To celebrate POLITICO's 15th birthday, we're looking back at its founding - and forward to the
next 15 years of media. Read more from the series
here.
It's almost conventional wisdom right now that the news media is in a fast-moving crisis, with
mainstream news sources collapsing and Americans increasingly divided not only in what they read, but
even what facts they choose to believe. How much worse will it get? Or is there a way out?
The changes in the media industry make it nearly impossible to guess. When POLITICO was born
15 years ago, a digital-first politics site was considered downright disruptive in Washington, D.C.
Today, that sounds almost quaint compared to what was on the way: Facebook was a baby, and Instagram
was just a twinkle in a code developer's eye. "Pandemic" meant the Spanish Flu of 1918 - and "Zoom"
was a kids' show from the '70s. Information now flows in ways nobody was even considering in 2007,
and over the next decade and a half, media is poised to change even more dramatically.
How? We at POLITICO Magazine decided to take advantage of our milestone - our 15th birthday - to
press some experts and media thinkers on what media will look like in the next 15 years. What will be
the biggest transformations - and how will they affect our public life? Are you optimistic? If so,
how do we get to the good part? If you're concerned, what can we do to avoid the worst outcomes?
Here's what they had to say.
by Nicholas Carr
When shunted through digital media, information behaves like water: It flows together, it
melds and it finds its lowest common level. The trivial blurs with the profound, the false
with the true. The news bulletin and the dance meme travel in the same stream, with the same
weight. Content collapses.
As traditional distinctions between different forms of information dissolve, not only does
politics become a form of entertainment, but entertainment becomes a form of politics. Our
choices about what we watch, read and listen to, on display through our online profiles and
posts, become statements about ourselves and our beliefs, signifiers of our tribal
allegiance.
Fed into the sorting algorithms of companies like Meta, Google and Twitter, our past choices
also become the template for the information we receive in the future. Each of us gets locked
into our own self-defining feedback loop. Bias gets amplified, context gets lost.
Barring an epochal change of heart or habit on the part of the public, the flow of
information will only get faster and more discordant in the years ahead. Even if the current
hype about the so-called metaverse never pans out, the technologies of augmented and virtual
reality will advance quickly. The information-dispensing screen, or hologram, will always be
in view.
The founding of POLITICO was not the most fateful media event that took place fifteen years
ago, in January of 2007. That was also the month that Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone, a
device that would come to make media a constant presence in people’s lives. Fifteen years from
now, in January of 2037, media will be even more inescapable. It will have become a permanent,
seamless overlay on reality, a warped window through which we see the world.
by Suzanne Nossel
The biggest, most dramatic transformation in media over the next 15 years will be the coming
of age of an audience born and raised in an ocean of news and information, consumed almost
entirely via social media. By 2035, most adults will have no memory of a time before polarized
cable news coverage, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and endless other attention-grabbing media
sources yet to be invented. Media consumers will be divided into three groups. A dwindling
cohort will remain moored in trusted and traditional news brands they encountered through their
parents, educators or a firm appetite for solid information. Most Americans will be in the
swollen ranks of the informationally adrift - those lacking the means or energy to discern
meaningful signals amid a cacophony that encompasses serious journalism, opinion writing,
perpetual hot takes, corporate advertising, paid promotions, bloviations, disinformation and
propaganda campaigns, much of which is deliberately disguised to sound like something else. A
final group will be informationally marooned - in the thrall of conspiracy theories and fakery
reinforced by the archipelago-like fragmentation of social media that makes them almost
impossible to reach with the truth.
The key to managing this transformation is maximizing the cohort of young people anchored
in credible news and information sources. Countless programs and studies have by now discerned
what it takes to equip citizens to navigate the digital swamp; the goal is to bring those
efforts to scale, grounding an entire generation in facts, science, basic research skills and
- above all - a fundamental refusal to be fooled. Schools and colleges need to teach students
the markers of reliable reporting, how to ascertain the provenance of a piece of information
and be their own fact-checkers. We need to transform ourselves to get a handle on today and
tomorrow’s media rather than letting evolving forms of information and engagement continue to
transform us for the worse.
by Richard Prince
Journalism will move closer to being part of the solution. Too often, as part of the power
structure, it has exacerbated the problem.
