Journalism is faster than ever but is it facing an empathy crisis?
By Pavithra in Media News on Tuesday, 19th May 2026 at 2:31pm
Has journalism become too fast to feel?
For decades, journalism ran on human instinct. Reporters spent time in streets, courtrooms, villages, police stations and tea shops, listening to people, observing behaviour, sensing tension and understanding what so often went unspoken. Many of the most important stories emerged not from algorithms or trending hashtags, but from curiosity, patience, skepticism, and the slow accumulation of on-ground observation.
That rhythm is increasingly under pressure. The rise of 24-hour news cycles, digital competition, and engagement-driven media has fundamentally transformed how newsrooms function. Journalists are now expected to publish quickly, track analytics, monitor trends, and remain constantly active online. In many organisations, speed has become ...
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