PSEUDOSCIENCE
Sources in the Pseudoscience category may publish unverifiable information that is not always supported by evidence. These sources may be untrustworthy for credible/verifiable information; therefore, fact-checking and further investigation is recommended on a per article basis when obtaining information from these sources. See all Conspiracy-Pseudoscience sources.
- Our Everyday Life is rated Least Biased because it avoids political content and focuses on lifestyle topics. However, due to frequent reliance on pop psychology, anecdotal evidence, and unsourced medical or behavioral claims, the site earns a Mixed rating for factual reporting. While some articles (e.g., consumer guides) contain generally correct information, others veer into mild pseudoscience and oversimplified advice unsupported by credible evidence.
Detailed Report
Bias Rating: PSEUDOSCIENCE (-1.o)
Factual Reporting: MIXED (6.1)
Country: USA
MBFC’s Country Freedom Rank: MOSTLY FREE
Media Type: Organization/Foundation
Traffic/Popularity: Minimal Traffic
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY
History
Our Everyday Life is a lifestyle and advice website owned and operated by TechnologyAdvice, LLC, a Tennessee-based digital marketing and content company that manages multiple informational and product-comparison sites. According to its Terms of Use, TechnologyAdvice provides this site and its related services as part of its broader network of consumer-facing content properties. Our Everyday Life appears to have been active since the early 2010s, primarily publishing lifestyle articles, relationship guidance, and home-related content under multiple bylines, such as J.E. Myers, Kay Ireland, and Ashley Friedman.
Read our profile on the United States media and government.
Funded by / Ownership
The website is owned by TechnologyAdvice, LLC, a for-profit media company whose revenue comes from advertising and lead generation partnerships. TechnologyAdvice produces large-scale lifestyle and informational content for SEO-driven audiences. The site does not list an editorial board or provide detailed author credentials. The About Us and Contact pages redirect to the parent company’s main corporate page (About TechnologyAdvice, Contact). Articles appear to be written by freelancers or general contributors rather than subject-matter experts.
Analysis / Bias
Our Everyday Life maintains a neutral political tone but relies heavily on soft lifestyle content and pop-psychology claims without citing peer-reviewed research. The site’s purpose is to attract broad traffic through relatable topics rather than provide verified or scientific information.
For example, in When a Woman Distances Herself From You, What Is She Saying?, author J.E. Myers references John Gray’s Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus, a book widely regarded as relationship pseudoscience, and presents gender generalizations as psychological insight. The article also includes speculative claims about emotional behavior without citations to empirical studies.
Similarly, Signs of Guilt of a Husband Who Cheated by Kay Ireland repeats unverified behavioral assumptions drawn from pop-culture relationship sources (e.g., Families.com, FirstWivesWorld.com). These articles offer anecdotal or entertainment-style commentary rather than evidence-based guidance.
Conversely, some content provides accurate and neutral consumer information. In “What Are the Dangers of Titanium in Cookware?“, Ashley Friedman provides a largely factual overview of cookware materials, drawing on general material science principles. While this article avoids overt misinformation, it lacks academic sourcing and presents safety assessments without citations to authoritative health or scientific studies.
Overall, Our Everyday Life functions as a general-interest advice and lifestyle site with inconsistent sourcing. Many posts present opinions or simplified summaries as factual statements, which can mislead readers on psychological or health-related topics. The tone is benign, but the lack of sourcing or expert verification lowers factual reliability.
Failed Fact Checks
- There are no known independent fact checks of Our Everyday Life by reputable fact-checking organizations. However, many of its relationship and self-help articles rely on unsupported claims and popular psychology, which are not considered scientific evidence under MBFC’s methodology.
Our Everyday Life is rated Least Biased because it avoids political content and focuses on lifestyle topics. However, due to frequent reliance on pop psychology, anecdotal evidence, and unsourced medical or behavioral claims, the site earns a Mixed rating for factual reporting. While some articles (e.g., consumer guides) contain generally correct information, others veer into mild pseudoscience and oversimplified advice unsupported by credible evidence. (D. Van Zandt 11/05/2025)
Source: https://oureverydaylife.com/
Last Updated on November 5, 2025 by Media Bias Fact Check
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