Medium and lately Substack: Often formulaic, low-effort, or self-promotional.
Aeon, Nautilus, Atlas Obscura: Long-form writing with little informational payoff, attention-bait.
The Atlantic: Culture war click-bait.
The New York Times, Bloomberg: Paywall, even if there is an outline.com or archive.[domain] link.
Conversely, I tend to check out submissions from personal blogs and more scientific/technical sources like Scientific American and IEEE’s Spectrum.
Does anyone else do this?
In a world of infinite choices, I believe that making deliberate choices is a good exercise, whether you do it via a strict whitelist/blacklist domain filter or some other means.
Many times, I don't actually read the article and just read some of the comments. Instead of filtering by the domain where the article is hosted, I use the title and its underlying theme or subject as the filter for which article comments I will read. I'm not interested in every single subject posted on HN so I just look for the subjects that I am interested in. Reading the actual article can take time. For me, I find skimming some of the discussion in the comments as a quick proxy on what the article is actually saying or the value of the article.
With all filtering, there is always the risk of false negatives where you skip something that you would have found of value or really interesting.
I agree that some of the most interesting articles are from non-mainstream sources. For example, the recent article about weaving.
Ignore most news outlets: NYT, Atlantic, Bloomberg, WSJ, Techcrunch, Vice, etc.
Will read: personal blogs, Substacks (for now), niche publications (e.g. Lapham's quarterly), twitter links.
In the case of Twitter I make an exception when the submission title is extremely enticing, in which case I copy the URL and open it in that Thread Reader thing.