True Thirty
truethirty.substack.comIf you are looking for a nonpartisan news source about the biggest stories of today, True Thirty is your new home for news, opinion, and entertainment. Our journalists and writers include conservatives, libertarians, and liberals alike. And if a bias is ever detected in our storytelling, it’s only because our homework has led us there. That much you can count on. Working independently, our experienced reporters and creative strategists uncover newsworthy stories about your industry and your brand. These narratives steer your creative strategy through video, editorial, social, PR, thought leadership, and media. Our approach to news today is “slow” news, or what we’re calling “slow journalism.” Slow journalism means taking the time to decide what is covered, why, when, and how. To treat issues of the day with the deference and deliberation they deserve, and to give ourselves time to figure out just which issues those are. “Slow” journalism lends itself to being more wholly baked, more deliberate, and therefore, is potentially more thoughtful and error free. And the pace might just make one less ‘anxious,’ leaving fear and anger further back in the line of responses to what’s going on in our world and how we come to know it. As media executives, writers, and journalists, we understand that historical engagement has always been about an either/or narrative, even when the world is really a place of also/and. And it’s this differentiation that separates us from the ever growing partisan reporting of our time.
Read moreIf you are looking for a nonpartisan news source about the biggest stories of today, True Thirty is your new home for news, opinion, and entertainment. Our journalists and writers include conservatives, libertarians, and liberals alike. And if a bias is ever detected in our storytelling, it’s only because our homework has led us there. That much you can count on. Working independently, our experienced reporters and creative strategists uncover newsworthy stories about your industry and your brand. These narratives steer your creative strategy through video, editorial, social, PR, thought leadership, and media. Our approach to news today is “slow” news, or what we’re calling “slow journalism.” Slow journalism means taking the time to decide what is covered, why, when, and how. To treat issues of the day with the deference and deliberation they deserve, and to give ourselves time to figure out just which issues those are. “Slow” journalism lends itself to being more wholly baked, more deliberate, and therefore, is potentially more thoughtful and error free. And the pace might just make one less ‘anxious,’ leaving fear and anger further back in the line of responses to what’s going on in our world and how we come to know it. As media executives, writers, and journalists, we understand that historical engagement has always been about an either/or narrative, even when the world is really a place of also/and. And it’s this differentiation that separates us from the ever growing partisan reporting of our time.
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