The media is the least trusted institution of 10 civil and political institutions in the U.S., recent polls show – even worse than Congress.
The media is the least trusted institution of 10 civil and political institutions in the U.S., recent polls show – even worse than Congress.

Mainstream Media Faces a Credibility Crisis

Professor’s journalism research shows how the news can still serve the public

Professor’s journalism research shows how the news can still serve the public

Share
The media is the least trusted institution of 10 civil and political institutions in the U.S., recent polls show – even worse than Congress.
The media is the least trusted institution of 10 civil and political institutions in the U.S., recent polls show – even worse than Congress.
Mainstream Media Faces a Credibility Crisis
Copy

“The news media is the least trusted group among 10 U.S. civic and political institutions involved in the democratic process,” the polling firm Gallup concluded in a 2024 analysis.

Despite news organizations’ pledges to provide fact-based reporting, and ongoing investments to build trust, people across the political spectrum in the U.S. are unconvinced of mainstream media’s self-described credibility.

The category “mainstream media” refers to flagship national newspapers like The New York Times, cable news channels like CNN and Fox News and news networks like ABC or NBC and their local affiliates. Despite deepening partisan divides in the U.S., Pew Internet Research has found that this definition is consistent across Republicans and Democrats.

Mainstream media’s credibility has been diminishing for years. But the trend has attracted renewed attention from news leaders and analysts since the 2024 presidential election when many outlets again misjudged the electoral chances of President-elect Donald Trump.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

Nova One kicks off our very first Biggest Little Desk: a Rhode Island spin of NPR’s Tiny Desk
Rodney Chatman is out after five years as Brown police chief. He’s succeeded by High Clements, who led the Providence police department for 12 years
Jon Mitchell points to gains in crime, schools and development, but sidesteps offshore wind slowdown and immigration concerns
From a show at AS220 to New Bedford’s film festival and a high-energy performance at Mundo’s, here’s what to do this weekend
While he says the state’s reputation as a hotbed of political corruption is overstated, Marion says government oversight today isn’t as ‘robust as it should be’