Isaac Saul

His work has appeared in publications including CNN, The Huffington Post, TIME Magazine,[1] the Independent Journal Review[2] and The Daily Mail.

He first became interested in journalism during his time at Pennsbury High School in Pennsylvania, and got his first job in news while he was an undergraduate student in nonfiction writing at the University of Pittsburgh.

As part of this effort, he published a running thread of tweets in which he challenged his readers to find an instance of alleged voter fraud that he could not disprove, a project which received external media coverage.

[14] In 2024, Saul gave a TED talk in Vancouver on the subject of bipartisan communication and the use of language to signal partisan identity in modern political discourse.

[18] Tangle has received substantial media coverage focused on the success of its subscriber-based model[19] and its efficacy in bridging political divisions.

[24] Additionally, Saul was featured in a 2024 episode of This American Life, which described how reading Tangle had saved the marriage of a politically divided couple.