About
News is written to be read.
Not understood.
Headlines are optimised for anxiety. Analysis is dressed as fact. Spin is so embedded in coverage that it’s become invisible — not a distortion of the news, just the texture of it.
Nuff exists because knowing what’s actually happening — and whether it affects you — shouldn’t require a media studies degree or forty minutes of cross-referencing.
Every story goes through the same process. Strip the noise. Identify who’s saying what, and why. Separate what’s true from what’s framed. Then ask the only question that actually matters to most people:
Do I need to care about this?
The answer is usually no. And that’s the point.
Three principles drive every response.
Facts first
What actually happened, separated from what people are saying about it. These are different things and most coverage conflates them.
Unspin everything
Every public statement has a motive. Every framing is a choice. Naming those choices isn’t cynicism — it’s the baseline for understanding anything.
Personal relevance
Most news doesn’t affect most people most of the time. Being honest about that isn’t dismissive — it’s respectful of your time and attention.
News unspun. Facts first. Nuff said.