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For the second year in a row we’ve documented a devastating lack of satisfaction with journalism in American - and an opportunity to do something about it. Here’s the formal press release of the new research, which we discussed in the opening session of this year’s We Media Miami Forum and Festival. The good news: Americans believe journalism is important. The bad news: They don’t like or trust the journalism in their communities. One thing is clear: Our forecast from four years ago of “the digital everything” has arrived - the Internet is the primary source of news for more people than any other. There’s no going back. The widespread dissatisfaction with traditional journalism could be viewed ominously, by those who produce and sell it, as a cause for alarm, a reflection of ongoing decline and a likely foreshadowing of further decline. But for the We Media culture a tremendous opportunity emerges - not only to produce better and more trusted journalism but to build better communities around it. In the We Media culture that’s an opportunity for everyone, including but by no means limited to those who think of themselves as media companies or professionals. Civic groups, healthcare companies, nonprofits, local governments and activists are starting to flex their muscles as story-tellers too. The future, like the past, will be full of stories. - Andrew Nachison
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Two thirds of Americans – 67% – believe traditional journalism is out of touch with what Americans want from their news, a new We Media/Zogby Interactive poll shows.
The survey also found that while most Americans (70%) think journalism is important to the quality of life in their communities, two thirds (64%) are dissatisfied with the quality of journalism in their communities.
Meanwhile, the online survey documented the shift away from traditional sources of news, such as newspapers and TV, to the Internet – most dramatically among so-called digital natives – people under 30 years old.
Nearly half of respondents (48%) said their primary source of news and information is the Internet, an increase from 40% who said the same a year ago. Younger adults were most likely to name the Internet as their top source – 55% of those age 18 to 29 say they get most of their news and information online, compared to 35% of those age 65 and older.
These oldest adults are the only age group to favor a primary news source other than the Internet, with 38% of these seniors who said they get most of their news from television. Overall, 29% said television is their main source of news, while fewer said they turn to radio (11%) and newspapers (10%) for most of their news and information. Just 7% of those age 18 to 29 said they get most of their news from newspapers, while more than twice as many (17%) of those age 65 and older list newspapers as their top source of news and information.
Web sites are regarded as a more important source of news and information than traditional media outlets – 86% of Americans said Web sites were an important source of news, with more than half (56%) who view these sites as very important. Most also view television (77%), radio (74%), and newspapers (70%) as important sources of news, although fewer than say the same about blogs (38%).
The Zogby Interactive survey of 1,979 adults nationwide was conducted Feb. 20-21, 2008, and carries a margin of error of +/- 2.2 percentage points. The survey results were announced at this week’s fourth-annual We Media Forum and Festival in Miami, hosted by the University of Miami School of Communication and organized and produced by iFOCOS, a Reston, Va.-based media think tank (www.ifocos.org). This is the second year of the survey.
“For the second year in a row we have documented a crisis in American journalism that is far more serious than the industry’s business challenges – or maybe a consequence of them,” said Andrew Nachison, co-founder of iFOCOS. “Americans recognize the value of journalism for their communities, and they are unsatisfied with what they see. While the U.S. news industry sheds expenses and frets about its future, Americans are dismayed by its present.
“Meanwhile, we see clearly the generational shift of digital natives from traditional to online news – so the challenge for traditional news companies is complex. They need to invest in new products and services – and they have. But they’ve also got to invest in quality, influence and impact. They need to invest in journalism that makes a difference in people’s lives. That’s a moral and leadership challenge – and a business opportunity for whoever can meet it.”
The survey finds the Internet not only outweighs television, radio, and newspapers as the most frequently used and important source for news and information, but Web sites were also cited as more trustworthy than more traditional media sources – nearly a third (32%) said Internet sites are their most trusted source for news and information, followed by newspapers (22%), television (21%) and radio (15%).