Attempts to forecast the future are risky. Who would have predicted the reckoning wrought by
the murder of George Floyd, or the internet's "information wants to be free" mantra that
endangered legacy media?
Still, we can trust the census predictions that whites in the United States will become a
minority in 2045, and plan for the change that will mean in the demographics of news consumers.
There are other trends. Foremost is the splintering of the news audience by ideology. The
multiplicity of platforms is another. Broadcast television and cable are making way for
streaming.
News deserts keep growing. Hedge funds continue to acquire local news operations and cut
staffs.
Collaborations are increasing, whether globally, as with the Pandora Papers project in
which reporting teams worked together to expose corruption, or the Dallas Morning News
partnering with the Texas Metro News, a Black-press outlet. Each helps supply what's missing
in the other.
Will the repression of news media worldwide persist? Joel Simon, former executive director
of the Committee to Protect Journalists, reported at the end of 2021 that record numbers of
journalists are imprisoned, and that governments "are waging a frontal assault against
independent journalism around the world."
There is room for optimism. News consumers want "solutions journalism." Don't just tell
them the problem; what can they do about it? When those news consumers are increasingly people
of color and others previously marginalized, a richer news report should result. Let's sharpen
our defenses against misinformation. Ramp up the research. Put in charge those who champion
the interests of those who've been missing at the top.
by Nicholas Lemann
All industries, even industries populated by liberals, resist government regulation of
themselves. Journalism and media are an extreme example, because so many journalists and media
owners (of my generation, at least) were raised on the idea that the First Amendment gives us
an absolute protection from government interference. And this is a rare instance of the views
of the newsroom and of the publisher's office being perfectly aligned, though for different
reasons.
The idea that government has no role in media was always a fantasy. Radio and television
were heavily regulated for more than half a century, roughly from the 1930s through the 1980s,
and even print publications are, for example, prohibited from publishing deceptive advertising.
By the 1970s, deregulation had come into fashion, including among liberals, and it was in this
atmosphere that cable television was created, broadcasting was deregulated and the Internet was
created. It's the world we live in now. And by 2037, it will have ended.
I'll give three examples. Social media expression will be regulated; this has become a
bipartisan cause, and it's also an issue where non-U.S. governments, with more pro-regulatory
instincts, are in the picture. There will be some form of government support for local
journalism; this is already in the current version of the Build Back Better bill. And the
Supreme Court will revisit the twin pillars of First Amendment law, the 1964 New York Times
v. Sullivan case and the 1971 Pentagon Papers case.
Here's a heartfelt plea to my fellow journalists: Let's not persist in our ostrich-like
avoidance of media policy (except when we say we don't think there should be any). These
developments will affect us profoundly. We can help shape them, in the interest of better
journalism, but only if we fully engage in what are sure to be rough and time-consuming debates
in the next few years.
by Nikki Usher
It's 2037, and the expected decline in access to local news and information hasn't happened
- at least not how we thought - but the inequality between those who have access to high-
quality journalism and those who don’t mirrors the even starker income inequality dividing the
country. Local digital-first sites, once known as local television, have AI anchors. Audiences
(wrongly) believe them to be more neutral than the humans that cover national issues, either
for the Republican-backed internet or the "regular internet" now only used by Democrats and for
Hollywood's content distribution.
In Republican states, community newspapers have been replaced by a party-funded local media
system that provides partisan news and information specific to a community, especially about
local school boards and upcoming elections. In Democrat-majority states, legislators pump
public money into the decaying news ecosystem, with journalists self-censoring any critique
that might endanger the cash flow, and almost all of which flows to big population centers.
It's actually a golden time for metropolitan journalism. In large cities, the New York
Times and the Washington Post have bought up any remaining newspapers, and are going
head-to-head fighting for the well-off city residents willing to pay for news. The Times
and the Post are also chasing the expensive and exclusive local POLITICO and Axios
outfits, who have cornered the local business and political elite (replacing the Wall Street
Journal).
