Nov 7, 2025 06:11 PM
(This post was last modified: Nov 7, 2025 06:18 PM by C C.)
https://harpers.org/archive/2025/11/why-...journalism
EXCERPTS: The challenges facing the establishment media are more severe today than ever before. Trust in the press is at a record low... [...] All of this raises pressing questions: In an era of declining trust, industry collapse, and technological disruption, does the media, as we’ve historically understood it, have a future? [...] Harper’s Magazine invited four leading media observers to grapple with these questions...
[...] I’m not sure that there’s a correlation between the mistakes the media has made and the distrust the public feels toward it... [...] I also think that it’s part of a broader institutional mistrust. If you look at the decline of trust in American institutions, it is overwhelmingly connected to the dynamics of local relationships...
[...] The editor of the local newspaper, the reporter people are familiar with, the family physician who has taken care of you and your siblings -- these figures have credibility in a way that large national institutions do not. Americans have never trusted large national institutions...
[...] I think we’re overlooking some important context here, which is that trust was the highest when the media really couldn’t be trusted. Gallup data on media trust goes back only to the early Seventies. Yet we know that in the Sixties, trust in the media was incredibly high. And we know from history that in the Fifties and the early Sixties, newspapers were not telling the whole story... [...] So I actually think that the decline of trust has to do with newspapers’ becoming more responsible, more accurate. Nobody I know would trade today’s newspaper for one from 1960...
[...] I would add that people have unreasonable expectations about science ever being settled. Obama sometimes used to cite something and say, “The debate is settled,” when, in fact, there’s no such thing as settled science...
[...] So we have an industry facing multiple crises: it isn’t widely trusted, it’s perceived as too weak to defend itself, and even its own backers are wavering. And now it must contend with another disruption: artificial intelligence... (MORE - missing details)
EXCERPTS: The challenges facing the establishment media are more severe today than ever before. Trust in the press is at a record low... [...] All of this raises pressing questions: In an era of declining trust, industry collapse, and technological disruption, does the media, as we’ve historically understood it, have a future? [...] Harper’s Magazine invited four leading media observers to grapple with these questions...
[...] I’m not sure that there’s a correlation between the mistakes the media has made and the distrust the public feels toward it... [...] I also think that it’s part of a broader institutional mistrust. If you look at the decline of trust in American institutions, it is overwhelmingly connected to the dynamics of local relationships...
[...] The editor of the local newspaper, the reporter people are familiar with, the family physician who has taken care of you and your siblings -- these figures have credibility in a way that large national institutions do not. Americans have never trusted large national institutions...
[...] I think we’re overlooking some important context here, which is that trust was the highest when the media really couldn’t be trusted. Gallup data on media trust goes back only to the early Seventies. Yet we know that in the Sixties, trust in the media was incredibly high. And we know from history that in the Fifties and the early Sixties, newspapers were not telling the whole story... [...] So I actually think that the decline of trust has to do with newspapers’ becoming more responsible, more accurate. Nobody I know would trade today’s newspaper for one from 1960...
[...] I would add that people have unreasonable expectations about science ever being settled. Obama sometimes used to cite something and say, “The debate is settled,” when, in fact, there’s no such thing as settled science...
[...] So we have an industry facing multiple crises: it isn’t widely trusted, it’s perceived as too weak to defend itself, and even its own backers are wavering. And now it must contend with another disruption: artificial intelligence... (MORE - missing details)
