Shift in News Consumption: Podcasters and AI Chatbots Gain Ground as Traditional Media Declines

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A new report reveals a significant shift in how Americans, especially younger generations, consume news, with social media, podcasters, and AI chatbots gaining prominence over traditional media sources.

Shift in News Consumption Patterns

A recent report by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism has revealed a significant shift in how Americans consume news. For the first time, more Americans reported getting their news from social and video networks than from traditional TV and news websites in the week following the January 2025 U.S. presidential inauguration

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. This trend highlights the growing influence of online personalities and creators in news dissemination, potentially eclipsing traditional U.S. news media.

Rise of Podcasters and Online Personalities

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

The report found that prominent podcasters like Joe Rogan are playing an increasingly important role in news dissemination. In the week following the presidential inauguration, one-fifth of a sampled group of Americans came across news or commentary from Rogan

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. Other influential figures included former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson, with 14% of respondents encountering his content across various social media and video networks.

The report also highlighted other top creators during this period, including Megyn Kelly, Candace Owens, and Ben Shapiro on the political right, and Brian Tyler Cohen and David Pakman on the left

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. Notably, the vast majority of the most followed commentators discussing politics are men.

Youth-Driven Trend

This shift in news consumption is particularly pronounced among younger Americans. Over half of people under age 35 in the U.S. are relying on social media and video networks as their main source for news

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. Across all surveyed countries, 44% of people aged 18 to 24 cited these networks as their primary news source.

Emergence of AI in News Consumption

Artificial Intelligence is emerging as another significant factor in news consumption, especially among young people. The report found that 15% of respondents under age 25 rely on AI chatbots and interfaces for news each week, compared to 7% of respondents overall

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. ChatGPT was the most mentioned AI service for news, followed by Google's Gemini and Meta AI.

Concerns and Implications

Despite the growing popularity of online influencers and personalities, they are seen as the biggest sources of false or misleading information worldwide, along with politicians

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. In the United States, politicians are considered the primary sources of false or misleading information.

The rise of AI in news consumption is raising concerns about potential loss of search referral traffic to publisher websites and apps, as chatbots eliminate the need for users to click on story links

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Changing Preferences in News Consumption

While text remains the most preferred way for people worldwide to consume news, around a third say they prefer to watch the news online, and 15% prefer to listen

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. Younger people are much more likely to prefer watching or listening to the news.

Social Media Platforms and Trust in News

Social media platform X (formerly Twitter) is becoming a more popular source of news in the United States, particularly among right-leaning users and young men. The report found that 23% of sampled Americans consume news on X, an increase of 8 percentage points from the previous year

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Despite these shifts, levels of trust in news across markets remain stable at 40%, unchanged for the last three years

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. However, over 70% of Americans express concern about their ability to distinguish true from false information in online news.

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