To appeal to the liberal elites who will pay, news outlets seem to now have a social
justice focus, but journalism still remains exclusionary and oblivious to historically-
marginalized groups. It’s popular for wealthy parents to complain about their "journalism
runaway" offspring, who move to rural America and use their trust funds to create digital
community journalism zines read only by friends and family. Luckily, these "journalism
runaways" come to their senses, generally after a violent encounter with a local who destroys
their self-driving electric car, and come running back to the cities to become a new generation
of elite news consumers.
by Akoto Ofori-Atta and Lauren Williams
The journalism industry faces a series of grave challenges: social platforms fuel political
polarization, spread mis- and disinformation, and gobble up ad revenue; America's
local news ecosystem is in peril;
and there's an
embarrassing lack of racial, regional and social economic diversity in U.S. newsrooms.
Combined, these challenges mean that quality journalism doesn't always reach those who need it
most, especially Black and brown people and those with low incomes.
But as co-founders of Capital B, a
startup nonprofit local and national news organization serving Black audiences across the
country, we believe the next 15 years will usher in a new era for the industry, one where
journalism can live up to better, more equitable standards.
A shift is already underway. Many news innovators are paving the path for more inclusive
media. In Chicago, City Bureau is
recruiting, training and working alongside community members to produce meaningful local
journalism. In Detroit, you can text a reporter at
Outlier Media and get on-demand service journalism. Resolve Philly is a collaborative journalism hub pioneering new practices
for equitable journalism, and sharing the lessons they learn with industry peers.
Small dollar donors are supporting nonprofit newsrooms at
record highs. And the idea that journalism is a public good necessary for
a healthy democracy is gaining footing, undergirding the push for public policy that bolsters
financial support for local news.
We started Capital B to help create the future we want to see, one where everyone has access
to transparent and trustworthy journalism, and where our democracy is stronger as a result.
We're not rosy-eyed about what it will take to get there. But we’re convinced that as long as
there are leaders willing to push the status quo, the future looks promising.
by Richard Stengel
I'll stick to the news business, which is what I know a little bit about. I'm generally
pretty bullish, but what concerns me about the future is that the news and information business
will cleave into two broad categories based on audience: the Haves and the Have Nots. The Haves
- the 200 or so million college educated folks around the world - will have bespoke and
sophisticated content that is tailored to their individual interests that they will pay for
with premium subscriptions. Heck, they'll have online news concierges that answer their
questions and create colorful pie charts and personalized tutorials. The Have Nots - pretty
much everybody else - will have advertiser-supported content that is broad and less
sophisticated and it will be stoked by algorithms based on emotion and eyeballs. And they
will not have access to all the premium stuff - first-class journalism - which will be behind
walls. This latter group will then become susceptible to ever greater quantities of mis- and
disinformation while the Haves tsk-tsk about all the junk news that most everybody else is
getting.
This isn't a healthy situation for democracies. I've long been an advocate for a kind of
E-ZPass for news - micro-charges per page - which would allow people to read what they want
without onerous subscriptions. That’s the only way that most people will pay for news. If the
quality press, as it used to be called, is just serving global elites, well, then the whole
point of the First Amendment becomes empty. We have freedom of the press so the press can
protect our democracy - not so that it can make money from high-end subscriptions. We need to
think as much about the purpose of news as we think about the economic models for it. Neither
is easy.
by Tom Scocca
Take one signature media-shaking event during the past 15 years: the devastating "pivot to
video" everyone made chasing fraudulent Facebook advertising opportunities. No one could have
seen it 15 years ago, when Facebook had only just stopped requiring an .edu address to join its
social network, hoping to somehow overtake the dominant Myspace.
So it's probably safer to look at something we all but certainly know will happen: By Census
Bureau projections, between 2022 and 2037, about 23 million baby boomers - almost exactly
one-third of the total cohort - will die. The generation that has enjoyed smothering dominance
over the culture and the economy since the mid-20th century is going to melt away like a
warming glacier. What might disappear along with all those people? Television in general, and
cable news in particular, assumes that viewers will always be there passively sucking down the
medium, the way the postwar babies were habituated to do.
