🙋🏾♀️ Younger audiences are increasingly accessing news via platforms such as TikTok
👎 Trust and interest in news are down in many countries
🙈 A depressing news agenda is leading more people to avoid the news reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/digital-news-r…
An increasing % of people is avoiding the news
🙈 38% in our global sample say they often or sometimes avoid the news (up from 29% in 2017). The number of avoiders has doubled in 🇧🇷 (27% to 54%) and 🇬🇧 (24% to 46%) over five years. More figures by country in the chart below
Why do people avoid the news? Here are the most common reasons:
🦠43% say they are put off by the repetitiveness of the news agenda, especially around politics / COVID-19
😥36% say that the news brings down their mood
🤬17% say the news leads to arguments they’d rather avoid
Interest in news is down in the vast majority of countries in our survey
🥱 In countries such as 🇪🇸(-30 points since 2015) 🇦🇷(-29) 🇧🇷🇬🇧(-27) these falls have been going on for some time. In 🇺🇸 interest remained high under Trump but has declined significantly since 2020
Trust in news is down in almost half the countries in our survey, partly reversing the gains made at the pandemic
📊 On average, 42% say they trust most news most of the time | 🇫🇮 remains the country with the highest levels of trust (69%) | 🇺🇸 and 🇸🇰 have the lowest score (26%)
Indifference to news and widespread perception of political biases are two of the main reasons for low trust
-In 🇺🇸 those who self-identify on the right are more than twice as likely to distrust the news compared with those on the left.
-In 🇫🇮 we see almost no difference
In other parts of the world, lack of trust is closely related to interference by politicians and businesspeople
🙊 This is an issue in Central and Eastern Europe, and in countries such as 🇪🇸🇬🇷🇮🇹, where there is a strong tradition of party-political influence over the media
There are signs that growth in the % of people paying for news online may be levelling off
💰 Despite increases in richer countries such as 🇦🇺(+5 points) 🇩🇪(+5) and 🇸🇪 (+3), 17% paid for any online news, the same figure as last year. Many more figures in the table below
People who subscribe to news are more likely to subscribe to other services and vice versa
📺65% in 🇬🇧 have at least one subscription to a TV service like Netflix (19% have 3+‼️)
🎧37% have a music subscription
⚽️22% pay for a sports service
📰7% have a news subscription
A theme in this year’s report is the difficulty in engaging younger users with news
🙋🏾♀️78% of 18-24s access news via side doors such as social media. Across all countries, 40% of 18-24s use TikTok for any purpose, with 15% using it for news. This is higher in the Global South
Around half of our respondents or more in most countries feel that journalists should stick to reporting the news on social media
🧐 However, a sizeable minority (especially younger audiences) believe they should also be allowed to express their personal views
Despite the popularity of video formats, all age groups say they still prefer to read news online rather than watch it
🎥 Respondents say they prefer reading because it is quicker (50%) or gives them more control (34%). 35% are put off by pre-roll ads. Figures by country below
After last year’s COVID-19 slowdown, growth in podcasts has resumed
🎙 Across a 20-market sample, 34% say they've consumed one or more podcasts in the last month. Our data show Spotify continues to gain ground over Apple and Google podcasts. Figures by country below
📌 These are just a few highlights from #DNR22. We encourage you to explore it in full. Here are a few key links:
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"We're doing less sensitive news like politics, court cases, the national security law. But political news has less interest, because the political system has changed" says Ronson
"There's quite a big difference between my previous work and today. It's not easy for me but it's the safest way for me to continue my life as a journalist," says Ronson
"Over the last 10 years, TV and print news consumption has been falling. People who don't use any news source at all have grown. The % has gone rom 3% in 2013 to 15% in 2022 in the US," says lead author @nicnewman#DNR22 twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
🇧🇷"It’s like a slow-motion coup. When we ask the internet platforms, how are you preparing for this? They don’t seem to have a plan." @camposmello speaks to @JuliaAngwin on her fears for Brazilian democracy niemanlab.org/2022/06/like-a…
🗳️"When specific actions threaten democracy, they should be covered as major news stories in themselves, not as part of a political or ideological debate." @protctdemocracy has published a guide to reporting on threats to democracy protectdemocracy.org/project/the-au…
🙏Brazilian police say they have found personal items belonging to missing British journalist Dom Phillips and his travelling companion and indigenous advocate Bruno Pereira bbc.co.uk/news/world-lat…
🌉The @sfchronicle is launching @sfnext a city-wide engagement exercise with residents about how to address major issues in the city to "drive public discussions and inform our journalism". sfchronicle.com/bayarea/articl…
🇵🇸A month after the killing of Shireen Abu Aqleh "the Biden administration continues to avoid assigning responsibility for the incident while refusing to carry out its own investigation [or] back calls for an independent investigation," writes @Harbpeace aljazeera.com/news/2022/6/11…
2️⃣Highly popular Spanish Telegram channels which have pushed COVID-denialism and conspiracy theories "have mutated to become deniers of the Kremlin's attack on its neighbor," according to this investigation by @malditaen maldita.es/malditobulo/20…
"[People shouldn't] jump the gun and then say,
“This has happened, I'm gonna tweet this first.”
There's no benefit to that. It usually benefits the propagation of lies and propaganda," said @astroehlein