Q&A: Our New Global Newsletter Host on Creating an ‘Antidote to the Overwhelm’

The World Just Got Smarter: NYT’s New Global Newsletter Is Your Daily Antidote to Chaos

Meet ‘The World’—Your New Daily Escape from Information Overload

Starting Monday, September 29, 2025, millions of readers across the globe will wake up to The WorldThe New York Times’ brand-new international newsletter designed to cut through the noise, deliver clarity, and even bring a little joy to your morning scroll.

Katrin Bennhold, host of The World newsletter

Katrin Bennhold, veteran international correspondent and host of ‘The World.’ (Credit: The New York Times)

Why ‘The World’ Exists

“I want The World to be smart, short and delightful,” says host Katrin Bennhold, a former Berlin bureau chief with over two decades of global reporting experience. “An antidote to the overwhelm.”

In an age of doomscrolling, polarization, and 24/7 news cycles, The World aims to be different: concise, human, and globally minded—without sacrificing depth.

What’s Inside Every Edition?

  • Top Global Headlines: Curated with context, not just clicks
  • Exclusive Video Dispatches: From Times journalists on the ground in 170+ countries
  • Daily Quiz: Test your global knowledge in under 60 seconds
  • Cultural Gems: Music, film, food, and fashion from unexpected corners of the planet
  • Recommendations: Books, shows, and life hacks from Times correspondents

How It Stands Out

The World replaces the former Morning Briefing newsletters for Europe and Asia—but it’s more ambitious. While The Morning (for U.S. readers) focuses domestically, The World is built for a truly international audience.

Feature The Morning (U.S.) The World (Global)
Audience U.S. and Canada Global
Host David Leonhardt Katrin Bennhold
Content Focus U.S. politics, economy, culture International news, global trends, cross-border stories
Special Elements Puzzles, opinion highlights Video reports, daily quiz, cultural tidbits

Who Is Katrin Bennhold?

A mother of three and a seasoned foreign correspondent, Bennhold has reported on:

  • The rise of far-right movements in Europe
  • Gender equality and social change
  • Terrorism and migration crises
  • Populist upheavals from Paris to Budapest

Her lived experience—balancing global journalism with family life—shapes The World’s empathetic, efficient tone. “I know exactly how busy you are,” she says. “This is something you can finish—and feel better for it.”

Why Now?

As global events—from Venezuela’s political crisis to Moldova’s pro-EU vote to drone wars in Kyiv—intensify, readers crave trusted, global perspective. The World delivers that through the lens of hundreds of Times journalists stationed worldwide, offering not just what happened, but why it matters to you.

“In this polarized moment, we badly need a global conversation,” Bennhold adds. “If The World contributes to that, I’ll be happy.”

Sources

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