This just sounds stressful.
Why not make batch of mulled wine, watch a film, wake up and check Reuters on Wednesday?
The outcome won't differ. What does election coverage offer that is insightful and useful?
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This just sounds stressful.
Why not make batch of mulled wine, watch a film, wake up and check Reuters on Wednesday?
The outcome won't differ. What does election coverage offer that is insightful and useful?
You just don't get the same sense of despair if you don't watch it live.
It's also great excuse to drink while wallowing in dread. I have a bottle of gin set aside for the occasion.
What does election coverage offer that is insightful and useful?
Mainly an excuse to stay up past our bedtimes.
If my kids demanded to stay up past bedtime to watch election coverage, I'd be seriously worried
Election drinking bingo. Back to you, Wolf.
Family fun!
I need to reduce the amount of time I read the news as well.
I'd like to think I'm informed but it doesn't change the actions I take during the day, it just makes me stressed out.
So, like, is that valuable? I'm not sure.
There are gonna be so many lawsuits this election we won’t know the outcome till Jan 7
None. First of all, watching news is far worse then reading it in terms of how you guard against subjective influence.
Second, who cares. It's exhausting. It's toxic. What happens will happen and we'll see the news later. I think last time it even took a couple days.
I'll probably see the result without effort the next day, say "huh," and go on with my life.
Sign up for Sling Blue and you can watch MSNBC and CNN.
https://www.sling.com/pm/homepage
Steve Kornacki, the MSNBC data guy, is pretty freaking stellar.
I'm glad at least one person decided to answer the question OP asked.
Yes, thanks!
Of course we're not going to know the answer until January 7, but we're staying up on Tuesday for the journey, not the destination.
If you really need/want to, use foreign coverage of it. Maybe BBC or other English world wide news will have something (DW, 24France).
You will get mostly unbiased info and it is usually more chill than the heated debates. I use this sometimes but for my country it doesn't cover much news.
PBS has excellent live coverage. It might be free on YouTube but you can access all of PBS's videos stuff by donating to them. It's a bit of an odd process because you donate to your local PBS but their streaming service is consolidated.
NPR also has good coverage if you want to play a board game or something while still following the insanity.
None. Nothing you learn will be actionable in any way. Just free anxiety/outrage.
Watch Billy Crystal's 1998 masterpiece "My Giant" instead. :)
Plug for "America's Sweethearts" also starring Billy Crystal as well.
I'm going to have to agree with everyone here, we won't know anything Tuesday night and more than likely won't know anything for a week or more.
Pennsylvania is essential to both parties and they have an absolutely absurd law that prevents them from counting mailed ballots until election night so that state won't have results for quite some time. Tie that into the thousands of lawsuits the GOP is ready to file and the whole first half of November is going to be irritating.
PBS
Save your mind. Just look at the newspaper the next day.
You could watch the Canadian coverage: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/how-to-follow-2024-us-election-cbc-1.7368364
As a public broadcaster, CBC is less prone to sensationalism than its commercial counterparts (though it is not immune).