*What's trending according to Yahoo News
*Most Popular on Youtube
*Most Popular on Facebook
*When is the newest iPhone upgrade is going to be released?
It's as though the news creators, of which there are countless, realize you have too many choices. To combat this, they narrow things down into bullet point headlines, scrolling news timelines and screenshots to make it easier. [Or more than likely, to steer you toward the things they want you to read about.]
I believe it may have been Walter Cronkite who first coined the term, infotainment, to describe how the reporting of hard news was morphing into something else entirely. He spoke of the concept way back when the internet was still in its infancy and most people I knew (including myself) didn't have a cell phone yet and e-mail was a mind-boggling concept.
The informative news broadcasts of current events from our parents' day and age, is becoming more and more diluted by popular culture. Now, there are no boundaries to what constitutes "news." In fact, what's trending is more driven by the public than ever before. Just look at the shows that hit the top ten on the Nielsen Ratings any given week.
Things that made headlines this week:
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