How to Listen to News Articles Instead of Doomscrolling

Stop doomscrolling and start listening to news articles instead. Learn how to build a calm, curated audio news routine with text-to-speech tools.

2026-02-15·7 min read
newsdoomscrollingaudio newsdigital wellness

Doomscrolling is the enemy of being informed. That sounds backward, because the whole reason you open Twitter or Apple News or Google Discover is to stay informed. But what actually happens is closer to the opposite: you consume a large volume of fragmented, emotionally charged snippets that leave you feeling overwhelmed and anxious without providing genuine understanding of anything.

You scroll for 30 minutes and come away knowing that something bad happened in three different countries, some politician said something outrageous, and there is a vague sense that the economy is either booming or collapsing depending on which headline you saw last. You are not informed. You are agitated.

I spent years in this cycle before I found a way out. The fix was not consuming less news. It was consuming better news, in a different format, on my own terms.

Why Reading News on Your Phone Makes You Anxious

The problem is not the news itself. Important things happen in the world, and staying aware of them is a reasonable goal. The problem is the delivery mechanism.

News on your phone arrives through feeds designed to maximize engagement. Engagement means clicks. Clicks are driven by emotion: fear, outrage, curiosity gaps, and urgency. Every headline is optimized to trigger a response that makes you tap.

The result is a consumption experience that feels like drinking from a fire hose of anxiety. You are processing dozens of headlines per minute, each one calibrated to provoke a reaction, with no space between them for reflection or context. Your nervous system responds accordingly.

Add to this the infinite scroll mechanic. There is no natural stopping point. No "finished" state. The feed regenerates endlessly, and your brain never gets the signal that it has consumed enough. So you keep scrolling, growing more anxious and less informed with each pass.

This is not a willpower problem. It is a design problem. The tools are built to keep you scrolling, not to keep you informed.

The Audio News Alternative

Now consider a different approach. Instead of opening a feed and reacting to whatever appears, you select 3-5 news articles from sources you trust, convert them to audio, and listen during your commute or morning routine.

The difference is structural:

You control the input. No algorithm decides what you see. You choose the articles based on what you actually care about and what sources you trust. The curation is yours.

The format encourages depth. When you listen to a full news article rather than scanning a headline, you get context. You understand why something happened, what the implications are, and what different perspectives exist. A 10-minute article provides understanding. A 10-second headline provides anxiety.

There is a natural stopping point. Your queue has 3-5 items. When they finish, you are done. Your brain gets the "finished" signal that infinite scroll never provides. You feel complete rather than unsatisfied.

The emotional tone shifts. Listening to a well-written news article feels calm and informative. It is the difference between a thoughtful conversation about current events and standing in a room where everyone is yelling headlines at you.

The shift from visual scrolling to audio listening changes your relationship with news from reactive to intentional. You are no longer consuming whatever the algorithm serves. You are listening to what you deliberately chose.

How to Set Up an Audio News Routine

Building an audio news habit does not require a dramatic lifestyle change. It requires about 5 minutes of daily curation and a willingness to replace one bad habit with a better one.

Step 1: Choose Your Sources (Once)

Pick 3-5 news sources that you trust and respect. The key criteria:

  • Quality of analysis, not speed of reporting. You do not need to be first to know. You need to actually understand.
  • Clean article formatting. Sources that publish well-structured articles convert better to audio than those heavy on embedded media, interactive elements, or paywalled fragments.
  • Range of perspective. Avoid building an echo chamber. Include at least one source that challenges your default worldview.

Good categories to cover:

CategoryExample Sources
General news analysisThe Atlantic, Reuters, Associated Press
Business and economyFinancial Times, The Economist, Bloomberg
TechnologyArs Technica, The Verge, Stratechery
Opinion and essaysSubstack writers you respect, The New Yorker
Local newsYour city's best newspaper or news outlet

Step 2: Build the Daily Queue

Each evening (or morning, if your schedule permits), spend 5 minutes selecting your news articles for the day:

  1. Scan your sources. Check the homepages, newsletters, or RSS feeds from your chosen sources. Spend 30 seconds per source.
  2. Pick 3-5 articles. Choose pieces that will genuinely inform you, not pieces that trigger a reaction. If a headline makes you angry before you have read the article, skip it.
  3. Convert to audio. Drop the URLs into speakeasy. The audio generates quickly and saves to your library.
  4. Order thoughtfully. Put the most important or complex piece first, when your attention is freshest. End with something lighter.

