The whole idea of news consumption just isn’t what it used to be. There’s a weird energy in the air this election season. I noticed it the other day in a coffee shop—two strangers arguing over something they’d both “heard,” but neither could remember where. It’s like everyone’s trying to stay informed, but nobody is exactly sure how to do it without getting overwhelmed. Our news habits feel… scrambled. And honestly, probably forever changed.
Real People, Not Suits
One of the biggest shifts? Folks aren’t sitting around waiting for a polished anchor to summarize the world anymore. They’re watching a guy in his garage explain policy changes on a whiteboard he clearly bought from Walmart. Or a woman filming updates from her car between errands. Somehow these people feel more believable. Maybe because they don’t sound rehearsed. Maybe because news consumption has drifted away from “professional” voices and toward whoever sounds like they actually care.
Trust Is at an All-Time Low
And who can blame us? We’ve had years of conflicting reports, heated commentary, and all the “breaking news” banners that turned out not to be breaking anything. So people are getting choosier. I’ve seen friends double-check a TV segment by searching for a local reporter who posted the same story from their phone. The whole landscape of news consumption has become a lot more pick-and-choose. Not tidy, but maybe a little more grounded.
Quick, Please
Most people I know don’t sit down to read multiple articles anymore. They’re catching updates between errands, during lunch breaks, while waiting for their kid’s school pickup. A clip here, a quick summary there. It’s scattershot, sure, but that’s pretty much the rhythm of modern news consumption. The days of one “big broadcast moment” feel long gone.
The Algorithm Elephant in the Room
And then there’s the AI stuff. Whether we like it or not, algorithms nudge what shows up first—sometimes boosting things that spark strong reactions. A lot of people are getting wise to it. I’ve noticed more friends subscribing to newsletters, or directly following small journalists so the algorithm can’t decide for them. It’s messy, but at least it gives people a bit more control over their own news consumption.
Heading Toward Election Day
All these changes might actually make this election more unpredictable, but also weirdly more democratic. Instead of a handful of big voices steering everything, we’ve got thousands of small ones chiming in, debating, correcting each other, sometimes arguing nonsense, sometimes offering clarity no major outlet ever did. Our news consumption is scattered in fifty directions, and maybe that’s okay.
The best part? People seem more engaged—but in their own way. Not because someone told them to care, but because they’re trying, in the middle of chaotic schedules and chaotic feeds, to actually understand what’s going on.
And honestly, however clumsy it all looks, this new version of news consumption might outlast the election itself.

