There was a time when journalism acted like a translator instead of a parrot. It didn’t just repeat what happened; it explained why it mattered, where it fit historically, and what forces were shaping public reaction. You finished an article feeling a little smarter, or at least better oriented in the world. Increasingly, that experience has been replaced by a familiar letdown: you’ve just read a well-formatted summary of the comment section you already survived.
Today, many stories don’t begin with investigation or curiosity. They begin with a viral post. Once the internet reacts loudly enough, an article materializes to document the reaction itself. Screenshots are quoted. Tweets are embedded. Reactions to reactions are thoughtfully aggregated. Journalism shows up like a note-taker who arrived late but is very confident they captured the vibe.
The result is a strange feedback loop. Readers click expecting insight and instead get confirmation that, yes, people are upset, divided, passionate, and typing in all caps. The piece doesn’t deepen the conversation so much as preserve it in amber. No one pauses to examine the assumptions fueling the outrage or the cultural baggage quietly doing the heavy lifting. The article reports that feelings were felt and then gently ushers everyone to the next scroll.
This isn’t because journalists collectively forgot how to do journalism. The incentives simply changed. Speed is rewarded. Depth is expensive. Outrage is efficient. It’s faster to quote a tweet than to research institutional history. It’s safer to amplify what people are already yelling than to ask why they’re yelling it. Engagement metrics creep in, editorial judgment scoots over, and suddenly the loudest voices are treated like the most authoritative ones.
Efficiency, however, is not the same thing as usefulness, no matter how many times the analytics dashboard insists otherwise.
When reaction becomes the centerpiece, substance quietly exits through a side door. Measurable outcomes get buried beneath debates about optics. Community impact is reduced to a sentence near the bottom, just above the “related articles” that have nothing to do with anything. Structural issues lose out to personality-driven controversy because spectacle is easier to package than nuance and requires significantly fewer footnotes.
This kind of coverage does not land evenly. Some people get to exist in the news as full humans with backstory and complexity. Others—particularly women, and especially Black women—are flattened into moments, outfits, or morality tales that say more about the audience than the subject. Faith communities are treated as either punchlines or problems, rarely as institutions with history, theology, and internal disagreement. Journalism may not invent these dynamics, but by repeating them without examination, it helps keep them well-fed.
What’s most frustrating is not that social media reaction exists. Public discourse has always been messy, emotional, and occasionally unhinged. The problem is when journalism stops where the discourse starts. Reaction is treated as the destination rather than raw material. The questions that once distinguished reporting from group chat screenshots quietly disappear.
Readers feel that loss. It shows up as fatigue. As déjà vu. As the moment halfway through an article when you realize you already know how it ends because you lived it in real time yesterday. You’re asked to care deeply about surface-level arguments while being given no tools to think more deeply about what’s actually at stake.
That exhaustion isn’t apathy. It’s discernment. It’s the brain politely whispering, “I was promised information and received vibes.”
Journalism doesn’t need to abandon social media, but it does need to remember who it is. Public reaction should be the beginning of reporting, not the conclusion. The real work is still there: tracing history, naming patterns, interrogating power, and redirecting attention from spectacle to substance.
Until that work becomes the priority again, stories will keep traveling fast while saying very little. And readers will keep scrolling, hoping—perhaps optimistically—that the next headline will offer more than a recap of what the internet already yelled about yesterday.
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