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Reading the news is the new smoking

▲ 58 points 59 comments by wesleyd 2w ago HN discussion ↗

Pangram verdict · v3.3

We believe that this document is fully human-written

0 %

AI likelihood · overall

Human
100% human-written 0% AI-generated
SEGMENTS · HUMAN 5 of 5
SEGMENTS · AI 0 of 5
WORD COUNT 1,842
PEAK AI % 0% · §1
Analyzed
Jun 26
backend: pangram/v3.3
Segments scanned
5 windows
avg 368 words each
Distribution
100 / 0%
human / AI fraction
Verdict
Human
Pangram v3.3

Article text · 1,842 words · 5 segments analyzed

Human AI-generated
§1 Human · 0%

Photo cred: my dadOne of my major pastimes used to be reading the news and being mad. I’d wake up, grab my phone, and get a quick primer on all the day’s outrages. “They raised tariffs on soybeans!” I would cry, unsure if the tariffs were bad, or if it was bad that they had waited so long to tariff them, but very sure that something about soybeans and tariffs was definitely outrageous. During the Trump administration, I would devour news of the president’s latest impropriety and imagine myself throttling one of his supporters. “WHY DID YOU DO THIS??” I would shout, squeezing the life out of them.I started to feel like maybe this was a bad thing.So in the summer of 2020, I stopped. I swore to only read the news on Saturday mornings. Since then, I’ve given it up almost entirely. And I feel better. Way, way better. It feels like a war that used to be fought in my backyard is now being fought on Neptune instead. I feel relieved of my duty to keep track of the whole world, and I now realize I never had that duty in the first place. My brain got quieter and I started hearing myself think instead of hearing myself worry. And I stopped imagining myself choking people to death, which was a big improvement.I also became more fun to be around. I stopped importing my grand anxieties into conversations with friends, punishing them with my sullenness because I just read an article about climate change or bad senators, as if nobody was allowed to feel good as long as bad things are happening. I lost the urge to extract my phone from my pocket during lulls in conversations, tap the News app, and see if maybe something awful had happened. I could fill my freed-up attention-space with more important things, like my niece and nephews’ various misadventures.That’s how I came to see reading the news like smoking: harmful not just to the consumer, but to anyone nearby. People used to think smoking was a fine way to start the day, a reasonable thing to do on a break, and even a healthy part of their routine—“More Doctors Smoke Camels!”—just like they think about reading the news today. People used to reach for cigarettes when they felt stressed or bored; now they reach for CNN.

§2 Human · 0%

Some people couldn’t even get out of bed without a smoke, while today some people can’t get up without checking the news first.I can’t promise that quitting the news is just as good for your lifespan as quitting cigs, but it is way easier, and people who do it universally report positive results. The Surgeon General is unlikely to issue a warning label for the news anytime soon, so here’s mine.A pretty good rule of thumb is “don’t do things that make you feel terrible unless you have a very good reason.” I feel terrible when I read the news, because all the headlines are things like “Republicans Vote to Reclassify Plastic as a Vegetable“ or “Birder Murderer Murders Thirty-Third Birder" or “Bradley Cooper Calls Holocaust ‘Big Misunderstanding’”. Sure enough: studies show that reading the news makes people feel bad.The news often makes me feel even worse than bad: it makes me feel bloodthirsty. I read about Congress doing something and my brain goes “smite them, slice them, burn them, bury them!!” And I’m not alone. I’ve seen mild-mannered moms swear they would kill certain politicians with their bare hands if they had the chance. I’ve seen Christians pray for Supreme Court justices to suffer heart attacks. I’ve heard nebbishy grad students wonder aloud whether assassination is such a bad thing. I’m not saying the news is solely responsible for this, but it sure doesn’t help.I would reluctantly keep reading about bad stuff if that somehow made it go away. But no matter how much I read, bad stuff keeps coming. Which makes sense, because it’s not like the news actually led me to do anything about the bad stuff. It kind of felt like my big contribution to the cause was reading and feeling bad. It was like I was floating above all the victims of every bad thing, going “Don’t worry everybody, I’m here to read all about you and feel awful!”Villainy is rare in the world but common in the news, so reading it may fool you into thinking you’re surrounded by evil-doers. But you’re not. As part of a research project, I once looked at two weeks of New York Times front pages and color-coded all of the stories based on whether they were about people being bad (red), good (green), or neither (gray).

