For me, the trick is figuring out not just what to read, but how, and when. Getting the division right between RSS reader, podcasts, radio, blog-browsing, twitter, and email is a work-in-progress.

My breakdown...

Audio Podcasts (at the gym, as well as going to and from, and running)
- The Ethicist
- Harvard Business Review
- CSIS
- Economist
- Martin Wolf
- Mars Hill Church
- Walk in the Word
- Insight for Living
- InTouch Broadcast

Video Podcasts (in the kitchen)
- Mosaic: News from the Mideast
- BusinessWeek - Mandel on Economics
- Reason.tv
- al-Jazeera (Fault Lines, Riz Khan)
- Fareed Zakaria (not a fan of his, but he has great guests)

Stitcher (iPhone/Blackberry app that plays audio podcasts; usually listen to during commute)
- Economist "The World Next Week"
- Wall Street Journal "What's News"
- Cato Daily Podcast (more political, but not left v right)
- Stratfor Daily Podcast

RSS Reader (whenever - laptop or iPhone)
- The Daily Star (Lebanon)
- The Jerusalem Post
- al-Arabiya (Pan-Arab)
- New York Times
- Washington Post
- Sabah (Turkey)
- Moscow Times
- The Australian
- Financial Times
- UK Telegraph
- Wall Street Journal

Email lists (usually read on iPhone while in the slower-than-death elevator in my apartment building and other random moments of waiting for stuff)
- Af-Pak channel
- FP Morning Brief
- Stratfor
- Gulf in the Media

Random browsing
- Stuff in my blogroll (already listed elsewhere in this thread)

- Twitter - I've found that twitter is ideal for following blogs that I read and of very little value for following major news outlets; it's handy to see when a blog or other site is updated (SWJ, Registan, Michael Yon, etc), but I don't need 20 random alerts every day from XYZ newspaper. I also don't understand how anyone can really "follow" hundreds of people on twitter. I follow 24 people on twitter and I still miss stuff.

- Facebook - I'm a newcomer to Facebook; is this purely a social medium or do people use it for news-related stuff?