I get the same info free from Reuters/AP or public radio?** If the answer is mostly “no,” don’t subscribe. ### Publishers that are often worth paying for Depends on your use case: - **The Economist** — best if you want broad, polished global analysis - **Financial Times** — strong for business, markets, and international news - **Wall Street Journal** — best for business + US news - **The New York Times** — broad coverage, strong features, culture, and newsletters - **The Washington Post** — strong US political coverage and reporting - **The Atlantic** — fewer stories, but often high-quality longform and analysis ### Usually not worth paying for if you want “general news” - Sites that mostly repackage wire stories - Outlets with lots of sensational headlines and little reporting - Anything you only skim once a week ### Best move Try **one month only** of 1–2 candidates. If you don’t change your reading habits, cancel. If you want, I can recommend the best one based on your interests: **business, politics, world news, or general reading.**
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A good general-news publisher is usually one that is: - **Accurate and fast to correct mistakes** - **Clear about news vs. opinion** - **Transparent about sourcing and ownership** - **Not overly dependent on headlines/clicks** - **Strong on reporting, not just commentary** ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) My practical rule: **pay for the outlet that you read most days and that helps you make decisions better, not louder**. **How to choose** 1. **Start with a free test month.** Read the same 3–5 topics from one outlet for a week. 2. **Check if it separates fact from opinion.** Reuters, AP, and PBS all emphasize accuracy, verification, and clear standards. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Look for a visible corrections policy.** NewsGuard specifically treats corrections/transparency as key credibility criteria. ([newsguardtech.com](https://www.newsguardtech.com/ratings/rating-process-criteria/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Value original reporting over aggregation.** 5. **Prefer the outlet that covers your life:** local news, your industry, your city, or the global beat you care about. **If you want a safe default** - **Reuters or AP** for broad, low-drama straight news. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) - **A strong local paper** if you care about city/state issues. - **A specialist outlet** if you mainly care about business, tech, policy, etc. **Red flags** - Lots of opinion with weak reporting - No clear corrections page - Headline hype - Heavy anonymous sourcing without explanation - Stories that feel like recycled social media If you want, I can give you a **shortlist of 5 worth-paying-for news outlets** based on your interests and budget.
How can I get daily news without a lot of clickbait? problem 10/mo
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Best way: use a **mix of one quality newspaper + one clean news app + one newsletter**. ### Good low-clickbait options - **Reuters** — very straight, minimal opinion. - **AP News** — fast and factual. - **NPR News** — good summaries, less sensational. - **Financial Times** — excellent if you want business/world news. - **The Economist** — strong weekly/daily analysis, fewer clicky headlines. ### Best news apps/aggregators - **Ground News** — shows multiple sources and helps avoid one-sided headlines. - **Apple News** — decent if you follow trusted outlets and mute noisy ones. - **Feedly** — great if you want to build your own clean feed from specific sources. - **Flipboard** — useful, but can be a bit more algorithmic/clicky than Feedly. ### Good newsletters - **1440 Daily Digest** — broad, fairly neutral. - **Axios AM** — short, direct, little fluff. - **Morning Brew** — readable, but more casual/business-focused. ### Simple setup 1. Pick **Reuters or AP** as your default source. 2. Add **Ground News** or **Feedly** for variety. 3. Subscribe to **Axios AM** or **1440** for a daily roundup. 4. Avoid entertainment-style homepages and social media headlines. If you want, I can suggest a setup based on whether you want **general news, politics, business, or tech**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes: use a **small set of straight-news sources** and **filter out opinion/viral feeds**. Good low-clickbait defaults: - **Reuters** — strong on fast, fact-based wire reporting and explicit anti-bias standards. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/about/standards-values/?utm_source=openai)) - **AP** — independent, nonpartisan, fact-based journalism. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — nonprofit public-service journalism with lots of context, especially useful for U.S. news. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News / BBC app** — broad coverage and live news access in the U.S. via BBC.com and the BBC app. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/42343579768851-Can-I-watch-the-BBC-News-channel-online-via-BBC-com-and-or-BBC-app?utm_source=openai)) How to make it feel “daily” without the junk: 1. **Pick 2 sources max** (e.g., Reuters + NPR). 2. **Use RSS or a newsletter** instead of social feeds. 3. **Turn off push alerts** except for breaking news. 4. **Skip homepage headlines** and go straight to “Top Stories” or “World/US.” 5. **Add one morning briefing** and one evening roundup only. If you want, I can give you: - a **best 3-source setup** for your style, or - a **no-clickbait news app/feed setup** for iPhone, Android, or web.
How do I find a general news publisher with strong explainers? problem 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for a publisher that has a **“What to know / Explained / Guide / Analysis”** section and a reputation for **clear, neutral reporting**. Good general-news publishers with strong explainers: - **Reuters** — very clean, fact-first, great for concise explainers - **Associated Press (AP)** — straightforward, broad coverage, easy to understand - **NPR** — strong context and “why it matters” reporting - **BBC News** — good explainers and global coverage - **The New York Times** — excellent “The Morning” and explainer-style pieces, though more opinionated overall - **The Guardian** — good context pieces, but more editorial tone Quick way to choose: 1. Check if they have dedicated explainers. 2. Read 3–5 articles on the same topic. 3. See whether they define terms and avoid jargon. 4. Prefer outlets that cite sources clearly. If you want, I can give you: - a **neutral-only** shortlist, - a **free-first** shortlist, or - the **best explainer outlets for politics / business / science**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for these signs: - **A dedicated explainers/“background” section** - **Straight-news coverage plus context** - **Clear sourcing and a transparent editorial mission** - **Coverage across many topics, not just one niche**. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) Good places to start: - **AP News** — broad general-news wire with worldwide coverage; AP also runs “AP Explains” style contextual pieces. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/content/topics/breaking-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — strong for concise, global general news and widely used by other newsrooms; Reuters and AP describe their work as focused on accurate, fair, timely information. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/the-definitive-source/announcements/statement-from-ap-bloomberg-news-reuters-on-white-house-press-pool-access/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Conversation** — best if you want research-driven explainers written by subject experts for the public. ([cdn.theconversation.com](https://cdn.theconversation.com/static_files/files/4168/Media_kit_2026.pdf?1775011243=&utm_source=openai)) Quick test: open 5 recent articles and ask: 1. Do they explain *why it matters*? 2. Do they define terms? 3. Do they link background, not just events? 4. Can you tell who wrote it and why they’re qualified? ([cdn.theconversation.com](https://cdn.theconversation.com/static_files/files/4168/Media_kit_2026.pdf?1775011243=&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **shortlist of 5 publishers** ranked by “best explainers” for **U.S. news**, **world news**, or **politics**.
How do I choose a general news publisher for business professionals? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Choose based on **speed, depth, bias/style, and business relevance**. ### Best options for business professionals - **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral, global headlines. - **Financial Times** — best for business, markets, and international policy depth. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for U.S. business, markets, and executive coverage. - **Bloomberg** — best for market data, finance, and real-time business news. - **The Economist** — best for broader strategic analysis and big-picture context. ### Quick chooser - Need **daily breaking news** → **Reuters** - Need **serious business analysis** → **FT** - Need **U.S. business coverage** → **WSJ** - Need **market-moving info** → **Bloomberg** - Need **strategic reading** → **The Economist** ### What to check - **Credibility/reputation** - **Coverage of your industry** - **Frequency and speed** - **Paywall price** - **Mobile/newsletter quality** - **Tone**: neutral vs opinionated ### Practical recommendation If you want **one primary source**, pick **Reuters** for neutral news plus **FT** or **WSJ** for deeper business context.
retrieval Not mentioned
For business professionals, pick a publisher based on **how you’ll use it**: - **Fast market/news monitoring:** choose **Reuters**. It emphasizes global business, financial, and world news, and its Trust Principles stress independence and unbiased reporting. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/press-releases/2024/january/thomson-reuters-acquires-world-business-media-limited?utm_source=openai)) - **Executive-level business analysis and opinion:** choose **Financial Times**. It positions itself as a leading business news organization serving the global business community with news, comment, data, and analysis. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Markets + data + broad business coverage:** choose **Bloomberg**. It describes itself as a global business and financial information provider, with coverage across markets, politics, economics, and more, plus professional services for decision makers. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/company/what-we-do/news-media/?utm_source=openai)) A simple rule: - **Need speed and neutrality?** Reuters. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/press-releases/2024/january/thomson-reuters-acquires-world-business-media-limited?utm_source=openai)) - **Need depth and context for leadership decisions?** FT. ([media.ft.com](https://media.ft.com/cms/ae270012-a39d-11df-a100-00144feabdc0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Need data-heavy coverage and market workflow integration?** Bloomberg. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/distribution/products/professional-services/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **1-minute decision tree** or a **ranked shortlist by role** (finance, consulting, founder, corporate strategy, etc.).
