How I Lost my Snow Day Trying to Read all the News on the Internet
It’s Sunday, outside is 5°, and I won’t go out : perfect day to catch up on the week’s news — or so I thought. Here’s how and what I read/heard/watched while the world was ending, buried under 70 inches of snow.
Opening eyes around 7.30, the first thing I do is check my phone (I know, it’s a bad thing to do). I read a blurry bunch of news notifications that popped on the screen while I slept. I only read the notifications, without opening any of them. This morning, they all describe the terrorist attack that happened in Denmark. This actually can be all that I do to remain informed on a busy day : seeing the world only through media notifications, trusting my apps to tell me only what’s essential, and never reading anything further. But it won’t be enough for a snow storm day, locked inside.
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I bother reaching for my glasses and my iPad, and let myself drift from link to link, starting with e-mail newsletters (Medium and LeMonde.fr). But Facebook pops up on the screen without me even thinking, and transforms my quest for news by taking me to a post-Valentine’s day feed. I say to myself that this is a little monochrome and irritating, but I end up reading a bunch of Valentine stuff I had no intent to read for an hour, like a map of the world’s single published on Medium. I emerge from this lukewarm love bath thinking about how I didn’t see anything about the latests event in Copenhagen pop up in my feed. So I finally take a deliberate decision and open The Guardian’s app to read about it. 15 more minutes.
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Next to some almond biscuits my partner and I put on the table, ends up a smartphone that shouts what NPR One app’s chooses to tell us about the world this morning. We listen closely when a report on Copenhagen comes up. And later complain about a Valentine’s day story (am I trapped?) we had heard two days before. We just turn the whole thing off when a game show comes up, feeling like we didn’t get the news we came for. And we ask : why did we not just play a podcast instead?
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I’m sorry that I have to drag you into this truth about media consumers : they often read you from their bathroom. Unfortunately, I make no exception — and open the NYTNow app when I get there. I always say I love this app because unlike the NYT homepage, it makes choices, and doesn’t flood me with tons of things I might not want to read. I scroll through the “News” section for a while, reading stories and saving a bunch of others “for later” — more stuff from Copenhagen, although the situation is unclear at this point. Then I get to my favorite part of the app : the “Picks” — where the editors have chosen for me what I should read out of the whole Internet. I rarely click through to any content. I just feel good knowing that these things exist.
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In an attempt to get some work done, I open my laptop to the hundred Chrome tabs from my last Internet time. Two starred e-mails later, the sound of Facebook pops in my ear. And in a heartbeat, I’m scrolling down my Facebook feed. This time around, I am flooded with the news of the day : snow is everywhere, more snow is coming, when will the snow end? My Tweetdeck is next on my instinctive desktop habits. I open a bunch of tabs, and jump from one content to another : The Guardian, Medium, Vox, Reddit, NYTimes, Quartz, NYMag… 90% of topics are about the U.S., and all contents are in English — which may seem weird for a French journalist, now that I think about it. I read a lot of stuff but the only thing that really strikes me is the Obama interview Vox did : good format, great interview.
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At night, I find the time to read the choices I’ve actually made on the whole Internet: the articles I’ve saved in Pocket, the read-it-letter app. But while I dwell into reading a bunch of my saved contents, this media diary makes me self-conscious. What is it that I actually choose to “save to read later”? First is an obvious one : (too) long pieces that I’m afraid I will never read. Second is a little less obvious : bookmarking. Things that I actually already read/watched, but wanted to keep somewhere. They’re coming from my favorite sources : Vox, NYT, Quartz, The Guardian, Le Monde, etc. No specific topic surfaces, and I feel like, once more, this saved content is still very much a result of my serendipity habits, rather than the reflection of my own interests.
Audrey, your narrative nicely captures your daily media consumption. How is your media consumption narrative going to change if you analyze it on a weekly basis?
Looks amazing – I want to know how you did that.
Thank you Sarah! We can talk about it next week if you still want.
Very cool!
Thank you Giovana!