Why old-style news is new again
The pandemic has forced Americans to turn to traditional media and away from 鈥渋ffy鈥 sources. This truth-seeking could last longer than the disaster driving it.
The pandemic has forced Americans to turn to traditional media and away from 鈥渋ffy鈥 sources. This truth-seeking could last longer than the disaster driving it.
From plagues to earthquakes, disasters often push people in wholly new directions. Will the current pandemic be the same? An inkling of a shift comes from a new study at the University of Michigan. It found more Americans have turned to mainstream news sites since the COVID-19 crisis began. They have shied away from what researchers call 鈥渋ffy鈥 sources on social media.
This 鈥渇light to quality,鈥 as the study puts it, is more than a desire for truth about ways to avoid personal harm. People are also worried about the virus鈥檚 impact on the world. Others have had their beliefs about nature, God, or humanity challenged. Trained journalists in traditional media have provided access to practical advice as well as broad meaning.
The study鈥檚 conclusion: 鈥淚t appears people turn to tried and true sources of information鈥 to navigate through a life-and-death situation and all its uncertainties.鈥 But, adds Paul Resnick, one of the researchers, 鈥淚t will be interesting to see whether this 鈥榝light to quality鈥 is short-lived.鈥
A crisis like a pandemic can quickly restore people鈥檚 trust in their ability to know the聽truth 鈥 and to seek out trustworthy news. Traffic to traditional media outlets has surged since the pandemic began. And social media platforms like Facebook are culling disinformation about COVID-19 from their sites.
This truth-seeking is a frequent reaction after a disaster. When three earthquakes and a tsunami killed tens of thousands in Lisbon, Portugal, in 1755, the enormity of the devastation triggered a revolution among Europeans about the role of God in such events. People began to develop critical thinking skills and the tools for fact-checking. This gave them the information and the mental acuity to put disasters in context.
In all aspects of life, truth can be liberating. 鈥淚t is only light and evidence that can work a change in men鈥檚 opinions; and that light can in no manner proceed from corporal sufferings, or any other outward penalties,鈥 wrote 17th-century philosopher John Locke.
The pandemic has turned much of modern life upside down. But it has also unleashed a search for sustaining truths that can outlast the crisis. Old-fashioned journalism can鈥檛 uncover all the answers. Yet with more people seeking fact over fiction, the truth will win in many ways.