Archer's Line Podcast
People say they want impartial news. They say they value facts, accuracy, and reporting that isn't driven by ideology. Then they get their news from social media, influencers, partisan outlets, podcasts, and increasingly, AI. The latest Reuters Institute Digital News Report reveals a growing contradiction: audiences continue to trust traditional journalism more than online creators, yet they're consuming less of it every year. In this episode, veteran broadcaster and journalist Rob Archer examines the widening gap between what people say they want from news and what they actually choose to consume. Why are audiences abandoning the very institutions they claim to value? Why are trust levels continuing to fall? And what happens when algorithms become the primary gatekeepers of information? Drawing on decades of experience in radio programming and newsrooms, Rob explores the psychology behind news consumption, the rise of the post-news environment, and why misinformation flourishes when familiarity becomes more important than verification. Sources include the 2026 Reuters Institute Digital News Report and recent research on trust, misinformation, social media, and digital news habits. For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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