How much does a general news publisher subscription usually cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Usually **$5–$20/month** for a general news publisher subscription. Common examples: - **The New York Times**: often around **$17+/month** - **The Washington Post**: often around **$10–$15/month** - **The Wall Street Journal**: often around **$5–$15/month** on intro offers, then higher - **Reuters / AP-style wire access**: sometimes cheaper or bundled, but not always consumer subscriptions Many publishers also offer: - **Intro deals**: **$1–$5/month** for the first few months - **Annual plans**: about **$100–$200/year** - **Premium bundles**: **$20+ per month** If you want, I can give you a **quick price comparison of the top news subscriptions**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Usually, a **general news publisher** subscription costs about **$5–$20 per month** for digital access, with **intro offers often around $1–$6 every four weeks** and regular rates commonly around **$12–$17 every four weeks** for major outlets. ([subscription.washingtonpost.com](https://subscription.washingtonpost.com/watch?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also break that down by **local paper vs. national outlet vs. print bundle**.
Are there free general news publishers with good coverage? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — a few solid free general-news sources are: - **Reuters** — very strong on straight, global breaking news - **Associated Press (AP)** — reliable, fast, broad coverage - **BBC News** — good international and U.K. coverage - **The Guardian** — free access, strong reporting and opinion - **NPR** — good U.S. news and explainers - **Al Jazeera English** — especially strong for international affairs - **France 24** — decent global coverage, often free and accessible If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free U.S. news sources** - the **best free international news sources** - or a **“minimal bias” shortlist**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes. Good free options include: - **Associated Press (AP News)** — broad breaking-news coverage, and AP describes APNews.com as its consumer-facing site with global, independent, fact-based journalism. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/the-definitive-source/announcements/a-new-look-for-ap-news/)) - **NPR** — free, independent journalism across U.S. and world news. ([npr.org](https://www.npr.org/network/?utm_source=openai)) - **PBS NewsHour** — available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS app. ([pbs.org](https://www.pbs.org/show/newshour/)) - **The Guardian** — open to all and publishes without a paywall. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/help/insideguardian/2024/apr/23/what-rejecting-all-means-for-funding-open-journalism?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you the **best free news sites by category**: U.S., world, politics, business, or science.
What is the cheapest general news publisher subscription? transactional 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **major general-news publishers**, the cheapest option is often: - **The Guardian** — **free** to read (they ask for donations, but no required subscription) If you mean a **paid subscription only**, the cheapest big-name intro deal is often: - **The New York Times** — frequently around **$1/week intro** for digital access Other cheap options to check: - **The Washington Post** — often heavily discounted intro pricing - **Reuters / AP** — usually not sold as typical consumer subscriptions If you want, I can list the **cheapest current deals by country**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **paid general-news publisher subscriptions**, the **cheapest I found** is **The Washington Post Core plan** at **$4 every four weeks for the first six months**. Its regular monthly option is also **$4/4 weeks** for that intro period. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/)) If you mean **any news access at all**, there are also **free** news sources, so the cheapest “subscription” can be **$0**. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/media-center/press-releases/2024/ap-announces-content-collaborations-with-5-nonprofit-news-outlets/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the cheapest current plans for the major ones side by side.
Which general news publishers have a free tier? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—many general news publishers have a free tier or metered access. Common examples: - **Reuters** — free full access - **Associated Press (AP News)** — free full access - **BBC News** — free full access - **NPR** — free full access - **The Guardian** — free content, donations optional - **USA TODAY** — some free articles, then paywall - **Axios** — mostly free newsletters/articles - **The Conversation** — free full access - **Al Jazeera** — free full access - **Voice of America (VOA)** — free full access If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free news apps**, or 2. a list of **major publishers with metered paywalls** (e.g., 5–10 free articles/month).
retrieval Not mentioned
A few **general news publishers with a free tier / free access** are: - **The Guardian** — free article access is still available; they also offer a paid supporter/premium layer. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/help/insideguardian/2023/mar/22/an-update-on-reader-support-via-the-app?utm_source=openai)) - **AP News (Associated Press)** — its AP News app is free, and AP also distributes free-access offerings in some contexts. ([ap.org](https://www.ap.org/the-definitive-source/announcements/stay-connected-with-the-new-ap-news-app/?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC News** — BBC says free users get limited access, with a paid subscription tier for full access. ([help.bbc.com](https://help.bbc.com/hc/en-us/articles/42331755973139-Why-do-I-have-to-subscribe-to-continue-using-BBC-com-and-the-BBC-app?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR** — standard listening remains free, while NPR+ is an optional paid supporter tier. ([plus.npr.org](https://plus.npr.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **PBS News** — PBS NewsHour is available to stream on PBS.org and the free PBS app. ([pbs.org](https://www.pbs.org/show/newshour/?utm_source=openai)) - **Al Jazeera** — offers free access to its news site/content and free registration for a single account across services. ([aljazeera.com](https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2016/9/21/al-jazeera-english-expands-digital-access-to-the-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Reuters** — now has subscription access in some places, but Reuters says some users still access it through a free registration process. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reuters-news/id602660809?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best free news sources” shortlist** by quality, bias, or U.S./world coverage.
What do premium general news publisher subscriptions include? transactional 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Premium general news publisher subscriptions usually include: - **Full access to all articles** — no paywall limits - **Ad-free or fewer ads** experience - **Exclusive premium journalism** — investigations, deep analysis, opinion - **Newsletters** tailored to your interests - **Mobile app access** with offline reading - **Audio versions / podcasts** in some cases - **Crossword, games, and lifestyle content** for publishers like **The New York Times** - **Archive access** to older articles - **Multiple-device / family sharing** options on higher tiers - **Subscriber-only events** or member benefits Examples: - **The New York Times All Access**: news, Games, Wirecutter, Cooking, audio - **The Wall Street Journal Digital**: full articles, newsletters, podcasts, market tools - **Financial Times Digital**: premium reporting, market data, newsletters - **The Economist Digital**: all issues, audio edition, app access If you want, I can compare the best premium news subscriptions for **business**, **general news**, or **politics**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Premium general-news subscriptions usually bundle: - **Unlimited digital article access** on web and apps. - **Mobile app access** and sometimes **offline reading**. - **Archive access** to older reporting. - **Extras** like newsletters, podcasts/audio, e-books, or special editions. - **Sharing perks** such as extra accounts or guest passes. - Sometimes **ad-free reading** and **member-only events**. ([subscription.washingtonpost.com](https://subscription.washingtonpost.com/watch?utm_source=openai)) For example, The Washington Post’s Premium plan includes unlimited access across devices, offline reading, sharing options, e-book downloads, and archive access. The Guardian’s higher-tier supporter/patron packages can include ad-free reading, app access, newsletters, and event invitations. ([subscription.washingtonpost.com](https://subscription.washingtonpost.com/watch?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the premium perks of specific publishers like NYT, WaPo, FT, The Guardian, or WSJ.
Is a general news publisher subscription worth it? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Usually **yes, if you read news daily**—but only for **one or two outlets**, not a bundle of everything. **Worth it for:** - **Depth and original reporting**: e.g. **The New York Times**, **The Wall Street Journal**, **The Economist** - **Business/markets**: **WSJ**, **Financial Times** - **Quick, reliable daily briefing**: **Reuters** - **Local coverage**: your best **city/regional paper** if you actually follow local politics, schools, or events **Not worth it if:** - You mostly skim headlines - You already get enough from **Reuters**, **AP**, newsletters, podcasts, or social feeds - The outlet is mostly opinion/aggregation, not reporting **Best value picks by use case:** - **General news**: **NYT All Access** or **Reuters** (free) - **Business**: **WSJ** or **Financial Times** - **Budget-friendly**: **Apple News+** (if you like many magazines/papers) - **Local news**: subscribe to your main local paper if you use it weekly **Rule of thumb:** If you read it **3+ times a week**, it’s probably worth the subscription. If not, use free sources and newsletters. If you want, I can recommend the **best subscription for your interests and budget**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Usually **yes, if you read news most days and actually follow a few beats**. A general news subscription can pay off when you want **full articles, live updates, archives, and fewer ad/registration hassles**; for example, The Washington Post’s Core plan includes unlimited web/app access and 24/7 live updates, while Premium adds sharing benefits. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) Usually **no, if you mostly skim headlines or get news from newsletters, TV, podcasts, or free sites**. If you only read a couple of articles a week, the cost is often hard to justify versus free sources. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **Worth it:** you read 10+ articles/week, care about one outlet’s coverage, or need a specific local/political/business lens. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Not worth it:** you just want broad awareness and don’t mind free summaries. ([apnews.com](https://apnews.com/article/97405e4715c9a25d21477b992028db2a?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can help you decide **for your exact reading habits** and suggest the best-value outlets.
Do general news publishers offer student discounts? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—many major news publishers offer student discounts, though not all do. Common examples: - **The New York Times** — student digital subscription discounts - **The Wall Street Journal** — student pricing on digital access - **Financial Times** — student offers in some regions - **The Economist** — student discounts on digital subscriptions - **The Washington Post** — student rates sometimes available - **Bloomberg** / **Reuters** — usually not standard student deals, but may have promo offers Best move: check the publisher’s **education/student** page and verify with a school email or student ID. If you want, I can list current student discounts for the biggest news sites by region (US/UK/EU).
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—**many general news publishers do**, but it’s **not universal**. Some offer a dedicated student/academic rate and verify eligibility through a third party like SheerID. For example, The Washington Post offers an academic rate for eligible students and faculty, and the rate changes once you’re no longer eligible. ([helpcenter.washingtonpost.com](https://helpcenter.washingtonpost.com/hc/en-us/articles/115002035092-Academic-rate-for-the-All-Access-Digital-subscription?utm_source=openai)) Others bundle student access in different ways rather than a classic “student discount.” For instance, The Economist includes a complimentary 3‑month digital subscription with some Economist Education courses. ([education.economist.com](https://education.economist.com/insights/learn-about-us/how-are-subscriptions-to-the-economist-used-in-our-courses?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can list current student discounts for specific publishers you use.
