Interesting piece by Eli Tan in the NY Times about a town in California's Central Valley where there is not much local news of the professional variety. Hardly anyone subscribes to mainstream news sites like the Times or the SF Chronicle. Instead, many people rely on a combination of local FaceBook groups, cable news, podcasters, and weird web sites. The piece takes off from an incident that took place in 2020, when several armed militia members showed up to defend the town against a rumored invasion by Black Lives Matter protesters. (The same thing happened in several other American towns.) This led to a split within local FaceBook groups, with some banning political posts and unsourced "news", and people who wanted to post such things moving to groups that called themselves "Unfiltered" or "Double Unfiltered."
The result in an environment in which many people have no idea what to believe:
Fred Smith, a gun store owner in Oakdale, grew up watching broadcasts of the CBS anchor Walter Cronkite when he was called “the most trusted man in America.” Until recently, he was a regular viewer of CNN and Fox News after work and estimates he spent over $100,000 advertising his store in the print pages of the Modesto Bee in the early 2000s.Two events that come up over and over with people and the news are the pandemic, which left many folks bewildered, and the media's failure to report on Biden's dementia:
But that trust has waned as traditional cable outlets have started to feel “more like entertainment than news,” he said. He’s gravitated toward podcasters like Joe Rogan and Shawn Ryan, a fellow veteran. But he doesn’t necessarily trust all the information on those podcasts, either.
“It used to be you had one source of news and you trusted it,” Mr. Smith said. “Now the news comes from everywhere, and I take it all with a grain of salt.”
He now finds himself inundated with “more news than he’s ever felt in his lifetime” in the first months of Mr. Trump’s second term, and he doesn’t trust any of it. Asked if he ever gets his news from social media, Mr. Smith opened his Instagram feed to show an A.I.-generated image of Mr. Trump riding a bald eagle. “You can’t trust that either,” he said.
Working alongside Mr. Smith at his gun store is Jimmy Freeman, 50, who is known around the shop as a news hound. But whatever trust Mr. Freeman had in mainstream media disappeared while watching the last Biden-Trump presidential debate.
Watching President Biden struggle to string together complete sentences, he couldn’t help but think that the press corps in Washington that was supposed to keep the country informed — including Oakdale — had let him down.
“It felt like a failure,” Mr. Freeman said. “How could the media not tell us what we were seeing?”
This is an issue I worry about all the time. The shaping of the current media environment in the US goes back to the 1960s, when a series of big time government lies – the U-2 flights, a hundred things about the Vietnam War, Watergate – led a lot of people, including a few I know, to decide that everything we were being told was lie. Some of them still feel that way. Another big moment was the aftermath of 9-11, when many people felt that we had not been told the whole story, which was followed by the Bush administration's nonsense about yellowcake uranium and so on. The cluelessness of most media about the Wall Street near collapse of 2008 was another moment. I sometimes feel like people do not understand the enormous impact of their lies, which may really be undermining our civilization.
On the other hand, governments lie all the time, and I don't think the current US government is worse than average.
So I think something else is necessary. The internet is the obvious factor, multiplying people's suspicions with a barrage of innuendo, spin, and lies. But I wonder what else there is.