Other findings from the survey include:
Republicans (79%) and political independents (75%) are most likely to feel disenchanted with conventional journalism, but the online survey found 50% of Democrats also expressed similar concerns. Those who identify themselves as “very conservative” were among the most dissatisfied, with 89% who view traditional journalism as out of touch.
Further Details: Zogby Methodological statement
– By Andrew Nachison
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I certainly agree with those findings. The mainstream media has gutted its journalistic ability, firing news staff and more and more becoming cheerleaders for the establishment. It is sad and will be destructive to democracy.
I agree as well, having ran a college newspaper for two years. People on both political sides are not trusting the media. In my experience, Fox is trusted by Republicans and most of the Democrats I know get their information from the internet.
The corporate media that is continually being bought up by republicans is starting to alienate the “Average Joe” that just wants the facts. Limbaugh, Hannity and O’Reiley are starting to create a backlash among independent voters. This will hopefully work to the advantage of those who want responsible spending policies, better health care and better stewardship of our environment. GS
In this small space I will confine myself to non-fictional information: specifically, what it is–and what it isn’t.
it is attested facts
It is standards based evaluation=s–applying the standard to the particular instant.
It is full scientific categorizing definitions–prioritized accounting s for the 5–6 essential working organs of man-made steps leading to a normative function of the thing being studied, utilized, monitored.
The categorical opposites of these qualities are I suggest what characterizes public corporate news monopolists illegal and unethical and incompetent activities. Myths are not attested facts. Attitudes, pro or con, are not value standards; and science is not unsupported beliefs.
This so-called election, for instance, to whatever degree it has not been hopelessly warped by fake headlines, false stories, shadow agendas, bribery by elitist interests and simple ignorance, incompetence and multi-million-dollar attack ads and slanders–the rest has been destroyed by the actions of ‘tsaristic’ news moguls supporting the status quo–which is collectivist public-interest caesarisjm engaged in by a rogue president,
an emasculated Congress and a totalitaraianized judcial system unable or unwilling to protect individuals'’ rights gained by following fundamental regulations designed to avoid negligence and empower the self, not the government’s cronies, corrupters or Iron Triangle.
The role of the media’s operatives during this non-election has been horrendously illegal, shockingly immoral by ludicrous as ethical pretensions by any possible standards. You cannot for instance attack John Edwards hairdo, ignore the nonexistence of WMDs in Iraq, allow Jonh McKain and Mitt Romney to praise our health care and drug cartels as “the best in the world” the same week nine scientific studies accuse them of costing massively too much and being unresponsive to citizens. Yes, the problems are easily fixed; but not under a governance of power stealers uninterested in reform and with a citizenry unwilling to admit that fundamental Constitutional reform is both necessary and decades if not centuries overdue necessary.
People–not consumers–as citizens do not always deserve the government they get; but they certainly deserve the one they vote to keep.
Considering the fear campaign on the media these days it is not surprising that people would be trying to find alternative news sources. I am hearing from more and more people that listening to/reading all the disaster stories which are released on every day makes them feel worse and that they prefer not to follow what is going on around them.
Internet is changing the way news are delivered to people as the choice of news is extraordinary when compared to traditional media. People can go out there and find news stories that tthey are interested in - instead of just wait for the stories to come to them through channels such as TV or newspapers.
There is nothing surprising in the fact that people are turning to the Internet for news - after all it is an information medium and since people are going to ebay to shop, skype to talk and facebook to meet other people, it is even more natural for them to go to the world’s biggest network to find news they want to read.
Case in point - anecdotal, but true none-the-less.
Driving home today, I tuned into NPR’s “All Things Considered” where I was treated to a quarter hour on how various uninformed Chinese, South African, Iraqi and British, non-American citizen, non-voters view the US Presidential primary horse-race.
There was no discussion of any substantive issue, no discussion of how various candidates proposed policies might affect those substantive issues, nor any discussion of whether any candidate has a snowball’s chance of enacting any of their positions into law once elected.
The reason people are turning away from traditional journalism is that traditional journalism has no news content.
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.