They’re talking about me!


The Onion is becoming the only reliable source for news

I can relate to this story: Why more and more people are tuning the news out: ‘Now I don’t have that anxiety’. I feel the same way!

“Now that I don’t watch the news, I just don’t have that anxiety. I don’t have dread,” said Mardette Burr, an Arizona retiree who says she stopped watching the news about eight years ago. “There were times that I’d be up at two or three o’clock in the morning upset about something that was going on in the world that I just didn’t have a lot of control over.”

She’s not alone. Globally, news avoidance is at a record high, according to an annual survey by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism published in June. This year, 40% of respondents, surveyed across nearly 50 countries, said they sometimes or often avoid the news, up from 29% in 2017 and the joint highest figure recorded.

The number was even higher in the US, at 42%, and in the UK, at 46%. Across markets, the top reason people gave for actively trying to avoid the news was that it negatively impacted their mood. Respondents also said they were worn out by the amount of news, that there is too much coverage of war and conflict, and that there’s nothing they can do with the information.

I gave up on the NY Times years ago — it was clearly a tool of the oligarchy, and I was constantly irritated with the bothsiderism. I stopped watching CNN during the Iraq war, when it was wallowing in the ‘glory’ of gunning down thousands of people. I thought maybe the Washington Post was a little better, but unsubscribed when Bezos exerted his control over its editorial position. Now I will go for days without looking at the news. I get most of my information from a few trusted online sources, and I worry that that will reinforce my biases, but no worry — I expect the government will squash them all soon, as they would like to do with PBS. ProPublica is still hanging in there!

Where do you get your news? Or do you even bother any more?

Comments

  1. cheerfulcharlie says

    I start my mornings with Raw Story. Sure it is biased, but it gives me the outrageous doings of the MAGAts I need to know about.

  2. Dick Pilz says

    I get my news from NPR, The Guardian, and Ground News. I have paid subscriptions to all three.

  3. cartomancer says

    For UK news I tend to go with Novara Media and Double Down News. For US news… well, same, but also Some More News, the comedy news show on Youtube. Or sometimes I just don’t bother, imagine some kind of horrific fascistic atrocity and just assume that probably happened to save time.

  4. raven says

    I don’t pay any attention to the MSN, Mainstream News any more.
    All of it is owned by billionaires and they don’t report the news any more.
    They’ve failed us big time in our current crisis.

    The New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, CBS, etc.. aren’t worth wasting time on.

    There is a lot of news online from reliable sources such as the Guardian and a lot of newer startups.
    I mostly just scroll through Bluesky for those.
    Plu,s in between the news, they have comics and cat photos.

  5. John Watts says

    I still scan the headlines, but don’t do a deep dive the way I once did. It’s all Trump 24/7 and my BP and sanity can’t take it. I never watch the bellowing, big ego news readers on the MSM. For example, the only articles I read this morning were about divers smashing sea urchins to save the California kelp forests and the latest on that 3I/Atlas comet.

  6. rorschach says

    any billionaire media and social media is out for me. There are a few good independent news outlets there, but you have to always scan them for zionism support. Michael West Media and Anthony Klan would be 2 to name from Australia in particular. The Guardian has its ups and downs. More reliable are RollingStone and TeenVogue, and Wired and Techcrunch for tech and internet shenanigans. If you want more info about all the age verification stuff going on, check out Siri Dahl(very much nsfw).

  7. vinnievidivici says

    I’ve kinda stuck with AP. The app on my iPad isn’t bad, but I miss out on local news. I probably ought to do something about that if I want to consider myself “informed.” [sigh] I’m going to check out ProPublica today though, based on recommendations here. Thanks!

    But my real recommendation is a podcast from NPR titled “Up First.” 10-15 minutes of your favorite reporters, covering the three top stories of the day. That seems to be just enough for me.

  8. Pierce R. Butler says

    I follow the news more than ever: sure it wears me down, but I prefer to know what and whom to prepare for. Getting sucker-punched with your hands in your pockets is, among other things, embarrassing.

    We’re really short on good news venues any more, but The Infinite Thread here does a good job and often points to worthwhile sources (thanks, Lynna & Co!).

