Attempting to balance between being knowledgeable by newsmedia and not seemingly overwhelmed and doubtful by it can be burdensome especially during a global crisis. The reasons behind this are the constant exposure of people to sensational or disastrous reporting and the declining credibility of some journalists these days. Likewise, some people adhere to the view that reading newspaper and watching television news is unnecessary. With this in mind, I completely affirm such a notion because of the news contents' enormous negativity and lack of reliability.
To begin with, the daily news consumption across multiple media platforms produces a detrimental impact on one's thoughts, behaviour and emotions. For instance, the constant stream of news about CoVID-19 that people nowadays are exposed to regularly can contribute to a person's worsening mental health conditions. Such nerve-racking circumstance involves changes in sleeping and eating patterns, fear and worry about personal health and the health of loved ones and concentration difficulties. Evidently, with consistent exposure to such news, whether actively or passively, someone is more likely to discover his worries difficult to manage and more distressful than it would normally be.
Furthermore, over the last twenty years, the public has grown increasingly incredulous of the news industry. In the first place, there is a powerful correlation between trust and how much people interact with news. The most valued factors related to this trust include accuracy, timeliness and clarity. To illustrate, consumers are more likely to give credence to media which get the facts right, are up-to-date with the most recent news and information, are concise and get to the point. This means that to enable information trustworthiness, content quality and information provenance should be primarily considered. Hence, provenance may aid in assessing the quality of a story, so as to determine the degree of trust that should be ascribed to it.
In conclusion, frequent broadcasting of tremendous unpleasant reports and declining dependability to journalism can make reading the newspaper and watching television news preposterous. Therefore, I believe that journalists must contemplate differently about content, formats and platforms to develop a generation with various foundations and expectations more engaged in the news.
Attempting to balance between being knowledgeable by
newsmedia
and not
seemingly
overwhelmed and doubtful by it can be burdensome
especially
during a global crisis. The reasons behind this are the constant exposure of
people
to sensational or disastrous reporting and the declining credibility of
some
journalists these days.
Likewise
,
some
people
adhere to the view that reading newspaper and watching television
news
is unnecessary. With this in mind, I completely affirm such a notion
because
of the
news
contents' enormous negativity and lack of reliability.
To
begin
with, the daily
news
consumption across multiple media platforms produces a detrimental impact on one's thoughts,
behaviour
and emotions.
For instance
, the constant stream of
news
about
CoVID-19
that
people
nowadays
are exposed
to
regularly
can contribute to a person's worsening mental health conditions. Such nerve-racking circumstance involves
changes
in sleeping and eating patterns, fear and worry about personal health and the health of
loved
ones and concentration difficulties.
Evidently
, with consistent exposure to such
news
, whether
actively
or
passively
, someone is more likely to discover his worries difficult to manage and more distressful than it would
normally
be.
Furthermore
, over the last twenty years, the public has grown
increasingly
incredulous of the
news
industry. In the
first
place, there is a powerful correlation between trust and how much
people
interact with
news
. The most valued factors related to this trust include accuracy, timeliness and clarity. To illustrate, consumers are more likely to give credence to media which
get
the facts right, are up-to-date with the most recent
news
and information, are concise and
get
to the point. This means that to enable information trustworthiness, content quality and information provenance should be
primarily
considered.
Hence
, provenance may aid in assessing the quality of a story,
so as to
determine the degree of trust that should
be ascribed
to it.
In conclusion
, frequent broadcasting of tremendous unpleasant reports and declining dependability to journalism can
make
reading the newspaper and watching television
news
preposterous.
Therefore
, I believe that journalists
must
contemplate
differently
about content, formats and platforms to develop a generation with various foundations and expectations more engaged in the
news
.