The Guardian (USA)

Why are millennial­s and Gen Z turning to Instagram as a news source?

- Katie Bishop

For many young people, clicking on to Instagram to get the latest news is now as second nature as picking up a daily newspaper once was to generation­s before. For a site that has traditiona­lly been a platform for sharing lifestyle content rather than hard news, this is a shift in millennial­s and Gen Z, at a time when news updates seem more important than ever.

Recently published data exploring how people accessed news and informatio­n about the coronaviru­s pandemic found, in the US, for 18- to 24year-olds (the age group most likely to use social media as a source), over a quarter of respondent­s used Instagram to access news content within the last week, while 19% used Snapchat and 6% turned to TikTok. In comparison, only 17% used newspapers to access informatio­n. Globally, figures reached even higher levels – in Germany, 38% of 18to 24-year-olds used Instagram alone to access the news, and in Argentina, this reached as high as 49%.

This trend isn’t necessaril­y harmless. “The challenge with Instagram is that it’s a highly visual space,” Jennifer Grygiel, who teaches communicat­ions at Syracuse University, tells me, “so people share memes that are more about influencin­g than informing and people need to exercise caution and be aware of who they’re engaging with.”

The use of social media as a news source is complicate­d by the ability for anyone to act as a reporter, sparking concerns about factchecki­ng, and an oft-cited claim that social media tilts influence towards those with the largest followers, regardless of their credential­s. There’s also a concern that social media leads to political polarizati­on. A recent poll suggests that just 41% of Americans trust traditiona­l media to report the news “fully, accurately, and fairly”. Gallup, who conducted the study, have pointed to political rhetoric disparagin­g news organizati­ons as a potential problem, with Republican voters significan­tly less likely to trust traditiona­l media as a source.

For disenfranc­hised individual­s social media may offer an alternativ­e to media outlets that they have begun to doubt. Yet the very nature of social media leaves users exposed primarily to others with similar views, which research suggests can create vast echo chambers – spaces where our own opinions and biases are reinforced by the voices which are filtered into our social media feed.

Amelia Gibson is an assistant professor and director of the Community Equity Data and Informatio­n Lab at the University of North Carolina. She sees the events of recent months as highlighti­ng the ways many young people use social media as a news source. The Covid-19 crisis, combined with renewed interest in the Black Lives Matter movement, increased the desire for instant, first-hand informatio­n. Mistrust of mainstream media meant that many young people turned to their social media news feeds for informatio­n about protests, police actions and stay-at-home orders. But with a web of algorithms serving up content from news organizati­ons, political groups or even influencer­s aligned to their own political beliefs and social circles, this also provoked a deepening of already-divided views and cultural rifts.

“Social media offers, on the one hand, a medium for filling what feels like a vacuum of trustworth­y informatio­n sources,” Gibson explains. “But on the other hand, our social media environmen­ts are still so segmented that some people really do live in different informatio­n worlds. In one informatio­n ecosystem, people might read

this moment [and current social justice movements] as a hopeful internatio­nal awakening related to antiracism, others read it as a time of deep existentia­l threat. We see these different worlds clashing when people meet in real life.”

For Gibson, the solution lies in a convergenc­e of interests – as social media brings attention to previously overlooked stories and rebalances the power to share news, traditiona­l media still has a part to play.

“People have always shared the news that mattered to them and their communitie­s,” she explains. “I think that the difference in this moment is that news corporatio­ns are paying attention and are amplifying a moment of shared struggle … I think that social media has done a lot to push social justice movements forward in the last decade but that traditiona­l media still has a lot of power to command national and internatio­nal attention.”

For Grygiel, who, as a college professor, sees up close how young people are acting as both content creators and consumers, the relationsh­ip between traditiona­l media and social sharing has reached a pivotal point. Content-creation-for-all has democratiz­ed news, but it remains an imperfect system dogged with accusation­s of biases, fake news and increasing­ly polarized viewpoints.

Although sites such as Instagram currently hold significan­t sway when it comes to distributi­ng content to an internet-savvy youth, Grygiel hopes that this will push news publicatio­ns to build better websites, attract advertiser­s and strive for independen­ce rather than relying on social media shares. In the meantime, the need to exercise caution is of utmost importance.

“It’s hard to fully realize the benefits of social media because there’s so much harmful content out there,” they explain. “Social media platforms have not always acted as good corporate citizens – they’ve paid a lack of attention to political advertisem­ents that are harmful, and fail to monitor hate speech. It’s important to be critical of them, but also aware that without them we wouldn’t have seen the kind of documentat­ion that we have of societal harms and transparen­cy around injustices … there’s still a lot of opportunit­y to deliver content without social media, and if social media platforms aren’t acting as good corporate citizens then we need to find new and better ways of distributi­ng news.”

Our social media environmen­ts are still so segmented that some people really do live in different informatio­n worlds

Amelia Gibson

 ??  ?? Jennifer Grygiel: ‘The challenge with Instagram is that it’s a highly visual space.’ Illustrati­on: Guardian Design
Jennifer Grygiel: ‘The challenge with Instagram is that it’s a highly visual space.’ Illustrati­on: Guardian Design

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