Editorial decisions: how we choose what 'Was News'

This Was News is not a breaking-news site. It’s a memory aid for the news — a slow, nostalgic snapshot of “what led the homepage” on past days.

Because of that, we make some very specific editorial choices about:

Below is how it all works.

1. Our sources: where the stories come from

Right now, This Was News looks at the home pages of three major news organizations:

These outlets were chosen because:

Over time, more outlets may be added, but any new source will be held to the same basic standards: highly factual reliability, broad news coverage, and not too far out on an ideological edge.

We only use publicly visible homepage content — no paywalled back-end feeds, no personalized “for you” recommendations, no social media trending lists. The goal is to capture what an ordinary visitor would have seen as the big news of the day.

2. What counts as a “story” for This Was News

Each day, we look at the top 3–5 stories on the homepage of each source. From that pool, a human editor decides which items qualify as “news” in the sense we care about:

A news story here is a report about something that happened in the real world, on or very near that day, that could plausibly be meaningful in the historical record.

That means we care about:

We know we can’t predict history perfectly. A story that seemed small may later turn out to be huge, and vice versa. But we try to pick the things a future “What happened that day?” researcher would reasonably expect to find. If, in retrospect, we need to reconsider what was noteworthy, we'll do that and document it on the daily page.

3. Stories we intentionally include

Here are the main types of stories we actively try to include when they show up among the top homepage slots:

Hard news events

These are the bread and butter of This Was News. Examples include:

If it’s the kind of thing that might appear in a future timeline of the year — “In 2027, X happened” — we lean toward including it.

Major deaths and obituaries

We normally exclude obituaries (see below), but we make an exception for:

These are often turning points that show up in retrospective accounts of a period.

First-order coverage of new developments

We also aim to include “first announcement” coverage of:

Key idea: we focus on the moment the change or event is announced or implemented, not on every later reaction or analysis.

4. Stories we intentionally exclude

News homepages contain many different kinds of content. Not all of it fits our goal of “what happened on this date.”

We explicitly exclude:

Live blogs and rolling updates

Retrospectives, explainers, and backgrounders

We skip stories that are mainly about explaining, contextualizing, or looking back, rather than reporting a new event.

These include:

These are valuable journalism, but they’re about understanding a story, not marking the moment it happened.

Lists, guides, and service journalism

We exclude most service or “guide” content, including:

Even when they’re timely or news-adjacent, they’re not discrete historical events.

Consumer reviews and “what to buy” coverage

We do not include:

These pieces are often well reported, but they’re not events in the sense we care about.

Opinion, commentary, and editorials

We exclude almost all:

They may influence public debate, but they are interpretations of events and not the events themselves.

Edge case: Sometimes a major investigative piece is labeled as “analysis” but reveals new, factually significant information for the first time (e.g., a big leaked-document investigation). In those cases, we may treat it as a news event, because the publication of the investigation itself can be historically important.

Pure “color” or human-interest features

We typically exclude:

These can be wonderful journalism, but they’re hard to anchor to a specific date in the way our format requires.

Market snapshots and routine reports (with narrow impact)

We usually skip:

We’re trying to record inflection points, not everyday events.

How we pick the “lead” story of the day

From the pool of included stories, a human editor chooses one “lead” story for each day. That decision is guided by:

This is a judgment call. Reasonable people can and will disagree. Our aim is not to declare “the one true main story,” but to pick a plausible, well-reasoned candidate as a memory anchor for that day. If, after time, we change our minds, we'll show that, too.

6. What’s human about this: subjectivity and limitations

A few important caveats:

If you spot something that seems out of line with the criteria above, it’s not a hidden agenda — it’s either an honest judgment call or, sometimes, an error. In either case, feedback is welcome.

7. Why these rules exist at all

The point of all this structure isn’t to overthink the news; it’s to make the site useful. By being picky about what we include, we aim to give you:

In other words: This Was News is a hobby project with a historian’s heart. These editorial choices are our best attempt to make that heart visible.