Over at New York, John Herrman pulls no punches describing the American news business:
American news is a smoldering wasteland....Cable news is in trouble, the twin threats of streaming and social-media video having sapped it of relevance....Print media is simply disappearing in much of the country, and where it still exists, it is in barely controlled decline.....Digital news is suffering a brutal downturn of its own....Publications savvy or lucky enough to have built subscription businesses — most notable among them the New York Times — have effectively traded broad influence and participation in the public discourse for survival behind ever taller paywalls, where smaller numbers of devoted subscribers consume news that they effectively cannot share. News organizations still vying for pure scale must contend with a Facebook that has thoroughly deprioritized news in its feeds, a chaotic Twitter owned by an ideologue, and a Google that’s threatening to replace its top results with content generated by AI.
I'd like to offer two different perspectives on this. The first is from the perspective of journalists themselves, where Herrman is 100% correct:
This is carnage. Since 2000 jobs in newspapers have plummeted 80%. Total journalism jobs have declined 63%. "Smoldering wasteland" is not too harsh a description.
But there's another perspective: that of the reader of news. Just for lulz, suppose you get your news from the following sources:
- New York Times
- Wall Street Journal
- A network nightly news broadcast
- The Economist
- Reuters/AP websites
- Daily Mail (for the gossip)
- BBC
- Politico
Whatever you think of these news sources individually, they're basically all healthy and reliable. Some are free, some are partially free, and some are behind strict paywalls. But that's still better than pre-internet, when you would have been required to pay for nearly all of them and couldn't easily share any of them since there was no sharing medium available.
You don't have to rely on CNN or BuzzFeed or Facebook or Vice. If you want, you can get your news from much the same places as you did 20 years ago, except more cheaply and more conveniently.
A hundred years ago, my great-grandfather had access to one news source (he ran the only newspaper in town). Twenty or 30 years ago, most of us effectively had access to three or four. Today we have effective—not just theoretical—access to far more than that.
Herrman's broadside against the news biz was motivated by his belief that its current parlous state will have terrible impacts on politics:
It seems not only possible but likely that this will be the first modern election in the United States without a minimum viable media: a placeless race, in which voters and candidates can and will, despite or maybe because of a glut of fragmented content, ignore the news.
I dunno about that. Here's the news that people say they actually consume:
This isn't an entirely pretty picture. Two of the most popular news sources are, at best, semi-reliable, although it's worth noting that social media news feeds mostly point to conventional news sources, not TikTok videos or Twitter disinformation.
There's no question that the news industry has problems. In particular, local news, no matter how you spin it, is all but gone. Small digital outlets, especially those without a niche, struggle constantly. Jobs in journalism have cratered. And yet, through all that, readers have more good options today than ever in history, and the evidence shows that they largely take advantage of that. There's plenty of crap around the edges that demands constant vigilance, but core news continues to putter along smoothly, providing excellent coverage at a reasonable price. It's hard to see how we could ask for much more.