Stride and Saunter

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Episode 109: "How Do You Get Your News?"

With the various tools and technologies available to many of us in the twenty-first century, how have our habits related to the news changed? Many studies show shifts between among media such as radio, television, online publications and print. How do younger generations behave differently than their older counterparts? This week, we react and respond to a 2014 New York Times article entitled "How Do You Get Your News?" Are there more traditional, socially-minded methods which have been discarded in favor of more convenient and fast-paced alternatives? We examine our own habits and discuss the trends and preferences we observe around us.

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Episode 109: "How Do You Get Your News?" Kip Clark and Caroline Borders

Further Reading:

The New York Times, "How Do You Get Your News?"

MacLean's, "Where do you get your news?"

Pew Research Center, "How Millennials’ political news habits differ from those of Gen Xers and Baby Boomers"

Nieman Lab, "Where you get your news depends on where you stand on the issues"

The New York Times, "How Facebook Is Changing the Way Its Users Consume Journalism"

American Press Institute, "How Millennials Get News: Inside the habits of America’s first digital generation"

Pew Research Center, "Millennials and Political News"

The Guardian, "How the different generations consume their daily news..."

The Media Insight Project, "How Millennials Get News: Inside the Habits of America’s First Digital Generation"