Daily Briefing
3I/ATLAS trajectory; Underwater exoskeleton; parasocial enters the lexicon

14 Articles •
Jeffries Campaign Tied to 2013 Epstein Fundraising Pitch
C 20%
Right 80%
What happened: A 2013 email shows a Democratic fundraising firm representing then-freshman Rep. Hakeem Jeffries invited convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to a high-dollar fundraiser with President Obama, offering a chance to "get to know" Jeffries. House Oversight Chair James Comer released the document this week during debate on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, accusing Jeffries' campaign of soliciting money from Epstein, though no evidence shows Epstein donated or attended.
Why it matters: The disclosure raises ethical questions about political fundraising and fuels partisan battles over transparency, as Republicans accuse Democrats of selectively leaking documents while Democrats demand full release of all Epstein files. The House passed bipartisan legislation requiring the Department of Justice to publicly release all investigative files related to Epstein's sex-trafficking operation, affecting public trust and survivors seeking accountability.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
93% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Scientists Refine Path of Interstellar Comet by Tenfold
L 17%
Center 67%
R 16%
What happened: ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter observed interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from Mars orbit between October 1-7, improving trajectory predictions by tenfold. The spacecraft captured images from 29 million kilometers away during the comet's Mars flyby, marking the first accepted astrometric submission from a planetary orbiter to the Minor Planet Center.
Why it matters: The breakthrough demonstrates techniques useful for tracking potentially hazardous asteroids approaching Earth, providing early warning capabilities. The rare interstellar visitor, discovered July 1 and approaching closest to Earth on December 19 at 270 million kilometers, offers scientists unprecedented data about materials from another star system.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Nestlé Adds Sugar to African Baby Cereals While European Products Have None
Left 34%
Center 33%
Right 33%
What happened: Yesterday, an investigation revealed over 90% of Nestlé's Cerelac baby cereals sold across 20+ African countries contain added sugar—averaging six grams per serving—while identical European products have none. The analysis found two-thirds of African products failed to disclose added sugar on packaging, and most sugar-free variants were European imports not intended for African markets.
Why it matters: WHO warns early sugar exposure creates lasting preferences for sweetened foods and increases obesity risk, a critical concern as African childhood obesity has nearly doubled since 1990. If you're feeding infants Cerelac in Africa, they may be consuming 1.5 sugar cubes per serving despite WHO guidance that foods for children under three should contain no added sugar.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

9 Articles •
World's First Underwater Exoskeleton Cuts Air Use by 23%
Center 100%
What happened: Peking University's Professor Wang Qining led a team that developed the world's first portable bilateral cable-driven underwater knee exoskeleton, which assists divers during flutter kicks. Tests with six experienced divers showed air consumption decreased by 22.7%, quadriceps activation dropped by 20.9%, and calf activation reduced by 20.6% compared to diving without the device.
Why it matters: This breakthrough could extend dive duration and improve safety by significantly lowering physical burden and oxygen consumption during underwater operations. The technology has potential applications in marine research, underwater construction, and professional diver training, while also providing insights into human underwater biomechanics and movement optimization.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

106 Articles •
Cambridge Dictionary Names 'Parasocial' Its Word of 2025
Left 30%
Center 64%
6%
What happened: Cambridge Dictionary selected 'parasocial' as its 2025 Word of the Year, describing one-sided emotional connections people form with celebrities, influencers, or AI they don't personally know. The 1956 academic term went mainstream this year as dictionary searches spiked amid social media culture and concerns about AI chatbot relationships.
Why it matters: The rise of parasocial relationships has redefined how you form connections online, with psychologists warning that intense one-sided bonds with influencers or AI chatbots can become unhealthy. Millions now engage in these relationships through social media and AI companions like ChatGPT, treating them as confidants despite the emotional risks of completely one-sided connections.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
61% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
3I/ATLAS trajectory; Underwater exoskeleton; parasocial enters the lexicon