    Also recommended: commondreams.org (a soapbox for progressive viewpoints, but often with good reportage on topics ignored elsewhere), tomdispatch.com (deep dives on war/peace, climate, etc issues), theintercept.com (national/international issues), rewirenewsgroup.com (feminist topics), newsfromthestates.com (localized US reportage), and of course digbysblog.net & emptywheel.net.

  9. Thomas Scott says

    Call me an optimist or even naive but I continue to subscribe to the Washington Post. I remember the “Pentagon Papers” , the Watergate “Plumbers”, and the Spotlight disclosures of the coverup of child abuses by the Catholic Church.
    I believe that an open and free press is essential to hold politicians accountable. Powerful people have always controlled the US press, but better that than a government controlled press.

  10. says

    Joe my God, Wonkette, The Infinite Thread. That’s about it since I’m living with my parents and they are Trunpkins (I think it’s unspoken conflict avoidance). I don’t have much opportunity to catch up on my phone, and I don’t want to put anything on in their house to avoid arguing.
    I’ll consider things I see in these comments as suggestions though.

  11. beholder says

    Having an accurate sense of American empire’s genocidal campaigns and other hegemonic goings-on isn’t supposed to be comfortable. I take breaks when I need to, but I catch up on it later.

    Where do you get your news?

    Props to Antiwar(dot)com for their volume of relevant output and for updating regularly. Also the World Socialist Web Site, Scheerpost, and a smattering of individual journalists’ blogs: Caitlin Johnstone, Jonathan Cook, Chris Hedges, etc.

  12. Deborah Goldsmith says

    Propublica
    The Guardian (have to watch out for transphobia)
    The Nation
    New Republic
    Mother Jones
    DAME Magazine
    The 19th
    Lots of small sites and individual newsletters and blogs, too numerous to list

  13. John Morales says

    “Having an accurate sense of American empire’s genocidal campaigns and other hegemonic goings-on isn’t supposed to be comfortable.”

    The article is about the news, and not all the news is about the USA’s goings on.

    That is to say, the world is much bigger than the USA and its goings-on.

    As an example, I asked BB about current conflicts:
    Here is a plain text list of current active war zones (2025), based on recent casualty data and conflict classifications:

    Ukraine – Russo-Ukrainian War
    Palestine/Israel – Israel–Palestine War
    Myanmar – Civil War
    Sudan – Civil War
    Ethiopia – Civil War
    Nigeria – Terrorist Insurgency
    Burkina Faso – Terrorist Insurgency
    Mexico – Drug War
    Syria – Civil War
    Mali – Terrorist Insurgency
    Democratic Republic of the Congo – Terrorist Insurgency
    Yemen – Civil War
    Pakistan/Afghanistan – Border Conflict / Insurgency
    Haiti – Gang War / Civil War
    Iraq – Terrorist Insurgency / Civil Unrest
    Cameroon – Insurgency
    Niger – Terrorist Insurgency
    Chad – Armed Conflict
    Mozambique – Insurgency
    Libya – Civil War
    Colombia – Armed Conflict
    South Sudan – Civil War
    Central African Republic – Civil War
    Bangladesh – Political Unrest
    Ecuador – Gang Violence
    Uganda – Insurgency
    Benin – Terrorist Activity
    Algeria – Insurgency
    Morocco – Border Tensions
    Ghana – Terrorist Activity
    Tunisia – Political Unrest

    This list reflects regions with sustained armed violence, not isolated incidents. Classification varies by source and reporting standards.

    Me, I follow Reuters, Guardian, El Pais, BBC, ABC (aus) as my baseline. No USAnian news sources, but I do follow Vox and Slate and David Brin and other opinion-heavy news items. And of course economics channels on YouTube.

    Plenty to choose from, but one needs a bit of parallax, so very easy to get into a bubble. (Media bubble, not bubblebot)

  14. devnll says

    The Guardian, Stephen Colbert, and John Oliver. It’s sad that 2 of 3 are supposed to be comedies, and they’re still my best sources of info, but there we are.

  15. DanDare says

    Here in OZ I watch the Australian Broadcasting Corporation news, which is bland, a bit lightweight but generally factual. Also the ABC’s 4 Corners for investigative journalism. I watch Al Jezeera for good international news and read The Guardian. I catch up with blogs like this and vlogs like BTC and Meidas Touch. I subscribe to Ground News to check the biases and find new stories.

Leave a Reply