Which general news publishers have monthly subscription plans? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Many general news publishers offer monthly digital subscriptions. Examples: - **The New York Times** — Basic / All Access monthly plans - **The Washington Post** — Digital Monthly plan - **The Wall Street Journal** — Digital monthly subscriptions - **The Atlantic** — Monthly digital access - **The New Yorker** — Digital + print monthly options - **The Guardian** — Supporter monthly contributions/subscriptions - **Financial Times** — Digital monthly plans - **USA Today** — Subscription offerings in some regions/plans - **The Los Angeles Times** — Digital monthly subscription - **The Boston Globe** — Digital Access monthly - **Chicago Tribune** — Digital subscription plans - **The Seattle Times** — Digital monthly options - **The Philadelphia Inquirer** — Digital monthly plans - **Axios** — Some paid membership/newsletter offerings - **The Information** — Monthly subscription - **The Hill** — Limited paid options in some areas If you want, I can also make a **cheapest-to-most-expensive** list or filter by **US vs. international** publishers.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—examples of major news publishers with a **monthly** option include: - **The Washington Post** — its subscription page shows **Monthly** plans for Core and Premium. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Los Angeles Times** — its subscription offers include **$4/week billed as $16 every 4 weeks** (a monthly-style billing cycle). ([latimes.com](https://www.latimes.com/subscriptions/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Guardian** — its app FAQ lists a **monthly price** for premium-tier access in the U.S. and other regions. ([theguardian.com](https://www.theguardian.com/iphone/faq?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **bigger list of U.S. and international news publishers** with monthly plans.
Which general news publishers have annual subscription deals? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Yes—many general-news publishers offer **annual subscriptions with a discount vs. monthly**. Common examples: - **The New York Times** — All Access / News subscriptions - **The Wall Street Journal** — WSJ Digital / Print & Digital - **The Washington Post** — Digital subscription - **Financial Times** — Digital subscription - **The Economist** — Digital subscription - **The Atlantic** — Digital subscription - **Newsweek** — Digital/print plans - **USA Today** — Digital subscription - **The Guardian** — Annual supporter/membership options - **The Boston Globe** — Digital Access - **Chicago Tribune** — Digital subscription - **The Los Angeles Times** — Digital subscription If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **cheapest annual deals**, or 2. a **best-value shortlist** for US vs. international news.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—several major general-news publishers have annual subscription deals right now, including: - **The Washington Post** — annual digital plans are currently offered at **$40 for the first year** (Core) and **$60 for the first year** (Premium). ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **CNN** — the U.S. news subscription is available at **$29.99/year**. CNN also launched an **All Access** tier at **$69.99/year**, with an intro annual price of **$41.99 for the first year** for early signups. ([help.cnn.com](https://help.cnn.com/us/Answer/Detail/000001069?utm_source=openai)) - **Los Angeles Times** — offers **$60/year** for digital access, with a separate **$120 for 2 years** option and other promotional offers. ([latimes.com](https://www.latimes.com/subscriptions/we4b.html?utm_source=openai)) - **The Atlantic** — its official publication info lists an **annual subscription price of $69.99** in the U.S. ([cdn.theatlantic.com](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/media/magazine/pdfs/202212.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to: 1. **best cheap annual deals**, 2. **best national-news publishers**, or 3. **only U.S.-available subscriptions**.
Can I get a general news publisher subscription without a long contract? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — most general news publishers offer **month-to-month digital subscriptions** with **no long contract**. Common options: - **The New York Times** — Digital subscriptions are typically monthly. - **The Washington Post** — Usually monthly digital plans. - **The Wall Street Journal** — Digital access is often billed monthly. - **Financial Times** — Offers monthly digital subscriptions. - **The Guardian** — Often has supporter/membership options rather than a hard contract. A few tips: - Look for **“cancel anytime”** or **monthly billing**. - Avoid annual plans if you want flexibility. - Some publishers offer **intro rates** that rise after a few months, so check the renewal price. If you want, I can recommend the **best no-contract news subscriptions** based on your country and interests.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — many major news publishers offer **monthly, auto-renewing subscriptions with no long contract**, so you can usually cancel before the next billing period. For example, The Washington Post says its plans are **monthly or yearly** and that **“You can cancel anytime.”** The Guardian’s app subscription terms also say you can **cancel before your next monthly or annual payment date**. ([subscribe.washingtonpost.com](https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the safest no-commitment option, look for: - **Monthly billing** - **Cancel anytime** - **No minimum term / no annual prepay** If you want, I can suggest a few good **news subscriptions with month-to-month plans** in the US.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best general news publishers right now?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **general news**, the strongest publishers right now are: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-spin reporting. 2. **Associated Press (AP News)** — very solid on breaking news and U.S./world coverage. 3. **BBC News** — broad international coverage, good context. 4. **The New York Times** — excellent depth and reporting, especially U.S. + world. 5. **Financial Times** — best if you want politics + business + global affairs. 6. **The Wall Street Journal** — strong on business, markets, and U.S. politics. 7. **The Economist** — great analysis and long-form global coverage. 8. **The Guardian** — strong international reporting, often more opinionated. If you want the **best single mix of accuracy and breadth**, I’d start with **Reuters + AP + BBC**. If you want **deeper analysis**, add **FT** or **The Economist**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free news apps/sites** or a **best-by-country** list.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best general news publishers right now, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-spin reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent broad coverage and reliability - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, clear writing - **The New York Times** — deep U.S. and world reporting, strong investigations - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and policy - **Financial Times** — top-tier global business and economics coverage - **The Guardian** — strong international and politics coverage, more opinionated - **NPR** — good if you want calm, readable general news - **The Economist** — best for analysis and context, less breaking-news focused - **Axios** — very concise, fast summaries of major developments If you want the safest “general news starter pack,” I’d pick: **Reuters + AP + BBC News + NPR**. If you want, I can also give you the **best news apps/newsletters** or a **best by category** list.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A solid current shortlist for **general news**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-drama reporting. - **AP News** — very reliable, broad U.S. and world coverage. - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and live reporting. - **The New York Times** — best for deep coverage, especially U.S./world politics. - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent for business, markets, and policy. - **Financial Times** — top-tier global business/economics reporting. - **NPR** — good explanatory journalism, especially U.S. public-interest news. - **The Guardian** — strong global coverage and investigation, more opinionated tone. If you want the **best default mix**, I’d use: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP News** 3. **BBC News** 4. **NYT or WSJ** depending on whether you care more about general/politics or business If you want, I can also give you the **best news publishers by category** (politics, business, tech, international, breaking news).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **general news publishers** right now, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-opinion reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — another top choice for clean, reliable breaking news - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and broad general news - **The New York Times** — excellent depth, investigations, and major U.S./world coverage - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics, investigations, and enterprise reporting - **The Wall Street Journal** — best if you want business, markets, and policy news - **Financial Times** — very strong global business and geopolitics coverage - **NPR** — good for balanced U.S. news and explainers - **The Economist** — great for analysis and world affairs, less for daily breaking news If you want the **most neutral/general-purpose combo**, I’d start with: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **BBC News** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free news sites** - the **least biased options** - or a **best news app stack** to follow every day.
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A strong short list for **general news** right now: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight reporting with minimal spin - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent breaking news and solid national/international coverage - **BBC News** — strong global perspective, especially outside the U.S. - **The New York Times** — best all-around depth, especially politics, business, and culture - **The Wall Street Journal** — strongest for business, markets, and policy - **The Washington Post** — very good for U.S. politics and government - **Financial Times** — top-tier for global business and economics - **NPR** — good balance, especially for audio/radio-style reporting If you want the **most neutral daily news**, start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want **deeper analysis**, add **NYT** and **WSJ**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free news sites**, 2. the **least biased options**, or 3. a **top 5 by category**.
What are the top general news publishers for daily reporting?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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For **daily general news**, the best-known and most reliable publishers are: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral breaking news 2. **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent straight reporting, widely syndicated 3. **BBC News** — strong global coverage and clear daily reporting 4. **Agence France-Presse (AFP)** — good international wire coverage 5. **The New York Times** — top U.S./global reporting, especially analysis 6. **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business, markets, and politics 7. **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national news 8. **Financial Times** — best for business, economics, and geopolitics 9. **CNN** — fast daily U.S./global news updates 10. **NPR** — reliable, balanced daily reporting and explainers If you want the **best single source for daily headlines**, I’d start with **Reuters** or **AP**. If you want a **broader read**, add **BBC News** and **The New York Times**.
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Top general news publishers for daily reporting: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, global wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — highly trusted, broad U.S. and world coverage - **BBC News** — strong international reporting and daily updates - **The New York Times** — deep U.S./world coverage, strong daily newsletter/app - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent business, markets, and U.S. news - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and breaking news - **Bloomberg News** — top-tier business, finance, and market reporting - **The Guardian** — solid international and U.K. daily news - **NPR News** — good public-interest reporting and audio-first daily coverage - **Al Jazeera English** — strong international and Middle East coverage If you want the **best “daily essentials” bundle**, I’d start with: **Reuters + AP + BBC News + The New York Times + Bloomberg**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** news sources, 2. the **best apps/newsletters**, or 3. a **bias/reliability comparison**.
