Less Than Half of Americans Learned of Aurora Shootings on TV: Poll
Fully 56% of Americans first heard of the July 20 mass murders in Aurora, Colo., from a source other than television, though the medium led thepack in terms of informing people of the theater tragedy.
Some 44% first heard of the shootings on TV, according to a new study from consulting firm CJ&N, ahead of the Internet (14%), radio (13%), Facebook (5%) and Twitter (2%).
"The findings point to a dramatic shift in how people get news and information, especially younger adults," said Mary Beth Marks, Ph.D., and vice president of research at CJ&N, in announcing the results. "It shows how news content providers across the country must work to serve changing consumer habits, particularly when it comes to younger information consumers."
Indeed, only 21% of adults 18-24 in the survey learned of the shootings on television. That's just ahead of word of mouth and Facebook, both 18%.
CJ&N conducted a telephone survey of 500 U.S. adults July 21-22.
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Michael Malone is content director at B+C and Multichannel News. He joined B+C in 2005 and has covered network programming, including entertainment, news and sports on broadcast, cable and streaming; and local broadcast television, including writing the "Local News Close-Up" market profiles. He also hosted the podcasts "Busted Pilot" and "Series Business." His journalism has also appeared in The New York Times, The L.A. Times, The Boston Globe and New York magazine.