Step 3: Listen During Existing Routines

Do not create a dedicated "news time." Layer the audio onto activities you already do:

  • Morning routine (getting ready, breakfast, coffee): 15-20 minutes
  • Commute: 20-60 minutes
  • Lunch walk: 15-20 minutes
  • Evening cooking: 20-30 minutes

Most people need only one or two of these slots to get through a 3-5 article daily queue.

Step 4: Set Boundaries

The audio news routine works partly because it has edges. Define yours:

  • One queue per day. Do not keep adding articles throughout the day. Curate once, listen once, done.
  • No breaking news. Unless your job requires it, breaking news can wait until tomorrow's queue. The important stories will still be important in 12 hours, and by then someone will have written a better analysis.
  • Weekend flexibility. I take Saturdays off from news entirely and do a longer queue on Sunday to catch the week's best analysis pieces.

The boundary between "staying informed" and "doomscrolling" is control. If you chose the content and it has a defined end, you are staying informed. If an algorithm is serving content and there is no stopping point, you are scrolling.

What I Listen To: My News Sources

After experimenting for months, here are the sources that work best for me as audio. Your mileage will vary based on your interests, but these share qualities that translate well to listening.

Daily Staples

These are the sources I pull from almost every day:

  • Reuters or AP for straight news. When I want to know what happened without spin, these are the sources. Their articles are factual, concise, and convert cleanly to audio.
  • One analysis piece from a respected publication. This varies by day. A deep dive from The Atlantic, a business analysis from the FT, or a tech piece from Ars Technica. This is the "understand" article rather than the "know" article.
  • One newsletter from a writer I follow. Substacks and independent newsletters often provide the sharpest analysis because the writer is accountable only to their readers, not to an editorial board or advertising department.

Weekly Additions

Some sources publish less frequently but are worth including when they drop:

  • Long-form essays and investigative pieces. These are weekend listening. A 20-minute article during Saturday errands provides more insight than a week of headline scanning.
  • Contrarian or international perspectives. Once a week, I deliberately include a source that challenges my usual viewpoint. It is uncomfortable and valuable.

What I Avoid

Not all news formats work well as audio:

  • Listicles and aggregator posts. "17 Things That Happened Today" style articles are designed for skimming, not listening. They lack the narrative structure that makes audio content engaging.
  • Live blogs and breaking news updates. These are fragmentary by nature and become incoherent as audio.
  • Heavy multimedia articles. Pieces that rely on charts, interactive maps, or photo essays lose their core content when converted to text-to-speech. Save these for screen reading.

The Unexpected Calm

The most surprising result of switching to audio news was not that I became better informed, though I did. It was that I became calmer.

When you listen to 3-4 well-written news articles per day, you understand the world in a way that doomscrolling never provides. You get context, nuance, and analysis rather than fragments and outrage. Your brain processes the information at a natural pace rather than the frenetic speed of a feed.

After a month of audio news, I noticed that I could discuss current events in actual conversations with depth and coherence. I had opinions based on understanding rather than reactions based on headlines. I could name specific articles that shaped my thinking rather than vaguely gesturing at "things I saw online."

And perhaps most importantly, I no longer felt compelled to check my phone every 15 minutes for updates. The audio briefing satisfied the need to be informed. Once that need was met, the compulsion to scroll dissolved.

Getting Started This Week

You do not need to build the full system on day one. Here is a minimal starting point:

  1. Tonight: Pick 3 articles from sources you trust. Convert them to audio with speakeasy.
  2. Tomorrow morning: Listen during your commute or morning routine instead of opening social media.
  3. Notice the difference. Pay attention to how you feel after 20 minutes of curated audio versus 20 minutes of scrolling.

If the experience is better (and for most people, it is dramatically better), expand the habit. Add the nightly curation step. Experiment with different sources. Find the listening slots in your day.

Doomscrolling is not a character flaw. It is a default behavior that fills a vacuum. Give your brain a better option, and the default changes. Curated, controlled, calm. That is what news consumption can feel like when you take the screen out of it and put it in your ears instead.

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