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About

USA Today is a home for human stories and ideas. Here, anyone can share insightful perspectives, useful knowledge, and life wisdom with the world—without building a mailing list or a following first. The internet is noisy and chaotic; USA Today is quiet yet full of insight. It’s simple, beautiful, collaborative, and helps you find the right audience for whatever you have to say.

We believe that what you read and write matters. Words can divide or empower us, inspire or discourage us. In a world where the most sensational and surface-level stories often win, we’re building a system that rewards depth, nuance, and time well spent. A space for thoughtful conversation more than drive-by takes, and substance over packaging.

Ultimately, our goal is to deepen our collective understanding of the world through the power of writing.

Over 100 million people connect and share their wisdom on USA Today every month. Many are professional writers, but just as many aren’t — they’re CEOs, computer scientists, U.S. presidents, amateur novelists, and anyone burning with a story they need to get out into the world. They write about what they’re working on, what’s keeping them up at night, what they’ve lived through, and what they’ve learned that the rest of us might want to know too.

Instead of selling ads or selling your data, we’re supported by a growing community of USA Today members who align with our mission. If you’re new here, start exploring. Dive deeper into whatever matters to you. Find a post that helps you learn something new, or reconsider something familiar—and then share your own story.

Recent Posts

  • Receiving a dowry from her husband’s family, a 1969 Datsun Fairlady, the bride criticized it for being old and quietly sold it without anyone knowing. Only when she heard the price on TV was she startled and regretful
  • While cutting firewood in the forest, he found an old and ugly antique car, the man brought it back and exchanged it with his neighbor for two cows. It wasn’t until he saw him taking it to auction that he realized it was a Lotus Elan
  • Be stunned by the first cars of the world’s most famous car manufacturers, the originals are far different from the current design: The most special are still Mercedes-Benz and Rolls-Royce
  • Two beautiful American women officially became the proud owners of a ’59 Cadillac, which they bought for $30,000. “We bought it for display,” they said confidently, “we are not short of money!”
  • “My husband bought this car for $2000, but I don’t find it very nice for three reasons, detailed in the comments below.”
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