| | |
Type of site | News website |
|---|---|
| Available in | English |
| Founded | 2010 |
| Headquarters | , United States |
| Founder(s) | Alexander Baldwin, Kit Westneat |
| Editor | Jaclyn Anglis |
| URL | allthatsinteresting |
| Users | 5.3 million monthly visitors |
| Current status | Active |
All That's Interesting (ATI) is an American news website created in 2010 by Alexander Baldwin and Kit Westneat to cover various "interesting" topics. They said ATI is based in Brooklyn, New York and described it as a "digital publisher that seeks out the stories to illuminate the past, present, and future". [1]
All Thatʻs Interesting was created in 2010 by Alexander Baldwin and Kit Westneat as a news website that covers various topics considered "interesting". According to them, the website is based in Brooklyn, New York. The men later hired an editorial team consisting of writers and editors, they has since published more than eleven thousand articles on various topics, such as true crime, popular culture and science. Reportedly, website of ATI is viewed 5.3 million times per month, 68% of the traffic comes from search while 14% comes from direct visits. ATI has a significant presence on social media and operates a Facebook account that publishes posts every few hours. ATI earns money through ads, user traffic and paid subscriptions to the website. [1]
Content of All Thatʻs Interesting was cited by a number of websites and news organizations like Snopes and Wikipedia. [1] ATI was quoted by The Jerusalem Post in December 2024 [2] and Popular Mechanics in November 2025. [3] Reportedly, ATI sought to hire freelance writers that are experienced in WordPress and have the capacity to write articles consisting of 800 to 1,500 words in 2019, paying them $150 per article. [4] Managing editor of the website is Jaclyn Anglis, who was hired by ATI in October 2019. [5]
In April 2019, Josefjakobs.info, a website dedicated to the life of German spy Josef Jakobs, said that ATI's article about Jakobs was "pretty good" but has two minor errors, such as reporting that Jakobs was arrested in 1939 when he was actually arrested in 1938. [6] In August 2019, fact-checker Lead Stories labeled one of ATI's articles, which talked about Carpenter v. Murphy court case, as fake news due to it misrepresenting the subject. Citing NewsGuard, Lead Stories said the site can still be trusted to maintain journalistic standards. [7]
In November 2020, Cloudeight InfoAve recommended ATI, calling its content "incredibly interesting" and saying that it provides "incredibly interesting reading". [8] All You Can Read described the content of the site as "intriguing, unusual, and thought-provoking". [9]