By 2037, most Americans won't have been alive for TV monoculture; fully fragmented video
consumption will be the natural order of things. Across all media, the inertial weight of the
last mass audience (and the grasping hands of the moguls who took control young and never let
go) will suddenly lift. What direction will things fly off into? Don't ask me. I was born in
1971; no one ever asks.
by Lynette Clemetson
All politics is local? Not so much anymore, and it's costing us our democracy. Over the
past fifteen years, politics has become ever more national, with much of that shift enabled by
the coastal concentration of the news media. As information (and disinformation) have become
more fragmented, dominant news flows have become more general, vehicles for boosting the
talking points of the right and left in Washington, D.C.
The "elites" scold "regular people" for voting against their self-interest and the common
good. But those things can feel elusive when stakes are not tied to consequential decisions
made in their own statehouse and town council - and news on local policy is hard to find.
Small and medium-sized independent news organizations are making impressive efforts across the
great expanse between California and the Acela corridor. Many have been able to grow with
grants from Facebook and Google, even as those behemoths continue to evade responsibility for
their role in our broken information systems.
Over the next decade, major news organizations need to get in the game, hiring journalists
to work - with real salaries - from where they live, reporting on communities they know.
Companies with editorial and technological heft must help train reporters in the field. Not
just for national stories that might get picked up by cable news channels, but for covering
school boards, zoning boards, city and county councils, courts and police unions, universities,
and state governments.
Big Journalism can learn lessons from enterprising journalists working on their own to
cover issues like education, race and the economy at the local level, with complexity and
skepticism for institutional and systemic bias. America’s Heartland, whatever that is (can we
retire that term?) is ethnically, racially, socioeconomically diverse and deserves reporting
that is serious enough to complicate and challenge the simple narratives that power national
politics.
If we can find a balance between national news and journalism and politics that engage and
empower people locally, then maybe, just maybe, we can protect - even improve - our national
democracy.
by Tim Hwang
The past 15 years have mostly featured an unwillingness on the part of lawmakers and
regulators to intervene in the flow of information through the internet. I believe the next 15
will see the reverse. We will see a major expansion in the degree of government involvement in
the design of platforms, as well as the industrial organization of "Big Tech." This has big
implications not just for the technology industry itself, but the entire media landscape that
now rests upon it.
This shift is the result of a range of forces. First, the period of public admiration that
characterized popular discourse about technology leaders in the 2000s has given way to
widespread distrust in the 2020s. Second, increased technological competition from China has
encouraged a push in the U.S. to ensure that private industry is aligned with broader
geopolitical objectives. Both forces have made “tech accountability” a weirdly bipartisan
rallying cry in an era of intense polarization.
By 2037, I expect that long-standing pillars of internet policy - including the platform
liability shield established by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act - will see
significant revision. The multiplication of state-level privacy laws like the California
Privacy Rights Act will create pressure to ultimately establish federal law in the area. The
threat of antitrust will likely drive a kind of “grand bargain,” with major platforms accepting
a partnership with government regulators in exchange for a legally-sanctioned cementing of
their market leadership.
All this will have a major impact on the media, and the flow of information through society
in general. One thing I’m watching for is an explosion in the number and influence of private,
closed online communities and content channels in our media landscape: the result of public,
incumbent platforms becoming ever more regulated, filtered and consolidated.
Heidi Tworek
By 2037, the American media landscape may look more like 1837 than 1937. There will be few
professional reporters. Many outlets in 1837 were single-person outfits, just as many news
operations will be single-person Substacks or equivalents in 2037. Journalistic norms and
standards will be the exception, not the norm. Most of those norms emerged in the late 19th
and 20th centuries. As
John Maxwell Hamilton and I argued back in 2018, "American journalism is
younger than American baseball." Many conventions of American journalism will disappear by
2037 in ways that seem to take us back to 1837.
At first glance, the apparent return to 1837 would seem to presage the troubling demise of
U.S. democracy. And in the worst case, this could be the outcome.
But, hopefully, 2037 will differ from 1837 in important ways. Unlike 1837, it won't just
be white men setting up media operations. A much more diverse set of people will have a voice
and will find an audience. They will do so by innovating new ways to report and discuss news
that may barely resemble journalism as we knew it in 2022. Some will operate on the norm of
being pro-democracy rather than objective. Others will abandon op-eds riddled with inaccurate
predictions to focus on superforecasting, drawing on research by scholars like Philip Tetlock to
better inform users. Yet others will build on nonprofit models like
The Markup to focus on rigorous
data-driven investigations. These would represent welcome innovations in reporting the news.
To get there, we would need to recognize what is currently broken in our media landscape and
have the bravery to double down on supporting those with the fortitude to innovate the media
beyond a model stuck in 1937.
by Colbert I. King
It's hard enough figuring out with any certainty just how the media landscape will look a
few months from now, let alone 15 years down the road. But if the current trajectory is any
indication, we, the news media, are on the way to becoming a mainstay in the entertainment
industry. As with showbiz, Hollywood and purveyors of theatrical entertainment, the news media
has slipped into overdrive to come up with ways in which to make ourselves more interesting to
read and watch. And we are doing it because we confront the same fate as Broadway, the circus
and the concert stage: without public engagement, we, like them, are nothing.
Meeting that challenge to grow readership and viewership, to draw more and more visits to
our news websites, to engage and retain traffic, in order to keep the lights on and pay the
bills is causing us, and here is where it hurts, to become less conveyors of the news -
presenting to the maximum extent possible, unbiased and reliable reports - and more hucksters
and peddlers who are selling and promoting selective products to draw the consuming public to
our side.
For more than 30 years, I have been engaged in advocacy journalism as an editorial writer,
and as a columnist. I have spent these years working for the Washington Post, an
independent, commercial publication that aims to produce objective journalism. I am not a
disinterested observer. I am paid to say what I think. I promote ideas and causes, and
criticize those I dislike, hopefully with compelling arguments for and against both.
But some time ago, the wall in journalism separating advocacy from objectivity was breached.
Today, as we speak, the "who, what, where and when" of storytelling with an added mixture of
"how and why," has given way to outright selling of carefully tailored tales designed to appeal
to targeted audiences, told by opinionated reporters untethered to facts.
Over the next 15 years, this transforming media with new pleasurable bells and whistles, is
likely to experience commercial success in the world of entertainment - but, I fear, with truth
and trust as collateral damages.
by Eli Pariser
We are well into an age of media fracture, and in the coming years that trend will only
accelerate. The information-rich will get information-richer, but those without the appetite
or funds to access gated digital communities will inhabit a vast wasteland of viral lies,
propaganda and conflict. Our attention will be pulled magnetically toward nationalized conflict
and viral upheavals that most people can’t influence, furthering a sense of powerlessness and
alienation.
But by 2037, thanks to a new generation of visionary public entrepreneurs, we will have
emerged from this dark media age into a more integrated and human-scale media landscape.
Today, we're seeing the first sprouts of this growing movement. Local, nonprofit journalism
is beginning its post-crash renaissance: Report for America, which places journalists in local
papers around the country, is growing enormously, as is LION, a kind of guild for small local
news startups. Social science research demonstrates how critical local media is to the health
of democracies, not just because it keeps people informed, but because it provides a domain of
influence most people can access and successfully engage in — which in turn strengthens trust
and faith in democracy itself.
Alongside this local journalistic renaissance, a new group of digital community
entrepreneurs, including my team at New_ Public, are beginning to ask how to do for community
building what these groups are doing for content: How might we make public digital spaces that
serve people, pluralism, democracy and social cohesion, rather than advertisers and venture
capitalists?
The idea that we can scale new kinds of public-service social institutions in a mere 15
years may seem fanciful, but it’s a move Americans have made again and again throughout our
history during periods of social stress and fracture. When industrialization came, we invented
public parks. When a new middle class was born, we invented libraries and public high schools
and colleges. Now, as public conversation moves to the digital age, we can invent the public
institutions that will make it constructive.
We already know how to make context-full, flourishing public spaces, because we've done it
before in the physical world. Our media need not be dystopian if we start building a better
digital future now.
by Kristen Hare
Here's the best-case scenario: By 2037, we won't just have a renaissance of local news,
we'll have a reformation. The coronavirus pandemic accelerated layoffs and closures. And it
will help inspire a new generation of local news entrepreneurs who stop trying to make the
newspaper a product of the internet and start serving communities and audiences wherever they
are. Locally-owned newsrooms will open around the country in Black, Latino, Indigenous and
immigrant communities that rarely get covered or considered. There will be a vibrant network
of local newsrooms covering climate change and rural communities. And the legacy newsrooms that
survived it all, including corporate ownership, will finally stop chasing clicks, scale and
Facebook and put their energy into helping people understand where they live.
Here's the worst-case scenario: By 2037, the only newspapers still in production will be
national. The space locally owned newsrooms occupied will be mostly taken over by national
networks of partisan sites that make it hard for people to know where their news is coming
from and easy to get riled up about the "others." National newsrooms will set up bureaus in
cities around the country, but that work won’t connect locally.
In the first, the effect on our public life isn't just renewed watchdog reporting of local
institutions, but community journalism that reminds people what we have in common. In the
second, we're more divided than ever. Both predictions are me at my optimistic and pessimistic
best, and we’re already seeing signs that both are possible - look at the 70-plus newsrooms
that launched during the pandemic. And look at the spread of pink slime news sites.
Whether we get to the first or the second scenario depends on how a lot of people and
institutions value local news and who makes it, from citizens to philanthropies to local
institutions to the federal government to national news itself.
David Folkenflik
It's a fool's game to predict anything with any confidence.
So let's look at what seems likely, and what's possible.
By 2037, the media landscape will no doubt accelerate trends we've already witnessed: strong
national brands triumph by catering to elite, monied and older Americans. Private investors
have picked apart local papers and sold them for scrap. Local TV stations are nationalized,
offering centralized coverage with local segments focusing on dystopian weather events and
hyped criminal incidents.
News otherwise splits into ever-more granular appeals, serving business interests and niche
obsessions. Social media news feeds give way to news snacks, hot takes to nuclear waste.
Ideology smothers news coverage. Public officials seek to hold the press at a distance when
they’re not actively discrediting it.
Someone reading a legacy magazine in print effectively attends an event, planned, prepared,
ticketed, as rare as a night at the opera.
All this sharpens divisions even more fiercely. Sinkholes in coverage become yawning
canyons, while well-heeled communities draw plentiful local news; for-profits chase global
cosmopolitan readers on a national and global scale, while not-for-profits scour desperately
for enough to scrape by until the next economic crisis.
And yet.
Nothing is foreordained. And languid resignation just feels tiresome. A generation of
journalists and news entrepreneurs have surfaced who do not recall a time in which local news
outlets ensured vast wealth. Many approach the industry with creativity and zeal.
A look back at the early 2020s reminds us of determined innovators: Insightful owners
emerged in Boston, Charleston, S.C., Los Angeles, Minneapolis and elsewhere to reshape local
news outlets, establishing them as both viable and vital.
Civic leaders in Baltimore, Chicago, Memphis, Oakland and Long Beach, among other cities,
made big bets of equity or sweat equity - or both - to cover the texture of local life in ways
that were recognized by the people who lived there.
Authoritative new sites surfaced with rigorous reporting on specific fields, such as
education, criminal justice, public health and other subjects that do not typically pump up
clicks or subscriptions.
Relying on a crazy quilt of disparate financial models, more sites must arise to cover
topics of climate, democracy, alienation, addiction, you name it - together offering a
patchwork system of news.
Taken together these news sources would knit people together as part of larger communities,
not just as interest groups or psychographics to be pitched. They would build a journalism that
treats people as citizens and neighbors, not just consumers. They would journalism worth
sustaining for another 15 years - and beyond.