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One story. Many angles.

A wide-angle news outlet, built for clarity.

The Bias publishes original articles built from broad coverage of the same real‑world event—so you get the essential facts and major perspectives in one coherent read. We also show where coverage agrees, conflicts, or remains unclear, with traceable sourcing when you want to go deeper.

Wide-angle clarity
One coherent read.

A single article that covers the key facts and the major viewpoints—without you opening ten tabs.

Reporting on the reporting
See the difference.

We surface framing differences and highlight where accounts diverge, so uncertainty is explicit—not hidden.

Traceable confidence
News with receipts.

Key claims can be traced back to the reporting behind them, with a full source list available on every story.

Why it exists

Modern news forces a trade‑off: one outlet’s lens (fast, but partial) or endless outlet hopping (broad, but exhausting). That makes it hard to know what’s solid, what’s disputed, and how narratives differ.

The Bias is built for news‑literate, time‑poor readers who want understanding without guesswork—so they can decide for themselves with a wider view of the story.

Our story

We’re two brothers who read the news daily. Over time, we started feeling like we were often being handed a narrative rather than the fullest version of events — and that the “same story” could look completely different depending on where you read it.

We went looking for a way to get the bigger picture without spending an hour tab‑hopping. Lots of outlets claim to be unbiased, but we found trust doesn’t come from a promise — it comes from transparency: showing where reports agree, where they don’t, and letting readers trace claims back to the reporting behind them.

The original idea for The Bias came in September 2025. Since then, the product has grown far beyond what we first imagined — into a calmer, more premium way to read the news with clearer context, better traceability, and fewer hidden assumptions.


What you get in one read

The Rundown

At the top of every story we include a short, scannable brief — the fastest way to understand what happened before you decide whether you want to go deeper.

It’s written to be practical, not dramatic: the key development, why it matters, and the next thing to watch as the story evolves. If a crucial detail is still disputed or unconfirmed, we say so directly.

  • What happened — the headline event in plain language.
  • Why it matters — the stakes and immediate implications.
  • What to watch next — the next decision, update, or unknown that could change the story.

International outlook

The same event often looks different from abroad. Alongside local coverage, we pull in reporting from outlets outside the story’s home country to surface what other regions emphasise — and what they leave out.

Sometimes that means extra context (history, geography, domestic politics). Sometimes it’s a different priority (economic risk, security, humanitarian impact). We don’t treat any one lens as “the truth” — we show the range, so you can see the full picture.

  • Broader context that local reporting may assume you already know.
  • Different framing depending on the country’s interests and audience.
  • Useful contrasts when outlets interpret the same facts in different ways.

How we make each story

We treat each story like a wide‑angle lens: one event, many viewpoints. The goal is a calm, premium reading experience— with transparent sourcing when you want to inspect the details.

  1. Step 1 Collect broad coverage
    We gather reporting on the same real‑world event across a wide range of outlets and countries.
  2. Step 2 Compare claims and framing
    We map where accounts align, where they conflict, and which details carry the most supporting evidence.
  3. Step 3 Write an original article
    We publish a coherent narrative: key facts first, then the main perspectives and reporting differences.
  4. Step 4 Attach sources and traceability
    Every story includes a full source list, and important claims can be traced back to the reporting behind them.
Want to help shape The Bias?

We’re launching on iOS soon. If you’d like to beta test, share feedback, or partner on distribution, reach out via Instagram or email.