Americans are
keenly aware of the negative impact budget cuts and staff reductions have had
on news outlets, according to a new study from Pew Research. The firm's annual State of theNews Media, released today, finds that 31 percent of those polled
have abandoned a news outlet in the last year. As for why readers (and viewers,
particularly in the case of local TV) are fleeing, respondents point to a
noticeable dive in quality output. 31 percent have ditched a news outlet — be
it a newspaper, magazine, or TV channel — for failing to measure up to the
level of work they've grown accustomed to. Digging a bit deeper, a vast
majority of that subset (60.7 percent) accuse outlets of producing "less
complete" journalism than in years past, with 23.5 percent saying they've
walked away after seeing fewer stories covered.
Unfortunately,
Americans seem woefully unaware of the hardships news companies continue
to endure thanks to plummeting ad revenues and — in the case of many
publications — a stubborn transition to digital format. 60 percent of those
surveyed say they've heard relatively little (or nothing at all) about ongoing
media struggles. Pew highlights the dire straits by revealing that the newsroom
workforce has fallen to its lowest point since 1978, employing less than 40,000
full-time professionals. TV viewership also showed signs of stagnation, a
troubling sign during an election year. Still, there's some good to be taken
away from Pew's report; newspaper circulation held relatively steady compared
to the sharp drops seen in previous years, and the paywall model adopted by
many publications is helping reverse their financial fortunes — along with other creative solutions. But if the end product suffers,
Pew's study suggests second chances may be hard to come by. [Source]
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