Research from the7stars found that UK news readers are both ‘confused’ and ‘resigned’ to the fact that they need to be able to establish the veracity of news themselves.
More Press articles
Leaders’ debates on UK TV died in the 2010 general election when Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg emerged from the shadows to effectively upstage David Cameron, writes Raymond Snoddy.
40% of British adults now trust politicians more than the media, making it “extremely troubling” for news platforms to maintain credibility, says Trinity McQueen report.
It’s dangerous for a free newspaper which targets readers purely on the basis of their location to be so overtly political, writes Dominic Mills – and ad revenues will be the first casualty.
15 million Brits are twice as likely to visit newspaper websites in the final two weeks before the General Election on 8 June, according to a new study by Teads.
It was only supposed to last four weeks but is still going strong almost one year on. The New European’s editor Matt Kelly tells Ellen Hammett what’s next for the newspaper that proved you don’t always need a long-term plan.
The idea of factoring in a ‘Trust Quotient’ score when deciding where to place ads has been mooted. Here, Newsworks’ Denise Turner explains how we should approach the concept.
If no news is good news, then April was a good month for national newspapers – with no significant changes to report.
It may not be as exciting as reporting on the chaos in Washington, but there’s no shortage of robust political reporting in the UK – despite the bias. By Raymond Snoddy.
The media industry has been warned to get its house in order ahead of the launch of the new currency for published media early next year.