14 Articles •
Jeffries Campaign Tied to 2013 Epstein Fundraising Pitch
C 20%
Right 80%
What happened: A 2013 email shows a Democratic fundraising firm representing then-freshman Rep. Hakeem Jeffries invited convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to a high-dollar fundraiser with President Obama, offering a chance to "get to know" Jeffries. House Oversight Chair James Comer released the document this week during debate on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, accusing Jeffries' campaign of soliciting money from Epstein, though no evidence shows Epstein donated or attended.
Why it matters: The disclosure raises ethical questions about political fundraising and fuels partisan battles over transparency, as Republicans accuse Democrats of selectively leaking documents while Democrats demand full release of all Epstein files. The House passed bipartisan legislation requiring the Department of Justice to publicly release all investigative files related to Epstein's sex-trafficking operation, affecting public trust and survivors seeking accountability.
Blindspot: No Coverage from Left Sources
93% of sources are Original Reporting

16 Articles •
Scientists Refine Path of Interstellar Comet by Tenfold
L 17%
Center 67%
R 16%
What happened: ESA's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter observed interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS from Mars orbit between October 1-7, improving trajectory predictions by tenfold. The spacecraft captured images from 29 million kilometers away during the comet's Mars flyby, marking the first accepted astrometric submission from a planetary orbiter to the Minor Planet Center.
Why it matters: The breakthrough demonstrates techniques useful for tracking potentially hazardous asteroids approaching Earth, providing early warning capabilities. The rare interstellar visitor, discovered July 1 and approaching closest to Earth on December 19 at 270 million kilometers, offers scientists unprecedented data about materials from another star system.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

17 Articles •
Nestlé Adds Sugar to African Baby Cereals While European Products Have None
Left 34%
Center 33%
Right 33%
What happened: Yesterday, an investigation revealed over 90% of Nestlé's Cerelac baby cereals sold across 20+ African countries contain added sugar—averaging six grams per serving—while identical European products have none. The analysis found two-thirds of African products failed to disclose added sugar on packaging, and most sugar-free variants were European imports not intended for African markets.
Why it matters: WHO warns early sugar exposure creates lasting preferences for sweetened foods and increases obesity risk, a critical concern as African childhood obesity has nearly doubled since 1990. If you're feeding infants Cerelac in Africa, they may be consuming 1.5 sugar cubes per serving despite WHO guidance that foods for children under three should contain no added sugar.
94% of sources are Original Reporting

9 Articles •
World's First Underwater Exoskeleton Cuts Air Use by 23%
Center 100%
What happened: Peking University's Professor Wang Qining led a team that developed the world's first portable bilateral cable-driven underwater knee exoskeleton, which assists divers during flutter kicks. Tests with six experienced divers showed air consumption decreased by 22.7%, quadriceps activation dropped by 20.9%, and calf activation reduced by 20.6% compared to diving without the device.
Why it matters: This breakthrough could extend dive duration and improve safety by significantly lowering physical burden and oxygen consumption during underwater operations. The technology has potential applications in marine research, underwater construction, and professional diver training, while also providing insights into human underwater biomechanics and movement optimization.
100% of sources are Original Reporting

106 Articles •
Cambridge Dictionary Names 'Parasocial' Its Word of 2025
Left 30%
Center 64%
6%
What happened: Cambridge Dictionary selected 'parasocial' as its 2025 Word of the Year, describing one-sided emotional connections people form with celebrities, influencers, or AI they don't personally know. The 1956 academic term went mainstream this year as dictionary searches spiked amid social media culture and concerns about AI chatbot relationships.
Why it matters: The rise of parasocial relationships has redefined how you form connections online, with psychologists warning that intense one-sided bonds with influencers or AI chatbots can become unhealthy. Millions now engage in these relationships through social media and AI companions like ChatGPT, treating them as confidants despite the emotional risks of completely one-sided connections.
Blindspot: Low Coverage from Right Sources
61% of sources are Original Reporting