Iโm as guilty as anyone else for waking up, grabbing my phone and doomscrolling on X (I still call it Twitter in real life like a normal person, donโt worry!).
That habit has exposed me to a timeline full of terrible hot takes, biased explanations of political developments, and retweets of product announcements that excite meโฆ only to learn theyโre now sold out. Now and then, Iโm treated to some actual good newsโthe news aggregator profiles I follow provide me with my daily dose of video game review previews/roundups, album release date reveals, and major updates on the news that affects the world as a whole the most.
But I know my doomscrolling tendencies arenโt exactly a positive for my mental well-being and productivity levels. Swiping up and down for an extended period and being assaulted by a timeline full of negativity and half-truths is no longer the move.
So I used ChatGPT to catch up on all the news I missed in 48 hours. Not only did this experiment prove to be more beneficial than I thought it would, but it also helped me leave my morning doomscrolling behavior behind.
AI playing the part of my personal news curator
Last Friday (July 10), I woke up and almost reached for my phone again for some good old-fashioned morning doomscrolling. But I stopped myself, turned on my laptop and chose to boot up ChatGPT instead to try out my newest way of catching up on the news.
I asked the chatbot to generate the most descriptive prompt it could to make sure I got up to speed on everything I might have missed or needed a reminder of from the fast-moving news cycle. With prior knowledge of my hobbies and interests, this is what ChatGPT came up with:
Act as my personal news curator.
I intentionally avoided news and social media for the last 48 hours to stop…
