Is it true that … you can never eat too much fibre?
This cluster reveals a significant fragmentation in news coverage priorities across the political spectrum. While left-leaning outlets focus on health and nutrition science alongside economic policy affecting different age groups, center outlets examine macroeconomic factors like inflation and energy prices, and right-leaning coverage addresses political speeches. The sources show minimal topical overlap, suggesting outlets are covering entirely distinct stories rather than the same events from different angles.
Left-leaning sources emphasize health and wellness topics alongside economic disparities, examining both personal health decisions and structural inequities in federal spending between demographic groups.
Center and independent outlets focus on economic mechanisms and policy explanations, exploring why inflation matters differently to various groups and what drives regional variations in consumer prices.
Right-leaning coverage concentrates on political figures and their public statements, with minimal substantive analysis of policy implications.
Key Differences
- Left outlets cover health/nutrition and economic inequality; center outlets focus on macroeconomic mechanisms; right outlet emphasizes political personalities
- This cluster shows almost no topical overlap—sources aren't covering the same stories from different angles but rather completely different subject matter
- Right-leaning representation is minimal (1 source) and lacks the policy depth found in center coverage or the social focus of left outlets
Left(2)
The GuardianAMar 30, 7:00 AM
Is it true that … you can never eat too much fibre?
Fibremaxxing is everywhere, and most of us should eat more roughage, but your gut won’t thank you for overloading Fibre has replaced protein as TikTok health influencers’ macronutrient du jour, with “
Washington PostAApr 1, 9:00 AM
Retirees receive six times as much in federal dollars as young people
An analysis from Penn Wharton Budget Model shows that baby boomers and the Silent Generation received an estimated $2.7 trillion in federal outlays last year.
Center(2)
The DispatchAApr 2, 6:48 AM
Why Presidents Don’t Care About Inflation as Much as You Do
Economic policy is no longer about ensuring broad prosperity but tangible benefits to key constituencies.
The HillBApr 2, 12:20 PM
Why gas prices vary so much across the US
Gas is nearly $6 a gallon in California but it's $3.27 in Oklahoma. Here's why prices vary so much by state.
Right(1)
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