BALANCING
NEWS INTERESTS:
A GREAT JUGGLING ACT
BY
ANDREW KOHUT
A
big news story sells itself, but attracting and maintaining audiences
is a juggling act in an era of peace and prosperity when dramatic
news is scarce. The diverse interests of news consumers create
an extraordinary challenge for journalists. In fact, that diversity
is so great as measured in our news interest polls, it's a wonder
that anyone sits through an entire news broadcast or reads the
paper front to back. Strong emphasis on one or a few news areas
can turn off as many people as it attracts.
But
these same audience surveys suggest there is a peril to news organizations'
tailoring their coverage to that cluster of subjects that poll
well. Here's what our polling finds with respect to the risks
and rewards of focusing on what "turns on" today's news consumer.
Big
weather stories invariably outpoll all other subjects on our monthly
news interest surveys. But when the sun is shining, four topics
have unusual drawing power: crime, health, local news, and sports.
Each attracts a big bloc of readers, viewers, and listeners from
different demographic quarters.
Americans
consistently say they follow crime news more closely than any
general subject, but beware: interest in crime is falling with
the crime rates. The percentage very closely following it fell
from 41 percent in 1996 to 36 percent in 1998 to 30 percent in
2000. Younger, less well-educated people, and African-Americans
are the prime crime-news consumers.
Health
news does about as well as crime in the polls with 29 percent
saying they follow it very closely. Women fifty and older are
heavier-than-average health-news consumers, but this subject is
of considerable interest to almost all Americans, with the exception
of men under forty.
Community
news holds strong general interest for about one in four adults.
Both men and women sixty and older are particularly drawn to news
about people and events in their hometown. City dwellers and suburbanites
are almost as interested in community news as are small-town people
and rural audiences.
Sports
ranks high because it is so dominant an interest among men under
forty. While more women do sports these days, it still does not
show up in their attentiveness to sports news. In fact, women
under thirty are not notably more interested in sports pages and
sportscasts than women sixty and older -- a finding that may say
more about the coverage than about their interest in sports.
The
staples of serious news programs and publications -- international,
financial, government, and politics -- each sparks strong news
interest from fewer than one in five Americans. Gender, generation,
and education make the difference for this material: college-educated
men forty years and older have the most interest; less well-educated
younger women have decidedly the least.
Religion
and science/technology are of interest to a slightly larger pool
of people than the classically "serious news subjects." About
one in five express strong interest in these two topics, but they
are very different kinds of people: religion appeals most to older,
less well-educated women. Science and technology attracts younger,
well-educated males who have little interest in news about religion.
A
similar push-pull is apparent in the audience segments attracted
to entertainment versus culture and the arts. Entertainment attracts
a younger but less well-educated segment of the news audience.
Coverage of culture and the arts appeals to fewer people, and
its audience is older, though better educated.
Looking
at these numbers, it's surprising that newspapers and broadcast
news programs are not having even more trouble in stitching together
a general news audience. So what's the glue that bonds consumers
to media that spend a lot of time or space on subjects that don't
especially interest them?
Our
surveys suggest that enjoying the news for its own sake is the
common denominator for news audiences. People who like "keeping
up a lot" are the avid news consumers. This is true irrespective
of specific news interests.
But
there is a big "but" here. People who like keeping up with the
news are strongly committed to serious news topics -- politics,
government, international news, and business. They are four to
five times more likely to express strong interest in hard news
than people who don't enjoy staying current with the news. There
is a much smaller gap on "soft news" between those who like to
keep up and those who don't.
This
is one of the reasons why news content dictated by the most popular
news subjects tends to drive away core audiences. Yes, there are
more people interested in softer news than serious news, but they
are not the avid, intense consumers who are the heart and soul
of general news audiences.
Attracting
news audiences these days is a balancing act. One must provide
enough "serious news" to satisfy a core audience that is small
in numbers, but also enough "back of the book" material to draw
in the larger number of marginal news consumers who can make a
real difference in the ratings and at the newsstand.