Is the So-Called Media Bubble Real?

Data analyzed by Politico reveals that the national media really does work in an extreme political and geographical bubble and there are no sign things are changing. More than ever, media organizations are concentrated on the coasts, which are decidedly politically liberal. This was not quite as true prior to 2008. Due to a steady rapid and steady rise in internet publishing and broadcasting, jobs in this field have grown from 77,900 in January 2008 to 206,700 in January 2017. Currently, 73 percent of internet publishing and broadcasting jobs are concentrated on the coasts. In contrast, newspaper jobs are spread around the country. However, Internet publishers are now gaining workers at twice the rate of the loss of workers of struggling and failing newspapers.

Why does this media bubble matter? Well, the political and geographical media bubble likely played a huge factor in the 2016 presidential election, for one thing. Donald Trump’s surprise win revealed a deep confirmation bias in the election coverage by most of the media. It was overwhelming assumed by the majority-liberal press that Hilary Clinton would win by a landslide. This failure to maintain objectivity reveals how untrustworthy the media truly is.

The most important reason why the media bubble matters is that journalists working on either of the coasts for big network media outlets appear to be out of touch with the average American experience. This trend is troubling, to say the least, because it begs the question: does the news really reflect what is going on in our country?

Can the media bubble be deflated? And does the media even recognize this as something that needs to be fixed?

Let me know your thoughts!

Comments

  1. I believe that for the most part, the news media has wholesome intentions. I believe that many corporations desire to share information as accurately and clearly as possible. But I do realize that journalist bias and controlling corporations do exist. I understand that as the article says "the media is not just guilty of confirmation bias but complicity". I think that many times, journalists report on the bandwagon type topics.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I believe that our news semi-accurately reflects what is truly going on in our country. It is impossible to be completely objective, but it seems as if news information and the journalist who write/post this information now-a-days really are not trying as hard as they can to give the most unbiased opinion possible. Furthermore, I do believe that the media bubble could potentially be defeated, although I think it would take a large amount of work to do so. It is especially hard because I do not think that a lot of the media recognizes it as something that needs to be fixed or that even exists.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment