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glonq | 5 months ago

Is anybody who identifies strongly with a political party is interested in hearing fair or balanced news? I had presumed that they just want to hear confirmation, and are likely to stray far beyond their favorite echo chambers.

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HPsquared|5 months ago

As news publishing becomes less profitable, it becomes more dependent on patronage - often political.

hvb2|5 months ago

> Is anybody who identifies strongly with a political party is interested in hearing fair or balanced news?

Yes. Same for conflicting opinions. Since this is HN I'll use a software analogy: I love it when people tell me how bad my idea is because they'll follow that up with theirs. And that's how we all learn.

To put that in real life US politics: we've made politics something you don't talk about because we fear disagreement and thus we slowly drift apart...

tptacek|5 months ago

I think this is a pretty important point; one thing that has changed over the last 20 years is the degree of polarization.

lapcat|5 months ago

> Is anybody who identifies strongly with a political party is interested in hearing fair or balanced news?

What does "fair or balanced" even mean?

I don't identify with any political party. What I want is truthful and accurate news. I don't want an equal number of Democrat and Republican reporters, for example, as if that somehow made good news.

"Fair and balanced" was the catchphrase of FOX News, which is anything but truthful and accurate. Ironically, FOX News eventually dropped even that slogan, remiscent of how Google eventually dropped "Don't be evil".

foxglacier|5 months ago

Truthful and accurate aren't enough. Most mainstream news is truthful and accurate but also so biased that readers can come away with the opposite feelings about what happened from what they'd have if they'd understood the event fully.

I just went to cnn.com and the biggest headline was "Shutdown-related firings likely to be ‘in the thousands,’ White House says". No doubt that's factually correct but it sounds like some kind of serious disaster. Except that's thousands of federal workers, of which there are about 2 million, so on the order of 0.1 %. Maybe it's not so big after-all? Also, why does it matter that federal workers lose their jobs? That happens to people all over the economy too and often at higher rates than that but those other cases aren't at the top of cnn.com.

joelshep|5 months ago

I "identify" strongly as Democrat (meaning, I vote consistently, but not purely, Democrat). I've also subscribed to The Flip Side for a number of years, which will take a news story a day and present viewpoints on it from left-leaning, right-leaning and libertarian news sources. That seems like a form of balance. I find more often than not it lowers my stress level about the news, not so much because of the voices reinforcing my own perspectives, but because the opposing perspectives are usually well-presented. I can read those and think "Well, I don't agree with that, but now I can see how the facts could be interpreted that way by a reasonably intelligent person." That gives me hope that it's actually possible to have a dialog about seemingly partisan issues, and a reminder that having different viewpoints is human and worthy of respect, not inherently malicious.

fullshark|5 months ago

And considering the only people really interested in the news are partisans, there's really no market for objective news, except maybe if you are in the C-suite.

hn_throw_250926|5 months ago

When Kagi released their news thing it was all trump related bullshit. If thats how you launch a news product then just fucking kill me.