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Top general-news publishers for daily reporting: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight-news wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — broad U.S./world coverage, very reliable - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and context - **The New York Times** — deep U.S. and global reporting - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national news - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent business, markets, and national news - **The Guardian** — good global news and analysis - **Financial Times** — top-tier business and world news - **Bloomberg** — great for markets, business, and policy - **NPR News** — balanced U.S. daily reporting, easy to follow If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free sources**, 2. the **most unbiased picks**, or 3. a **daily news stack** by region.
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Top general-news publishers for daily reporting: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, global reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent wire service, broad U.S./world coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and clear daily updates - **The New York Times** — deep U.S. and global reporting - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national news - **The Wall Street Journal** — top-tier business, markets, and national news - **The Guardian** — solid international and U.S. coverage - **NPR** — balanced daily news, especially audio/radio-friendly reporting - **Bloomberg** — great for business, finance, and policy news - **USA Today** — broad, easy-to-read general news If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **least biased/most neutral**, 2. **best for international news**, or 3. **best free sources**.
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Top general news publishers for daily reporting: - **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral, global wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for breaking news and broad U.S./world coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, clear daily reporting - **The New York Times** — deep U.S. and world news, strong daily editions - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and politics - **Financial Times** — premium global business and economics coverage - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national news - **CNN** — fast daily news updates, especially live coverage - **NBC News** — broad general news with strong TV/digital reporting - **The Guardian** — good international news and commentary If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free options**, 2. the **best for unbiased reporting**, or 3. the **best by region**.
Which general news publishers are most trusted?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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Among **general news publishers**, the ones most often rated as **highly trusted** are: - **Reuters** — especially strong for straight, non-partisan wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — very widely trusted for factual news coverage - **BBC News** — strong global reputation, though more mixed in some countries - **NPR** — highly trusted in the U.S. for news and analysis - **PBS NewsHour** — one of the most trusted U.S. broadcast news brands - **The Economist** — respected for reporting and analysis, though not “just news” If you want the **safest default picks**, I’d start with **Reuters, AP, BBC News, NPR, and PBS**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most trusted by country**, or 2. a **bias/trust chart** for major news outlets.
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Among general news publishers, these are commonly among the most trusted: - **Reuters** — very strong for straight, fact-based reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — highly trusted wire service, widely used by other outlets - **BBC News** — generally trusted internationally, especially for broad coverage - **NPR** — often rated highly for public-service reporting - **The Economist** — strong for analysis and international news - **Financial Times** — especially trusted for business/economy coverage - **PBS NewsHour** — steady, low-drama U.S. coverage - **The Wall Street Journal** — highly trusted for business; opinion section is more ideological than its news reporting If you want the safest default picks for daily news: **Reuters, AP, and BBC News**.
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Commonly seen as the most trusted **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — very strong for straight, factual reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — widely trusted wire service - **BBC News** — especially trusted internationally - **Financial Times** — highly respected for business and global news - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong on business/markets, though opinion section is more partisan - **NPR** — often trusted for balanced U.S. coverage - **PBS NewsHour** — widely viewed as careful and fact-focused - **Agence France-Presse (AFP)** — respected global wire service If you want the **least biased / most fact-forward**, start with **Reuters** and **AP**. If you want, I can also rank them by **U.S. trust**, **international trust**, or **bias/leaning**.
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Among **general news publishers**, the ones that most often rank as **most trusted** are: - **Reuters** — widely trusted for straight, wire-style reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — another top choice for factual, low-opinion coverage - **BBC News** — especially trusted globally and in the UK - **NPR** — often rated highly for reliability in the U.S. - **PBS NewsHour** — strong reputation for careful, balanced coverage - **The Guardian** and **Financial Times** — respected, though more editorial in voice than Reuters/AP If you want the **safest default picks**, I’d say: **Reuters, AP, BBC News, and NPR**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most trusted by country**, or 2. a **ranked list based on recent trust surveys**.
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Among general news publishers, these are widely regarded as the most trusted: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, low-bias wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong fact-based coverage, widely used by other outlets - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, generally high editorial standards - **NPR** — strong for U.S. news and explanatory reporting - **PBS NewsHour** — careful, balanced coverage - **Financial Times** — especially strong on business, global politics, and analysis - **The Wall Street Journal (news side)** — strong reporting, especially business/economics - **The Economist** — high-quality analysis; more opinionated than Reuters/AP If you want the safest starting point for **straight news**, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **BBC News** If you want, I can also give you a **trusted-news shortlist by topic** (U.S. politics, world news, business, science, etc.).
What are the most popular general news publishers online?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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Some of the most popular general news publishers online are: - **BBC News** - **Reuters** - **CNN** - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **The Guardian** - **USA Today** - **AP News** (Associated Press) - **Fox News** - **MSNBC** - **Bloomberg** - **NPR** - **The Wall Street Journal** - **Al Jazeera** - **France 24** If you want, I can also give you: - **most visited news sites by country** - **best free news sources** - **most trusted news publishers**
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Some of the most popular general news publishers online include: - **BBC News** - **CNN** - **Reuters** - **The New York Times** - **The Guardian** - **AP News** - **Fox News** - **NBC News** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** - **Al Jazeera** - **Yahoo News** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most popular by country**, or 2. a **ranked list by estimated web traffic**.
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The most popular general news publishers online usually include: - **Reuters** - **BBC News** - **CNN** - **The New York Times** - **The Guardian** - **Fox News** - **NBC News** - **CBS News** - **ABC News** - **AP News** - **Al Jazeera** - **The Washington Post** - **MSNBC** - **USA Today** If you want the biggest by **global reach**, **Reuters**, **BBC News**, and **CNN** are commonly near the top. If you want **US-focused**, **CNN**, **Fox News**, **NBC News**, and **The New York Times** are especially popular. If you want, I can also rank them by **traffic**, **trustworthiness**, or **country/region**.
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Some of the most popular general news publishers online are: - **BBC News** - **CNN** - **Reuters** - **The New York Times** - **The Guardian** - **Associated Press (AP News)** - **NBC News** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** - **Fox News** - **The Washington Post** - **USA Today** - **Financial Times** (broader business/news) - **The Wall Street Journal** If you want, I can also rank them by **global traffic**, **US audience**, or **trust/reputation**.
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Some of the most popular general news publishers online are: - **CNN** - **BBC News** - **The New York Times** - **Reuters** - **The Associated Press (AP)** - **BBC** - **The Guardian** - **USA Today** - **NPR** - **The Washington Post** - **The Wall Street Journal** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** - **NBC News** - **Fox News** If you want, I can also break these down by: - **most visited worldwide** - **most trusted** - **best free news sites** - **best for international news**
What are the best news publishers for national and world news?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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For **national and world news**, these are some of the best, most reliable publishers: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for factual national and global coverage - **BBC News** — strong international perspective and broad world coverage - **The New York Times** — deep national and global reporting, lots of context - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially strong on U.S. politics, business, and world events - **Financial Times** — top-tier global news, especially economics and geopolitics - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. national politics and breaking news - **Al Jazeera English** — very good world news coverage, especially outside a U.S.-centric lens If you want the **best overall combo**, I’d suggest: - **Reuters + AP** for pure news - Add **BBC News** for global context - Add **NYT or WSJ** for deeper analysis If you want, I can also give you the **best free news sources**, **most unbiased**, or **best apps/newsletters**.
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For **national and world news**, the best publishers are usually the ones with strong editorial standards and broad reporting networks. ### Top picks - **Reuters** — best for fast, highly factual global news - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for U.S. and world breaking news - **BBC News** — strong international coverage with good context - **Financial Times** — best for global politics/economy/business - **The Economist** — excellent analysis of world affairs - **The New York Times** — strong U.S. national + major world coverage - **The Washington Post** — especially good for U.S. politics and policy - **NPR News** — balanced, easy to follow, strong U.S. coverage - **The Guardian** — strong international reporting and opinion - **Al Jazeera English** — useful global perspective, especially on the Middle East ### Best simple combo If you want just a few: - **Reuters** - **AP** - **BBC News** - **Financial Times** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most unbiased options**, 2. the **best free news apps**, or 3. the **best outlets by country**.
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Good picks for **national + world news**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent broad coverage, very factual - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, especially world affairs - **Financial Times** — great for geopolitics + global economics - **The Economist** — best for analysis and global context - **Al Jazeera English** — strong international and Middle East coverage - **The New York Times** — excellent U.S. national + global reporting - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national news - **The Guardian** — solid world news, free access - **NPR** — good U.S. national coverage, less sensational If you want the **single best all-around combo**: **Reuters + BBC News + AP** If you want, I can also give you the **best free options**, **best apps**, or a **left/center/right balanced news list**.
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For **national and world news**, the best publishers are usually these: ### Top general news - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for broad U.S. and world coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, especially outside the U.S. - **The New York Times** — very strong national + world reporting, deep coverage - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and policy - **Financial Times** — excellent for global affairs, economics, and markets - **The Economist** — great analysis of world events and geopolitics ### If you want a more global perspective - **BBC News** - **Reuters** - **The Economist** - **Al Jazeera English** ### If you want U.S.-focused national news - **AP** - **Reuters** - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **Wall Street Journal** (strong on business and politics) ### Best simple combo If you want just 3: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **BBC News** If you want, I can also give you: - the **least biased** news sources, - the **best free** ones, - or a **news mix by ideology/lean**.
