What You Get Every Morning
The Parallax is a free daily digest that identifies the biggest news stories of the day and shows you how outlets across the political spectrum report on each one. Instead of reading five different websites to understand the full picture, you get it in one email — typically a 5-minute read, with an audio version if you'd rather listen.
For each major story, you'll see a neutral summary followed by source-by-source coverage: what each outlet reports, what facts they lead with, and what they include or leave out. We use neutral language throughout — we tell you what each outlet says, never how you should interpret it.
How It Works
15 Sources, Monitored Daily
Each morning we pull the latest from news outlets spanning the full political spectrum — left, center, and right — to ensure no perspective is missing.
Same Story, Identified Automatically
When multiple outlets cover the same event, our system clusters them together — so you can compare apples to apples.
Coverage Compared, Not Judged
We report what each outlet says using neutral language. We never label sources as "left" or "right" in the digest — you see the coverage and draw your own conclusions.
Delivered to Your Inbox (and Ears)
The full digest arrives by email each morning. Prefer to listen? There's an audio edition you can play on your commute.
What It Looks Like
Here's a simplified example of how The Parallax covers a single story. The real digest includes 3–5 stories like this, plus quick hits.
Congress Passes Infrastructure Spending Bill
The Senate approved a $200 billion infrastructure package on a 64–36 vote, with 12 Republicans joining all Democrats. The bill focuses on roads, bridges, and broadband expansion.
How it's being covered:
Same event. Four outlets. Four different facts leading the story. That's the value of comparing news coverage — and it's what The Parallax delivers every day.
See It in Action — Recent Editions
See Today's Coverage Comparison
Join readers who start their morning with the full picture.
Our Sources
We deliberately curate a wide range of outlets to ensure you see reporting from across the spectrum. These 15 sources form the foundation of every daily digest:
Every story in the digest links directly to the original source articles, so you can always dig deeper.
Why Compare News Coverage?
Most people get their news from one or two sources. The problem isn't that those sources are wrong — it's that every outlet makes choices about which facts to highlight, which quotes to feature, and how to frame events. Over time, reading a single source gives you an accurate but incomplete picture.
Comparing coverage reveals patterns you can't see from a single source. One outlet might lead with economic impact while another leads with the political reaction. One might quote government officials while another quotes affected citizens. Neither is lying — but each is telling a different version of the same story.
The Parallax makes this comparison effortless. Instead of opening ten browser tabs every morning, you get the key perspectives in one place, in five minutes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The Parallax free?
Yes. The daily email digest and audio edition are completely free.
Does The Parallax label outlets as left or right?
No. We report what each outlet says using neutral language. We don't label, score, or rate outlets by political lean in the digest. We believe you're capable of recognizing the differences yourself.
How is this different from AllSides or Ground News?
Those are great tools for browsing coverage on demand. The Parallax is different — it's a curated daily digest that comes to you. We select the most important stories, synthesize the coverage, and deliver a complete picture in one email. No app to open, no browsing required.
Is AI involved?
Yes. We use AI to identify story clusters and synthesize coverage from our 15 sources, followed by an automated copy-editing layer that checks for neutrality and accuracy. The source selection and editorial principles are human decisions.
How often is it published?
Every morning, seven days a week. Each edition covers the previous 24 hours of news.