You phrased it like you're clarifying something, but parent is saying the opposite of what you are: if a news article will stay interesting, it's history, even if it's been published today.
I only realized in the past year or so that much news isn’t that helpful to consume. And this from somebody who gets most news from a print Economist weekly. On reflection, many stories go like “here are some things that happened, it’s about the same thing that’s been happening in this story for five months, it’s not yet clear how important recent developments are”.
Unfortunately, many conflicts fall under this umbrella.
Maybe there is some value to repeatedly pushing these things to the front of my consciousness —- rather than, say, checking in every few months —- but I can’t see what it is.
That sounds very similar to Ezra Pound's "Literature is news that stays news."
I prefer Phil Graham's "News is the first draft of History":
> So let us today drudge on about our inescapably impossible task of providing every week a first rough draft of history that will never really be completed about a world we can never really understand
I have a sudden urge to experiment with replacing all the news sources and journals that I regularly browse online with a single, finite, regular, curated issue.
I imagine this would prevent me from going down pointless rabbit holes, would free my mind from the shackles of checking news at every break in whatever I'm doing, and make it easier to resist the hell of refreshing.
> I have a sudden urge to experiment with replacing all the news sources and journals that I regularly browse online with a single, finite, regular, curated issue.
I miss paper magazines. Turns out, they still sell them! I usually only encounter them while waiting around at airports, to have something to read while I'm offline during the flight. Maybe I should get a subscription or two...
I realized some time ago that weekly, biweekly, or semiweekly publications were likely the best way to consume the news, in order to dissociate the signal from the noise. Unfortunately, there seems to be a dearth of publications that provide this.
Even reading the weekend editions of various papers, there's a focus on providing the latest information over contextualizing current events within a broader timeslice than a few days at a time.
I get the weekly print version of the economist, although it’s only slightly delayed gratification. Covers all the stories of the week fairly thoroughly imo
It boggles my mind a little bit to realize that there was a period in my life when, barring really earth shattering news, I basically learned what noteworthy had happened the previous week when I got my issue of Time Magazine—possibly augmented by the network evening news if I got home in time and wasn’t traveling.
I really liked subscribing to the Economist. These days I unfortunately cannot in good conscience take the time to read through it every week. This is where I hope Delayed Gratification can be a substitute.
There's something to be said for getting news from a source that isn't just trying to maximize eyeballs by optimizing/tweaking headlines and clicks (click optimization), but I'm not sure you're going to get anything much less biased.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 60.5 ms ] threadUnfortunately, many conflicts fall under this umbrella.
Maybe there is some value to repeatedly pushing these things to the front of my consciousness —- rather than, say, checking in every few months —- but I can’t see what it is.
I prefer Phil Graham's "News is the first draft of History":
> So let us today drudge on about our inescapably impossible task of providing every week a first rough draft of history that will never really be completed about a world we can never really understand
I have a sudden urge to experiment with replacing all the news sources and journals that I regularly browse online with a single, finite, regular, curated issue.
I imagine this would prevent me from going down pointless rabbit holes, would free my mind from the shackles of checking news at every break in whatever I'm doing, and make it easier to resist the hell of refreshing.
Maybe get out of the house.
Even reading the weekend editions of various papers, there's a focus on providing the latest information over contextualizing current events within a broader timeslice than a few days at a time.