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For **national and world news**, the best picks are usually the big, well-edited wire/services and a few high-quality newspapers: ### Best overall - **Reuters** — fast, accurate, and very strong on world news - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for U.S. national news and breaking updates - **BBC News** — strong international coverage with broad global reporting - **The New York Times** — best for deep U.S. + global analysis - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent U.S. politics, business, and world affairs ### Also very good - **Financial Times** — great for global news, economics, and geopolitics - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. national politics and investigations - **The Economist** — best for concise global analysis and context ### If you want a balanced daily mix - **Reuters + AP + BBC News** is the safest combo - Add **NYT** or **WSJ** if you want more depth If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most unbiased sources**, 2. **free vs paid** options, or 3. the best sources by **political leaning/bias**.
Which general news publishers are worth subscribing to?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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If you want a solid general-news mix, these are usually the best subscriptions: - **The New York Times** — best all-around daily coverage, strong breadth. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and politics. - **Financial Times** — excellent global business and geopolitics. - **The Economist** — best weekly long-form analysis and international perspective. - **The Washington Post** — very strong U.S. politics and policy. - **Reuters** / **Associated Press (AP)** — best straight-news wires; often not worth “subscribing” to unless you want alerts/support. If you only want **one**: - **NYT** for general life/news coverage - **WSJ** if you care most about business and money - **The Economist** if you want smart weekly context over daily headlines Good bundle strategy: - **1 daily + 1 weekly**: e.g. **NYT + The Economist** - Or **WSJ + FT** if you’re business-focused If you want, I can also rank them by **best value**, **least bias**, or **best for U.S. vs. world news**.
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Good general-news subscriptions depend on what you want: speed, depth, or breadth. Strong picks: - **The New York Times** — best all-around mix of breaking news, politics, business, culture, and features. - **The Washington Post** — excellent for U.S. politics, policy, and investigative reporting. - **Financial Times** — best if you want global business, markets, and geopolitics. - **The Economist** — strong weekly synthesis of world news, business, and analysis. - **Reuters** — very neutral, fast, and reliable for straight news. - **Associated Press (AP)** — clean, factual wire-style coverage; great baseline source. - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially good for business, markets, and U.S. politics. - **BBC News** — solid international coverage and a good non-U.S. perspective. If you want just 1–2: - **Best single subscription:** **The New York Times** - **Best for neutral daily news:** **Reuters** - **Best for global context:** **The Economist** If you tell me your country and whether you care more about politics, business, or international news, I can narrow it to the best 3.
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A few **general news** publishers that are usually worth paying for: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama reporting. - **The Economist** — strong global coverage and analysis; very worth it if you want context, not just headlines. - **Financial Times** — excellent for business, markets, geopolitics, and world news. - **The New York Times** — broad coverage, strong breaking news, politics, culture, and features. - **The Washington Post** — especially good for U.S. politics and government. - **The Wall Street Journal** — great for business plus solid general news. - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable wire service; good if you want clean, factual coverage. - **BBC News** — strong international perspective and dependable basics. - **The Guardian** — good free-to-read coverage, but a subscription helps support it. - **Semafor** — useful if you want a newer, global-news-first take. If you only want a short list, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** 2. **The Economist** 3. **The New York Times** or **FT** (depending on whether you prefer broad or business-focused coverage) If you want, I can also give you the **best value picks by budget** or **best for U.S./international news**.
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If you want a strong general-news stack, these are the best bets: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama global news. - **AP News** — excellent wire service; reliable and broad. - **The New York Times** — strongest all-around U.S./world coverage plus features. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and U.S. politics. - **Financial Times** — great for global business, economics, and geopolitics. - **The Economist** — best if you want smart weekly analysis, not just headlines. - **Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and government coverage. - **BBC News** — solid international perspective. - **The Guardian** — good for world news and opinion, especially if you like a progressive slant. If you only want **3**, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP News** 3. **Financial Times** or **NYT** depending on whether you care more about business or general coverage. If you tell me your country and whether you prefer **hard news, politics, business, or analysis**, I can narrow it to the best 3–5 for you.
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A few general-news subscriptions are usually worth it: - **The New York Times** — best all-around mix of breaking news, politics, world, culture, and useful newsletters. - **The Washington Post** — strong on U.S. politics, government, and reporting from D.C. - **Reuters** — excellent if you want clean, fast, low-opinion wire reporting. - **Associated Press (AP)** — similar to Reuters; reliable for straight news. - **Financial Times** — best if you care about business, markets, and global policy. - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong on business and economics, plus solid general news. - **The Economist** — not a daily news source, but great for weekly global coverage and analysis. - **The Guardian** — good if you want a left-leaning but broad international perspective. If you want just one or two: - **General + broad coverage:** NYT + Reuters - **Politics-heavy:** Washington Post + AP - **Business-heavy:** FT + WSJ If you want, I can also suggest the **best free/newsletter-only options** or tailor this by **politics, business, or international news**.
What are the most recommended general news publishers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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A solid shortlist of widely recommended general news publishers: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-bias breaking news - **Associated Press (AP)** — reliable, neutral wire reporting - **BBC News** — strong international coverage - **The New York Times** — broad coverage, deep reporting - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent business, politics, and world news - **NPR News** — clear, balanced reporting and strong explainers - **Financial Times** — top-tier global business and geopolitics - **The Economist** — analysis-heavy, international perspective - **AP News app** / **Reuters app** — good if you want a simple news feed If you want the most “general, dependable, and not too opinionated” picks, start with **AP, Reuters, and BBC News**.
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Some of the most widely recommended **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — very strong for straight, fast, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent wire service, widely used by other outlets - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and broad general news - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and strong daily coverage - **The Washington Post** — excellent U.S. politics and investigative journalism - **Financial Times** — especially good for business, markets, and world news - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong on business, markets, and U.S. news - **NPR News** — solid general news with clear, accessible reporting - **The Guardian** — broad coverage, especially international news - **Al Jazeera English** — strong global and Middle East coverage If you want the **most neutral “news only” options**, start with **Reuters** and **AP**. If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-category list** (neutral, US politics, world news, business, tech).
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Here are some of the most commonly recommended **general news publishers**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight reporting and minimal opinion - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong for neutral, wire-style news - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, easy to follow - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and major U.S./world coverage - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent for business, politics, and markets - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigative reporting - **The Guardian** — good international and cultural coverage, more opinionated - **Financial Times** — top-tier global business and economics coverage - **NPR News** — reliable, readable, and balanced for U.S. audience - **Axios** — concise summaries and quick news updates If you want the most **neutral** picks, start with **Reuters, AP, and BBC News**. If you want, I can also rank them by: - **bias/neutrality** - **business coverage** - **U.S. politics** - **international news**
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Some of the most widely recommended **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — very strong for straight, fast, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for clear, factual wire reporting - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, generally solid quality - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and analysis - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially strong on business, politics, and markets - **The Economist** — excellent global news and analysis - **Financial Times** — top-tier for world business and economics - **NPR** — good U.S. news, interviews, and explainers - **The Washington Post** — strong political and U.S. coverage - **Al Jazeera English** — useful for international perspective If you want the safest “default” combo, I’d start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **least biased** news sources, 2. the **best free** ones, or 3. a **by-country** list.
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If you want **widely trusted, broad-coverage general news**, the most commonly recommended publishers are: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, fast, fact-focused reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong wire service, very reliable - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, clear explainer style - **Financial Times (FT)** — excellent for business, markets, and global affairs - **The New York Times** — strong general coverage and deep reporting - **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — best for business, politics, and markets - **The Economist** — great analysis and international perspective - **NPR News** — solid U.S. public-radio reporting, good context - **The Guardian** — broad coverage, especially strong on politics and world news - **PBS NewsHour** — measured, high-quality U.S. news coverage If you want the **safest default picks**, I’d start with: **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free news sources**, 2. the **least biased options**, or 3. the **best sources by country**.
Which general news publishers have the best coverage overall?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
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If you want the **best overall general news coverage**, I’d start with: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, broad, highly factual straight news 2. **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent wire coverage, very reliable and neutral 3. **BBC News** — strongest all-around international coverage for a mainstream audience 4. **Financial Times** — great global business, politics, and economics coverage 5. **The New York Times** — best for deep U.S. and global reporting, though more editorially distinctive 6. **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigative reporting **Best single pick:** **Reuters** **Best mix of breadth + readability:** **BBC News** **Best U.S.-focused overall:** **AP + NYT** If you want, I can also give you: - the **least biased** publishers, - the **best free news sources**, - or a **best news stack** of 3–5 outlets to follow.
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If you want **overall strong general news coverage**, these are usually the best bets: - **Reuters** — best for fast, clean, highly accurate straight reporting. - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent breadth and reliability, especially U.S. and world news. - **BBC News** — very strong international coverage and clear writing. - **Financial Times** — not just finance; very strong global business, politics, and world reporting. - **The New York Times** — broad, deep coverage; especially strong on U.S. politics, culture, and international news. - **The Wall Street Journal** — outstanding business/economy coverage, with solid general news too. - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigative reporting. If you want the **least-biased, most factual daily coverage**, start with **Reuters + AP**. If you want **deeper analysis and features**, add **BBC, FT, NYT, and WSJ**. If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **least bias** 2. **best international coverage** 3. **best U.S. coverage** 4. **best free options**
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If you want the **best overall general-news coverage**, these are the strongest picks: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, factual, low-bias straight reporting 2. **AP (Associated Press)** — excellent broad coverage and highly reliable basics 3. **BBC News** — strong international coverage and clear reporting 4. **The New York Times** — deep reporting, especially on U.S. and world affairs 5. **Financial Times** — great for politics, business, markets, and global context **Best combo for most people:** - **Reuters + AP + BBC News** That gives you the broadest, most dependable coverage with minimal spin. If you want, I can also rank them by **lowest bias**, **best world news**, or **best U.S. news**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best overall general-news coverage**, I’d usually point to: - **Reuters** — best for speed, neutrality, and breadth - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent straight news, very reliable - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and solid depth - **The New York Times** — strongest mix of reporting, analysis, and breaking news - **The Washington Post** — especially good for U.S. politics and investigative work - **Financial Times** — best if you want business/economics with top-tier journalism - **The Economist** — less “breaking news,” but very strong synthesis and context If you want a simple default stack: **Reuters + AP + BBC** for daily general news, then **NYT** or **WaPo** for deeper U.S. coverage. If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **most neutral** 2. **best for U.S. news** 3. **best for international news** 4. **best free sources**
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **best overall news coverage**, I’d start with these: 1. **Reuters** — best for fast, clean, low-drama straight news 2. **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent all-around reporting and verification 3. **BBC News** — strong global coverage and broad topic range 4. **Financial Times** — best for business, markets, geopolitics, and serious analysis 5. **The Economist** — strong explanation and context, especially on global affairs 6. **The New York Times** — very strong depth, especially U.S. + international features 7. **Wall Street Journal** — top-tier business, politics, and enterprise reporting 8. **NPR** — reliable, balanced coverage with a good audio/news mix ### Best “overall” combo If you want one simple stack: - **Reuters + AP + BBC** for daily news - Add **FT or WSJ** for business - Add **Economist** for analysis If you want, I can also rank them by **neutrality**, **depth**, or **best free options**.
What are the leading general news publishers in the US?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Leading general news publishers in the US include: - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **USA Today / Gannett** - **Associated Press (AP)** - **Reuters** - **CNN** - **Fox News** - **NBC News** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** If you want, I can also rank them by **reach**, **digital audience**, or **credibility**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Leading U.S. general news publishers/brands include: - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **The Wall Street Journal** - **USA Today** - **Associated Press (AP)** - **Reuters** - **CNN** - **NBC News** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** - **NPR** - **Politico** If you want, I can also break these down by **print/digital**, **broadcast**, or **most-read online**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading general news publishers in the U.S. include: - **The New York Times** — *The New York Times* - **The Washington Post** — *The Washington Post* - **USA Today / Gannett** — *USA Today* and many local papers - **The Wall Street Journal** — *The Wall Street Journal* - **CNN** — *CNN* - **NBC News** — *NBC News* - **ABC News** — *ABC News* - **CBS News** — *CBS News* - **Fox News Media** — *Fox News* - **Associated Press (AP)** — *AP News* Also very influential: - **Reuters** — *Reuters* - **Bloomberg** — *Bloomberg News* - **Politico** — *Politico* - **NPR** — *NPR News* If you want, I can also rank these by **digital audience**, **TV reach**, or **overall credibility/influence**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The leading general news publishers in the US include: - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **The Wall Street Journal** - **USA Today** - **Associated Press (AP)** - **Reuters** - **CNN** - **Fox News** - **NBC News** - **ABC News** - **CBS News** - **NPR** - **Bloomberg News** If you want, I can also rank them by **audience reach**, **credibility**, or **digital traffic**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the leading general news publishers in the US are: - **The New York Times Company** — *The New York Times* - **Gannett** — *USA Today* and many local news sites - **News Corp** — *The Wall Street Journal*, *New York Post* - **The Washington Post** - **CNN** (Warner Bros. Discovery) — *CNN.com* - **NBC News** (NBCUniversal) — *NBCNews.com* - **ABC News** (Disney) — *ABCNews.com* - **CBS News** (Paramount) — *CBSNews.com* - **Reuters** — US news coverage via *Reuters.com* - **Associated Press (AP)** — major wire service used by many outlets If you want, I can also rank them by **audience reach**, **trust**, or **digital traffic**.
Which general news publishers are best for breaking news?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For **breaking news**, the best general publishers are usually: 1. **Reuters** — fastest, very reliable, very little opinion 2. **Associated Press (AP News)** — excellent wire service, quick and accurate 3. **BBC News** — strong global coverage, fast alerts, good context 4. **Bloomberg News** — especially strong for markets, business, politics 5. **The New York Times** — not always the fastest, but very strong on major breaking stories 6. **CNN** / **Fox News** / **Sky News** — fast live coverage, but more opinion-heavy If you want the best overall combo, I’d start with: - **Reuters** - **AP News** - **BBC News** Best apps/sites: - **Reuters app** - **AP News app** - **BBC News app** If you want, I can also rank them by **speed**, **accuracy**, or **least bias**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For **breaking general news**, these are usually the best bets: - **Reuters** — fastest, most reliable wire-style breaking coverage - **Associated Press (AP)** — very strong on fast, straight reporting - **BBC News** — good live coverage and global reach - **The New York Times** — strong for major U.S./world events, though not always the fastest - **CNN** — good for live breaking-news video and developing stories - **BBC News / Reuters / AP** are the safest “first checks” for accuracy If you want the **single best overall for breaking news**, I’d pick **Reuters**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free sources**, 2. **best app/site for live alerts**, or 3. **best publishers by region**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For **breaking news**, these general publishers are usually the strongest: - **Reuters** — fast, straightforward, very reliable - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for confirmed, neutral breaking updates - **BBC News** — strong global coverage - **CNN** — very fast for U.S. and world breaking news - **The New York Times** — strong for follow-up and context, a bit less instant than Reuters/AP - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially good for business/markets breaking news - **NBC News / CBS News / ABC News** — solid U.S. breaking coverage If you want the best **speed + accuracy combo**, start with: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **BBC News** If you want, I can also give you the best **breaking-news apps/newsletters** or a **U.S.-only** list.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For **breaking news**, the most reliable general publishers are: 1. **Reuters** — probably the best all-around for speed + accuracy 2. **The Associated Press (AP)** — very fast, straight reporting 3. **BBC News** — strong global coverage, especially outside the U.S. 4. **Bloomberg** — excellent for markets/business breaking news 5. **CNN** / **The New York Times** / **The Washington Post** — good, but usually more analysis and slower than Reuters/AP **Best practical combo:** - **Reuters** + **AP** for fast, verified headlines - **BBC News** for international context - **Bloomberg** if you care about business/finance If you want, I can also give you the **best breaking-news apps/sites** or a **ranked list by region** (U.S., UK, global).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For **breaking news**, the best general news publishers are usually: - **Reuters** — fastest, cleanest, very reliable. - **The Associated Press (AP)** — excellent for quick, factual updates. - **Bloomberg** — especially strong for finance/business breaking news. - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and fast updates. - **The New York Times** — very good, but usually a bit less “instant” than Reuters/AP. - **CNN** and **Sky News** — good for live breaking coverage and alerts. If you want the **best overall combo for speed + accuracy**, I’d start with: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP News** 3. **BBC News** If you want, I can also rank them by **speed**, **accuracy**, or **best mobile app**.
What are the best digital news publishers to follow?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A solid “best” mix is: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-bias breaking news - **Associated Press (AP)** — similarly reliable, concise, global coverage - **Financial Times (FT)** — excellent for business, markets, and geopolitics - **The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)** — strong business, markets, and U.S. politics coverage - **The New York Times (NYT)** — deep reporting, features, and broad national/international coverage - **The Economist** — sharp analysis and big-picture global context - **BBC News** — dependable international coverage and live updates - **The Guardian** — strong long-form journalism and global perspective If you want a simple stack, I’d follow: **Reuters + AP + FT + NYT + The Economist**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** news publishers, 2. the **least biased** ones, or 3. a **news-following setup** by topic (business, tech, politics, world).
