What is also interesting to look at too is which new stories an outlet covers. We used to get the WSJ, USA Today, the SF Chronicle and SJ Mercury News at work. It was amazing not only to see how each outlet covered a given story, but also which stories made front page news between the various outlets. The very liberal local papers often had the national/international stories that made the front page of WSJ and USA Today on page 3, with local/liberal causes on the front page. In that same timeframe CNN had stories #1-3 about Donald Trump regardless of whether something more meaningful was going on in the world.Found this chart years ago, when I already knew how very different ‘News’ can be, depending on where it comes from. The chart is a great visual, and I find it to be spot on. There’s other charts like it, they look similar.
For me, News is about gathering facts from many sources, to make an informed conclusion. I'm a bit of a news junky.
Some new agencies say they are News, but only give the ½ of the story that echoes what their fans want to hear. It’s intentionally misleading.
Reminds me of the old Paul Harvey “Rest of the Story” report. Only difference is, to the hear the rest of the story, you need to turn the channel.
It wasn’t always like this. There used to be accountability in reporting news, and to enjoy a license to be a news agency. It was called the Fairness Doctrine, it was about truth and fairness in reporting. It was done away with in the late 80’s, the argument was - Free speech. Now, people can say anything, and call it News. So the bottom corner dwellers on the graph were born. Some people get all their news from the those bottom corners, they tend to be angry, misinformed and loyal to those “news’ agencies, who keep reporting what their fans want to hear. Facts have nothing to do with it.