§3 Human · 0%

It turns out the newspaper is black, white, and red all over:Red = people being bad. Green = people being good. Gray = neither.With all this coverage of people’s misdeeds, it’s no wonder that people think crime is going up even when it’s going down:In fact, in another of my research projects, people drastically overestimate the percentage of Americans who die by homicide, suicide, and accidents, maybe because these kinds of deaths tend to generate news stories while dying from heart disease does not:This leads us to fear things that probably won’t kill us, like nuclear power plants, and not fear things that probably will kill us, like coal-fired power plants. (Even accounting for high-profile, news-generating accidents, nuclear energy is so much safer than coal that you can barely see both of them on the same graph.) Plus, as Gwern Branwen points out, as population and media coverage increase, “anything that can happen will happen a small but nonzero amount of times” and we’ll no doubt hear about it. In a world of eight billion people, “crazy person does crazy thing” is not news; it’s an inevitability.When I drastically cut back on my news consumption, I realized that all of the seemingly world-changing events from the previous week had, in fact, not changed the world at all. Scandals go supernova and dissipate in days. People are mad about one thing, then they’re mad about another thing. There was only one story that actually seemed to matter from week to week—“a pandemic is happening!”—and I already knew that one.My favorite example of this is a piece of performance art my friend strung together during the Trump administration: a 167-tweet thread that was simply a link to each new Trump outrage with the caption, “This will be the thing that finally brings Trump down.” Spoiler: it wasn’t.There’s always something new when you check the news (not a terrible slogan!), which makes checking seem like it’s going to be interesting, but then it turns out it’s the same junk as always. I bamboozle myself the exact same way with my email.

§4 Human · 0%

Every time my inbox dings, my brain goes “OOOH BABY GOTTA CHECK OUT THIS EXCITING NEW EMAIL” and 99% of the time the email is something like “Hi we’re Dunkin’ Donuts and we have donuts!” I have probably wasted 30% of my life so far on pointless checking like this. And checking the news is especially bad—much like checking your stocks, it’s stressful, misleading, and encourages you to act rashly. Last year I wrote a scientific paper that got lots of media attention, and I was amazed at how many articles misstated basic facts. For example, this article originally claimed our study was about phone conversations—it wasn’t, all the conversations we studied were face-to-face. They changed the headline when I wrote to them about it, but the rest of the article still heavily implies that participants were on Zoom or on the phone. If I can see the news getting it wrong when I happen to know the right answer, why should I rely on them anywhere else? (Michael Crichton had a term for forgetting this realization: Gell-Man Amnesia.)Unfortunately, my story seems to be pretty common: in one big study, 61% of articles contained factual errors, as judged by people with firsthand knowledge of the event being covered. News is, after all, the first draft of history, and first drafts usually suck. I’m happy to wait for something a little more finalized.If you spend 30 minutes reading the news every day from your 18th birthday until your 90th, you’ll spend 547.5 days on the news alone. I think we’ve all got better ways to spend a year and a half.For me, I’m always finding new weird and wonderful blogs to read—The Classical Futurist (good post) and Maia Mindel’s Some Unpleasant Math (good post) are two I picked up recently and really enjoy. I subscribe to The Browser, which curates stories from all over the internet. And then I read books, which are like the internet, but printed out and stapled together. They’re also kind of different in that nobody yells at you while you read them.More importantly, I close my laptop and do other stuff. I hang out with my friends. I do Pilates.

§5 Human · 0%

I go outside and stand near trees. It’s great!When I tell people I stopped reading the news, sometimes they act as if I’ve just told them that I heat my home by burning big piles of crucifixes. I get it: I seem like I’m sticking my head in the sand. For instance:The Valedictator@TheValedictator@nikkibitching I told my therapist that one of the sources of my anxiety was all of the shit going on in the world (COVID, war, shootings every day, etc.) and her advice was to stop watching/reading the news. Apparently burying your head in the sand is the key to conquering anxiety.5:27 AM · Jun 11, 202268 Reposts · 6K LikesBut to me, people who read the news seem like they’re sticking their heads in sewage. So we have some misunderstandings to clear up. Here are a few of the arguments I’ve gotten, and why I don’t find them convincing.(May I also interest you in other people’s arguments about not reading the news, like this one from Applied Divinity Studies or this one from Aaron Schwartz or this one from Rolf Dobelli.)Probably the greatest PR victory of all time is news media convincing people that “being informed” = “reading the news.” To be an informed person, you should know things like what causes headaches, where to get cheap good food, whether your deodorant will give you armpit cancer, and a billion other things. The news is a pretty inefficient and misleading way to get there, especially because understanding the world requires you to know a lot of things that happened long before today, which is exactly what the news doesn’t cover. If you’re going to read the newspaper, you might learn more reading an issue from 1971.Media types will own up to this when nobody’s looking. I was once at a dinner with an editor at a big-name news organization, and after he put back a few drinks, he looked around at us, wild-eyed. “Some people think we’re, like, doing public service,” he said. “We’re not. This is entertainment for people who want to feel smart.