I Didn’t Read the News Today, Oh Boy: Embracing the ‘News Avoidance’ Pandemic › American Greatness
Thaddeus G. McCotter
It is never a good idea to use the internet for purposes of self-diagnosis. Indeed, if you already know curiosity killed the cat, you certainly don’t want to be the cat surfing the net to catch the latest wave of half-baked quackery listing the possible symptoms of a chic new pandemic whose lethal wave is on the verge of wiping you out. Still, you only live once, so—“Cowabunga!”
It was during a public policy seminar that I first heard of the burgeoning pandemic of “news avoidance.” The term referred to a growing number of Americans who felt so utterly inundated by the inexhaustible flood of bemusing and disturbing information that they assiduously avoided media reporting on local, national, and international news.
I was gripped by a gnawing feeling of anxiety—much like when I hear news, despite my best efforts to the contrary. I have long told people that I do not have cable; moreover, I only listen to sports radio. (Being a fan of Detroit teams, you might think this is a sign of masochistic tendencies, but I digress . . .) If something important were to happen outside of sports, eventually that news would find me. To wit: “The Tigers game is postponed to a 7 p.m. start due to a North Korean nuclear attack.”
At first blush, then, it seems I have been suffering from news avoidance. Frantically, I immediately consulted the internet for a more professional diagnosis. Up popped Penn State University’s News Literacy Initiative and its podcast interview with Dr. Kristen Eddy, who is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. She was discussing the topic of “News Avoidance and Why It Matters.”
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https://amgreatness.com/2026/04/25/i-didnt-read-the-news-today-oh-boy-embracing-the-news-avoidance-pandemic/