Boston Herald

Gen Z must find journalism it can trust

- By JACK ZHANG Jack Zhang is a junior at Phillips Exeter Academy.

Meet “Generation Z.”

The pundits are still determinin­g what birth years that applies to, but most agree that it was between the late 1990s and the late 2000s. We grew up with developed internet, social media and convenienc­e above all else. Forget millennial­s as the delinquent stewards of democracy — at least they still read online newspapers and journals. According to a 2017 study, Generation Z newspaper readership lags behind other age groups by nearly 30 percent.

Somehow, technology has made our informatio­n both more democratiz­ed and top-down at once. We can laugh at President Trump’s gaffes live, but we also think little past what’s presented to us in a five-minute YouTube politics video. We think of ourselves as activists when we point out Twitter typos or watch a NowThis clip on Medicare. Generation Z hasn’t rejected informatio­n, but we’re more concerned with superficia­l understand­ing than the nitty-gritty of politics and ideology.

The inane and otherwise unreportab­le things that went ignored by mainstream journalism are now easily accessible to all of us, and Generation Z is eating it up. Real investigat­ive journalism is already hard to come by these days. Imagine when Generation Z, the cohort that has already forgone substantiv­e reporting in favor of BuzzFeed videos, becomes the main purchasing bloc of the world. Real journalism, along with all our democratic institutio­ns and the American political tradition, will wither away unless Generation Z supports and believes in it. As the Washington Post is so keen on saying, “Democracy dies in darkness.”

Beyond their unwitting weakening of solid journalism, Generation Z has gone even further: We have swapped emotion for reason. It’s not hard to ridicule Trump for his antics or former President Barack Obama for his halting speech, which is why it’s easy for us to substitute these things for real political engagement. The convenienc­e of personalit­y-based politics has superseded real journalism — but we shouldn’t blame millennial­s, Generation Z or even technology for that. Instead, we should build trust in reliable and substantia­l journalism for the future.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? FOCUSED ON THE FUTURE: Jack Zhang, left, of Markham, Ont., a junior at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, and Andrew Hoenig, a Franklin Pierce University senior, edit Jack’s article for The Presidency and the Press, presented by the Boston...
COURTESY PHOTO FOCUSED ON THE FUTURE: Jack Zhang, left, of Markham, Ont., a junior at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, and Andrew Hoenig, a Franklin Pierce University senior, edit Jack’s article for The Presidency and the Press, presented by the Boston...

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