THE WAKE

What happened while you slept.

A daily news briefing. 22 sources cross-referenced. No spin, no sponsors, no tracking. Five minutes to read. Free.

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What you'll get, every 5:30 AM ET

One email. Eight sections. Built so you can skim it on the way out the door, or read every word over coffee.

The Lead The 1-2 stories that actually matter today, with enough context to know why.
Pre-Market Pulse S&P, Nasdaq, dollar, gold, oil, BTC — one line, before the bell.
World · America Cross-referenced across 22 sources. Framing notes whenever outlets disagree on the same event.
Money & Markets What moved overnight and why it matters to a normal person, not a trader.
Tech Signal AI, cyber, hardware, regulation. Color-tagged so you can skim past whatever you don't care about.
Watchlist 35+ ongoing crises tracked daily. Each gets one line. Status: escalating, updated, de-escalating, resolved.
The Clearing One cultural recommendation per day — a film, a book, a piece — tied to today's news. Something to step into instead of doomscrolling.
Notably Absent What the major outlets didn't cover today. Maximum three. The point of the section is the gap.

What you won't get

The Wake doesn't do this stuff.

  • Sponsored placements
  • Banner ads
  • Affiliate links
  • A paywall
  • Tracking pixels
  • Click-bait subjects
  • Open-rate guilt emails
  • Personality cult

If we ever stop earning your read, the unsubscribe link works in one click. No retention email. No "are you sure" page.

How it actually works

Every morning, an automated pipeline reads dozens of wire feeds, looks for the same story across multiple outlets, and writes a single neutral summary that names the disagreement when sources diverge. A second model does an editorial pass for accuracy and framing. Then it lands in your inbox at 5:30 AM ET.

It's automated — that's how we keep it free, daily, and personality-free. The byline is Garibaldi, which is to say, no byline.

Today's sources include: BBC World, BBC US/Canada, BBC Business, BBC Tech, NYT (World, US, Business, Tech, Science), NPR (World, US, Business, Science), Reuters, AP, Al Jazeera, The Guardian (World, US), CNBC, Ars Technica, Wired, TechCrunch, Hacker News, SEC EDGAR. Plus 5-10 secondary feeds depending on the news cycle.

Wake up informed.

Free your mind.

Read the facts. Color your own opinions. Every conclusion is breakable.