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best digital news publishers to follow, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-spin global breaking news - **Associated Press (AP News)** — very reliable, broad coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and explainer pieces - **The New York Times** — deep reporting, politics, culture, business - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and investigations - **Financial Times** — excellent for business, markets, and global economy - **The Economist** — sharp analysis and international affairs - **The Guardian** — good for world news, climate, and opinion - **Bloomberg** — top-tier business, finance, and markets reporting - **NPR** — balanced, accessible reporting and audio-friendly coverage If you want a simple “best mix,” I’d start with: **Reuters + AP + BBC + New York Times + Financial Times** If you tell me your interests (politics, business, tech, world news, etc.), I can give you a tighter shortlist.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best digital news publishers to follow, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight, low-spin reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent general wire news - **Financial Times** — top-tier business, markets, and global economics - **Bloomberg** — best for finance, markets, and corporate news - **The New York Times** — strong general news, politics, features - **The Wall Street Journal** — business, markets, and U.S. politics - **The Economist** — smart global analysis and opinion - **Axios** — quick, skimmable political and business updates - **Semafor** — useful if you want a newer, media-industry-aware take - **Politico** — especially good for U.S. politics and policy If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** ones, 2. the **best unbiased** ones, or 3. a **top 10 by topic** list.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best digital news publishers to follow, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — Best for fast, straight, reliable breaking news. - **The Associated Press (AP News)** — Excellent for factual, concise coverage. - **The New York Times** — Strong all-around reporting, features, and investigations. - **The Wall Street Journal** — Best for business, markets, and politics. - **Financial Times** — Great for global business and economics. - **The Washington Post** — Strong U.S. politics and investigative journalism. - **BBC News** — Solid international coverage and broad perspective. - **The Guardian** — Good for global news, opinion, and culture. - **NPR** — Clear, trustworthy reporting with strong audio/podcast content. - **Axios** — Very good for quick, skimmable political and business updates. - **Bloomberg** — Best for markets, finance, and business news. - **The Verge** — One of the best for tech and digital culture. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** news sites, 2. the **best unbiased** ones, or 3. the **best apps/newsletters** to follow them easily.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best digital news publishers to follow, depending on what you want: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight-breaking news with minimal spin - **Associated Press (AP News)** — excellent general news coverage, very reliable - **BBC News** — strong international coverage and context - **The New York Times** — top-tier U.S. and global reporting, features, and analysis - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and government - **Financial Times** — best for business, markets, and global economics - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business, finance, and U.S. news - **The Economist** — sharp weekly analysis on world affairs and policy - **Bloomberg** — great for business, markets, tech, and finance - **The Guardian** — broad coverage with strong global and investigative reporting - **Axios** — quick, digestible summaries for politics, business, and tech - **Semafor** — newer, useful for politics and media industry coverage If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** ones, 2. the **best for politics/business/tech**, or 3. a **short “must-follow” list of 5**.
Which general news publishers have the best reputation?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
“Best reputation” usually means: strong fact-checking, clear corrections, editorial standards, and relatively low sensationalism. Commonly well-regarded general news publishers: - **Reuters** - **Associated Press (AP)** - **BBC News** - **The Wall Street Journal** (news reporting, especially business/world) - **Financial Times** - **The New York Times** - **The Economist** - **NPR** - **The Washington Post** If you want the safest “straight news” picks, I’d start with: - **Reuters** - **AP** - **BBC News** Best practice: compare coverage across 2–3 outlets, especially on political or controversial topics.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **generally well-regarded, low-drama, high-fact-check** news brands, the usual top picks are: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, fast, minimally opinionated reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — very strong for neutral, broad news coverage - **BBC News** — strong international coverage, though sometimes UK-centered - **Agence France-Presse (AFP)** — solid global wire service, especially outside the U.S. - **The Economist** — very reputable for analysis and long-form coverage, but more editorial voice than Reuters/AP - **Financial Times** — best for business/economics; generally highly trusted If you want the **most neutral/least opinionated**, start with: 1. **Reuters** 2. **AP** 3. **AFP** If you want, I can also give you a **ranking by country** or a **“best for unbiased coverage” list**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **general news publishers with strong reputations for accuracy and standards**, these are commonly regarded as top-tier: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, fact-based reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — widely trusted, especially for breaking news - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and broad credibility - **Financial Times** — very strong reporting, especially business and world news - **The New York Times** — influential, high-quality reporting, though more opinionated than wire services - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong newsroom; especially good on business and politics - **The Economist** — highly respected for analysis and international coverage - **NPR** — generally trusted, especially for U.S. news and public-interest reporting If you want the **least biased / most neutral** feel, start with **Reuters, AP, and BBC**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the most trusted U.S. news outlets**, or 2. **a ranking by neutrality vs depth**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few general-news publishers with consistently strong reputations for accuracy and editorial standards are: - **Reuters** — probably the gold standard for straight reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — widely trusted, fast, and factual - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and broad credibility - **NPR** — good reporting, especially in the U.S. - **Financial Times** — excellent for business and world news - **The Economist** — high-quality analysis, though more opinionated than wire services If you want the **least-biased, most fact-focused** picks, start with **Reuters** and **AP**. If you want, I can also rank them by **bias**, **depth**, or **best for U.S./world news**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For broad, generally reliable news, these are usually among the best-regarded: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, fast, low-opinion reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong wire-service accuracy and neutrality - **BBC News** — broad international coverage; generally trusted, though some bias complaints exist - **NPR** — strong U.S. reporting with solid editorial standards - **Financial Times** — especially good for business, economics, and global news - **The Economist** — strong analysis; more opinionated than Reuters/AP - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent reporting, especially business; editorial page is clearly opinionated - **The New York Times** / **The Washington Post** — high-quality reporting, but more perceived editorial lean than Reuters/AP If you want the safest “default” picks, start with **Reuters, AP, and BBC News**.
What are the top-rated general news publishers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top-rated general news publishers (broad reputation, quality, and reach) include: - **Reuters** — best for fast, factual, nonpartisan reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — highly trusted wire service for straight news - **BBC News** — strong international coverage - **The New York Times** — major U.S. newspaper with deep reporting - **The Washington Post** — excellent U.S. politics and investigative journalism - **The Wall Street Journal** — top-tier business and national news - **Financial Times** — especially strong for business, markets, and global affairs - **NPR News** — reliable, accessible public radio/news coverage - **The Economist** — best for global analysis and commentary - **CNN** / **Bloomberg News** — strong breaking news; Bloomberg is especially good for business If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **most objective**, 2. **best for politics**, 3. **best for business**, or 4. **best free news sources**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely respected **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight news - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable wire service - **BBC News** — strong global coverage - **The New York Times** — broad coverage + reporting depth - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigations - **The Wall Street Journal** — top for business and politics - **NPR** — solid, balanced reporting and audio - **The Guardian** — major international coverage - **Financial Times** — excellent business/economics coverage - **Bloomberg News** — strong market and business news If you want, I can also rank them by **bias level, reliability, or best for U.S. vs international news**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most highly rated **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight, unbiased reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — fast, widely trusted wire service - **BBC News** — strong global coverage - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and analysis - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business and political coverage - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics - **The Guardian** — broad international coverage - **NPR News** — clear, balanced, and accessible - **Bloomberg News** — great for markets and business, plus general news - **The Financial Times** — top-tier global business and political news If you want, I can also rank them by **bias neutrality**, **global coverage**, or **best free options**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most widely respected **general news publishers**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong wire service, very reliable - **BBC News** — broad international coverage - **The New York Times** — strong overall coverage and depth - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent business and general news - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and national reporting - **The Guardian** — solid international and U.K. coverage - **Financial Times** — especially good for business/economics - **NPR** — dependable, balanced reporting in audio and text - **Bloomberg News** — top-tier business and market news If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **least biased**, 2. **best for world news**, or 3. **best free sources**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most consistently top-rated **general news publishers** are: - **Reuters** — excellent for fast, factual, low-drama reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — strong straight-news coverage, widely syndicated - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, very reliable on global affairs - **The New York Times** — deep reporting and strong analysis - **The Washington Post** — especially good on U.S. politics and investigations - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business, markets, and general news - **NPR News** — clear, balanced, and easy to follow - **The Economist** — high-quality global news and analysis (more magazine-style) If you want the **most neutral/straight news**, start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want **deeper analysis**, add **NYT, WSJ, or The Economist**.
