The other half of the news.
Most news is built to alarm you. It is loud, fast, and almost always about what went wrong. That is one real half of the world. This is the other half.
Every morning, Today Got Better reads 71 sources across eight fields, from primary research journals to solutions newsrooms, and pulls out what genuinely got better: a discovery, a treatment that worked, a problem somebody actually solved. Then it does the part most feeds skip. It looks for where the fields agree. What a psychology finding adds to a neuroscience one. What a good-news outlet noticed that a science journal missed.
What you get is short. One calm read with the day's real progress, the people behind it, and an honest line about what we still do not know. No outrage, no doomscrolling, no spin. Just proof, gathered daily, that the world keeps quietly improving.
How it's made
We read the feeds in full, not only the headlines. We group every version of a story together. We read across the eight fields and write up where they meet. Real photos, real sources, and every claim linked back to where it came from, so you can always check for yourself.
It is free, and it is meant to stay that way. If it makes your mornings a little lighter, the best thing you can do is forward it to someone who could use the good news too.