I seem to have ended up with a small, slightly improvised system for dealing with the news on my laptop. Not by design, more by irritation gradually hardening into habit.
It starts with Reuters. If you want to know what has actually happened, that’s where you go. A few paragraphs, no fuss, no attempt to make you feel anything in particular. Just the facts, a quote, and a sense of what’s solid and what isn’t yet. You read it, think “right”, and move on. It feels almost old-fashioned.
If it looks like it might turn into something, you wander over to Sky News. Same story, but now it’s being performed. Banners, live updates, presenters leaning forward as if that helps. And video. Always video. You click on something that ought to take 20 seconds to read and find yourself watching two people discuss a third person’s reaction to the thing you were trying to understand. You come away knowing a bit more, but having sat through quite a lot of nodding and the occasional urgent eyebrow.
It used to be that you could retreat to the BBC for a proper write-up. Sentences. Structure. Someone had clearly taken a breath before publishing. Now you click and half the time you’re handed a video instead, as if reading has quietly become optional. And somewhere on the page there will be “Most Popular”, which turns out to mean “what people clicked on”, not “what matters”. You go looking for something serious and end up being steered towards a story about a goose holding up traffic somewhere.
That’s all mildly irritating in the daytime. At three in the morning it becomes something else.
I have got into the habit of waking up, usually twice a night, and having a quick look at what the world has been doing. I come downstairs, quietly, like I’m checking on a strange noise in the garden. It used to be straightforward. A bit of Reuters, perhaps a glance at the BBC, and back to bed with the sense that nothing too dramatic had happened.
Now I am apparently expected to watch a video.
In an open plan house.
With minstrel galleries.
There is no such thing as “low volume” in a place like that. You tap play and it feels as though the whole building is helping the sound along. So you sit there in the half-light, watching subtitles, trying to work out what’s going on without announcing it to the rest of the household. It’s like trying to follow a football match by reading the crowd reactions.
And then, for variety, you click a link on Facebook. Looks interesting, plenty of comments, people clearly have views. You click through and land on a paywall from The Telegraph or The Times. Of course. You back out.
The comments, though, carry on regardless. Confident, detailed opinions about an article nobody has read and nobody intends to read. The headline has done the job. The rest is guesswork dressed up as certainty. Someone is furious about a detail that may not even be in there. Someone else agrees. Another drags in something unrelated from years ago. The article itself might as well not exist.
Occasionally someone will cite GB News as if that settles it, which tells you roughly where things are heading.
So you end up with a routine. Reuters when you actually want to know what’s going on. Sky if you feel like watching the fuss around it. The BBC once it has decided what to show you, or what everyone else has already clicked on. The rest, when you can be bothered.
It’s less like following the news and more like keeping an eye on a workshop where one person is shouting, one is checking, one is writing it up later, and a crowd outside is arguing about instructions they haven’t read.
And all I really wanted was to know what had happened, quietly, without waking the house.