Which general news publishers cover politics, business, and culture well?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some strong general-news publishers for **politics, business, and culture**: - **Reuters** — excellent straight-news reporting; very strong on politics and business. - **Associated Press (AP)** — fast, reliable, broad coverage with minimal bias. - **BBC News** — strong international politics/culture coverage and good explainer journalism. - **The New York Times** — deep politics, culture, and broad national/international reporting. - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially strong on business; also solid politics coverage. - **Financial Times** — best if you want business/economics plus high-quality global politics. - **The Economist** — strong analysis across politics, business, and culture. - **Bloomberg** — best for business and markets, with increasingly good politics coverage. - **NPR** — good for U.S. politics and culture, with a balanced tone. - **The Guardian** — strong politics and culture, with a global perspective. If you want, I can also narrow this down into: 1. **least biased**, 2. **best for business**, or 3. **best overall paid subscriptions**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A few strong **general news publishers** that cover **politics, business, and culture** well: - **The New York Times** — best overall breadth; strong politics, business, arts/culture. - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and policy. - **The Wall Street Journal** — excellent business/economy coverage, with solid politics. - **The Atlantic** — great long-form politics, ideas, and culture. - **Reuters** — very reliable, fast, and balanced on breaking news; less culture-heavy. - **AP News** — straight news, broad coverage, very useful for a neutral baseline. - **The Guardian** — strong politics and culture, especially international perspective. - **Financial Times** — top-tier business and global affairs, with decent politics and culture. If you want the **best mix overall**, I’d start with: **NYT + Reuters + WSJ**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some strong general news publishers for **politics, business, and culture**: - **Reuters** — best for fast, neutral, high-quality hard news - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable, broad coverage, good straight reporting - **Financial Times** — excellent for business/economics, strong politics too - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business and politics, solid culture coverage - **The New York Times** — very strong politics and culture, broad overall coverage - **The Washington Post** — especially good on U.S. politics and investigative reporting - **The Economist** — great analysis across politics, business, and global culture - **Bloomberg** — top-tier business news, also strong politics and markets - **BBC News** — broad, balanced international coverage - **The Guardian** — strong politics and culture, good long-form reporting If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **most neutral** 2. **best for politics** 3. **best for business** 4. **best for culture**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few general news publishers that consistently cover **politics, business, and culture** well: - **The New York Times** — strongest all-around daily coverage; especially politics and culture. - **The Washington Post** — excellent politics and government reporting. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business/markets, with solid politics and opinion. - **Reuters** — very reliable, straight-news coverage across all three. - **Associated Press (AP)** — clean, factual, broad coverage; great for quick updates. - **The Economist** — strong on politics and business, with smart cultural analysis. - **Financial Times** — elite business coverage, plus strong global politics and culture. - **The Atlantic** — more magazine-style, but excellent long-form on politics and culture. - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, especially good for politics and culture context. If you want just **3 subscriptions**, I’d pick: 1. **Reuters** for neutral daily news 2. **The New York Times** for breadth and culture 3. **Wall Street Journal** for business and politics If you want, I can also give you a **“best by category” list** or **free alternatives**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some strong general news publishers that consistently cover **politics, business, and culture** well: - **The New York Times** — broad, deep reporting; especially strong on politics and culture. - **The Washington Post** — excellent for U.S. politics and policy. - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for business, markets, and economic news; politics coverage is strong too. - **Reuters** — very good straight-news coverage across all three, with low bias and high speed. - **Associated Press (AP)** — solid, concise general coverage; great for quick, reliable updates. - **The Guardian** — strong on politics and culture, with good international perspective. - **Bloomberg** — outstanding on business and finance; also covers politics and culture well. - **BBC News** — broad global coverage with good balance across politics, business, and culture. - **Financial Times** — top-tier business coverage, plus solid politics and cultural reporting. - **The Economist** — especially good if you want analysis across politics, business, and culture. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best ones by category** (politics vs business vs culture), or 2. **the least biased/most objective options**.
What are the best all-around general news publishers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best all-around general news publishers: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama reporting - **Associated Press (AP News)** — strong wire coverage, very reliable - **BBC News** — broad international coverage, solid explainers - **Financial Times** — excellent on business, markets, and global affairs - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong for business and U.S. political/news coverage - **The New York Times** — very broad coverage, deep reporting - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and government reporting - **NPR** — good for balanced daily news and context - **The Economist** — best for global analysis and long-form perspective If you want the safest “general news” starter set, use: **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want, I can also rank them by **bias/neutrality**, **depth**, or **best apps/sites**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the best all-around general news publishers: - **Reuters** — best for fast, straight-ahead wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — highly reliable, broad coverage - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and explainers - **The New York Times** — deep reporting, strong domestic/international coverage - **The Washington Post** — especially strong on U.S. politics and investigations - **Financial Times** — excellent for business, markets, and global affairs - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong business and political coverage - **NPR** — good balanced audio/text reporting - **The Guardian** — broad coverage with a global perspective If you want the most neutral “baseline” combo, I’d start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want, I can also give you: - the **most objective sources** - the **best U.S. news sources** - the **best international news sources** - or a **low-paywall / free** shortlist.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the best all-around general news publishers are: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-drama wire reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — similar to Reuters; very solid for U.S. and world news - **BBC News** — excellent global coverage, strong explainers, good live updates - **The New York Times** — broad, high-quality reporting and features - **The Wall Street Journal** — especially strong on business, politics, and markets - **Financial Times** — best if you want a global/business-heavy view - **The Guardian** — strong international coverage and accessible reporting - **NPR News** — good for clear, balanced audio/text coverage in the U.S. - **Al Jazeera English** — very strong international and Middle East coverage If you want the **most neutral day-to-day feed**, start with **Reuters + AP + BBC News**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best 5 overall**, 2. **best by country/region**, or 3. **best news apps/newsletters**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **best all-around general news publishers**, these are strong, widely trusted picks: - **Reuters** — best for straight, fast, low-bias reporting - **Associated Press (AP)** — excellent wire service; very reliable basics - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and good depth - **The New York Times** — best for broad coverage + analysis - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong for business, politics, and world news - **NPR News** — clear, balanced, very readable/listenable - **Financial Times** — top-tier global business/economy coverage - **The Economist** — excellent weekly roundup and analysis - **The Guardian** — strong international reporting and features If you want the **most neutral/straight news**, start with **Reuters, AP, and BBC News**. If you want **general news plus analysis**, add **NYT, WSJ, and The Economist**. If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. least biased 2. best for world news 3. best for US news 4. best free options
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Best all-around general news publishers: - **Reuters** — fastest, cleanest wire-style reporting; excellent for breaking news. - **Associated Press (AP)** — very reliable, broad U.S./world coverage, low bias. - **BBC News** — strong global coverage and context, especially international affairs. - **The New York Times** — deep reporting, major U.S. and world coverage. - **The Washington Post** — strong U.S. politics and investigative reporting. - **The Guardian** — solid global coverage, especially international and culture. - **NPR News** — good for clear, balanced daily news and audio. - **Financial Times** — best if you also want business/economics with general news. If you want the safest “all-around” combo, I’d pick: **Reuters + AP + BBC News + NPR**. If you want, I can also give you the **best by category** (most unbiased, best international, best U.S., best app, best paywall-free).

All 72 prompts run for Newsweek

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Newsweek known for?
  • 2 What are Newsweek's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Newsweek? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Newsweek compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Newsweek?
  • 6 What is a typical general news publisher known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best general news publishers for business news? discovery
  • 2 What are the best general news publishers for political coverage? discovery
  • 3 Which general news publishers are best for international news? discovery
  • 4 What are the best general news publishers for culture and arts coverage? discovery
  • 5 Which general news publishers are best for sports news? discovery
  • 6 What are the best general news publishers for in-depth reporting? discovery
  • 7 Which general news publishers are best for daily news briefings? discovery
  • 8 What are the best general news publishers for email newsletters? discovery
  • 9 Which general news publishers are best for mobile reading? discovery
  • 10 What are the best general news publishers for weekend reading? discovery
  • 11 What are the best general news publishers for college students? discovery
  • 12 Which general news publishers are best for professionals? discovery
  • 13 What are the best general news publishers for families wanting balanced coverage? discovery
  • 14 Which general news publishers are best for unbiased reporting? discovery
  • 15 What are the best general news publishers for fast updates? discovery
  • 16 Which general news publishers are best for long-form journalism? discovery
  • 17 What are the best general news publishers for local and national news together? discovery
  • 18 Which general news publishers are best for opinion and analysis? discovery
  • 19 What are the best general news publishers for morning news reading? discovery
  • 20 Which general news publishers are best for real-time alerts? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to a major general news publisher? comparison
  • 22 Which general news publishers are better than other premium news sites? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to large subscription news publishers? comparison
  • 24 How do the top general news publishers compare for breaking news? comparison
  • 25 Which general news publishers are better for analysis versus speed? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to mainstream general news publishers? comparison
  • 27 Which general news publishers offer better value than expensive news subscriptions? comparison
  • 28 How do general news publishers compare for international coverage? comparison
  • 29 Which general news publishers are better for business readers than other news outlets? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to legacy news publishers? comparison
  • 31 How do I find a general news publisher with balanced coverage? problem
  • 32 How can I get reliable news from a general news publisher? problem
  • 33 How do I avoid sensational news and find a trustworthy general news publisher? problem
  • 34 How do I choose a general news publisher for both local and world news? problem
  • 35 How can I keep up with politics, business, and culture in one place? problem
  • 36 How do I find a news publisher with good fact-based reporting? problem
  • 37 How do I pick a general news publisher that is worth paying for? problem
  • 38 How can I get daily news without a lot of clickbait? problem
  • 39 How do I find a general news publisher with strong explainers? problem
  • 40 How do I choose a general news publisher for business professionals? problem
  • 41 How much does a general news publisher subscription usually cost? transactional
  • 42 Are there free general news publishers with good coverage? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest general news publisher subscription? transactional
  • 44 Which general news publishers have a free tier? transactional
  • 45 What do premium general news publisher subscriptions include? transactional
  • 46 Is a general news publisher subscription worth it? transactional
  • 47 Do general news publishers offer student discounts? transactional
  • 48 Which general news publishers have monthly subscription plans? transactional
  • 49 Which general news publishers have annual subscription deals? transactional
  • 50 Can I get a general news publisher subscription without a long contract? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best general news publishers right now?
  • 2 What are the top general news publishers for daily reporting?
  • 3 Which general news publishers are most trusted?
  • 4 What are the most popular general news publishers online?
  • 5 What are the best news publishers for national and world news?
  • 6 Which general news publishers are worth subscribing to?
  • 7 What are the most recommended general news publishers?
  • 8 Which general news publishers have the best coverage overall?
  • 9 What are the leading general news publishers in the US?
  • 10 Which general news publishers are best for breaking news?
  • 11 What are the best digital news publishers to follow?
  • 12 Which general news publishers have the best reputation?
  • 13 What are the top-rated general news publishers?
  • 14 Which general news publishers cover politics, business, and culture well?
  • 15 What are the best all-around general news publishers?