Why Do People Avoid Following The News!

Four in ten people say that they avoid the news at least sometimes, according to the Reuters Institute’s Digital News Report 2025, published on Tuesday.

Four in ten people say that they avoid the news at least sometimes, according to the Reuters Institute’s Digital News Report 2025, published on Tuesday.

This is according to a survey of nearly 100,000 people across 48 countries.


Of these, 39% said that they purposefully turned away from news because it has a negative effect on their mood, while 31% said they feel worn out by the sheer amount of news that there is.


A similar share said that there is too much coverage of war and conflict (29 percent) or politics (29%) in the news. Respondents were able to select multiple answers out of ten possible options.

According to the report, younger respondents were more likely to say that they feel powerless in the face of existential issues such as economic insecurity and climate change, that the news doesn’t feel relevant to their lives or that it can lead to arguments.

Under-35s were also far more likely to have said that the news is too hard to understand.

In Malaysia, Switzerland and Thailand, 19-24% of under 35 year old respondents who at least occasionally avoid the news, said this was due to the issue of it being too hard to follow.

In the U.S., 13% of under 35 years old news avoiders said the same.

David Manners

David Manners

David Manners has more than forty-years experience writing about the electronics industry, its major trends and leading players. As well as writing business, components and research news, he is the author of the site's most popular blog, Mannerisms. This features series of posts such as Fables, Markets, Shenanigans, and Memory Lanes, across a wide range of topics.

Comments

2 comments

  1. An excellent point John. The Tow Centre For Digital Journalism part of Columbia University came up with a study which found a substantial proportion of inaccuracies in answers to questions put to generative AI search engines.
    The study tested eight generative search tools: OpenAI’s ChatGPT Search, Perplexity, Perplexity Pro, DeepSeek Search, Microsoft’s Copilot, xAI’s Grok-and Grok-3 (beta), and Google’s Gemini.
    Collectively, the tools provided incorrect answers to more than 60% of queries.
    Perplexity answered 37% of the queries incorrectly, while Grok 3 answered 94% of the queries incorrectly.

  2. Hi David. It would have been useful to see the sources from where these respondents got their news. My real question is how much of their opinions are shaped by fake or misleading news sites.

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