Teenagers Say Reading Online News Is Stressful
January 24th, 2008 — admin
Northwestern University’s Medill School and Kellogg School Of Management recently conducted a study in which 14 to 18-year-old participants were asked to describe the time they spend on YouTube or social networking sites, and contrast that to time spent on news sites.
Many of the participants described time spent on YouTube or social networking and music downloading sites as a treat or time-out. But they considered their online news experiences as stressful or a reminder of the world’s dangers.
The study drew some conclusions that should be of extreme interest to any local news operation:
The research found:
• News isn’t that important to teens right now.
Particularly news of politics, government, public affairs and other subjects that journalists might call “serious news.” Other things are more compelling. In addition, following the news is stressful for teens: it reminds them of the peril in the world.
• Local news sites aren’t much on their radar screens.
Teens are not interested enough to go out of their way for news. So whatever news pops up in front of them when they turn on their computers – usually the large Internet portals and news aggregators – is what they see.
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One of the biggest challenges any local news organization has faced in recent years has been reorganizing the process of gathering and publishing news across a number of platforms. Local journalism now includes not just the traditional broadcast or print market, but the web, mobile, video, rss, widgets, radio and whatever else comes along.
On Thursday, LIN TV Corp. launched a local political website in each of the Company’s 17 markets. Each local political website includes news headline feeds from a variety of area traditional media outlets as well as local and regional political blogs. There is a also a bunch of candidate profiles, voting info and other political research and poll results.
It’s important to be able to accurately judge the reach of a local news site. It’s not just the page views or unique monthly visits. It’s how vital the site is to its core users. Does it have value to advertisers? Is it a factor in the blogosphere?
One of the challenges for anyone dealing with local news and the web is staying on top of the newest technologies and services. Yes, there is more on the web than just Facebook, MySpace and YouTube.