In today's information landscape, media outlets face a fundamental challenge: maintaining audience trust. The formula is actually quite straightforward. When outlets repeatedly get facts wrong or when audiences can anticipate their editorial stance on any given issue before the story even drops, people simply switch off. They stop listening. It's not about whether someone agrees or disagrees—it's about predictability bred from inconsistency. When your track record shows systematic errors or your narrative always fits a predetermined template, you lose the right to be heard. This erosion of trust explains why traditional media houses have struggled to retain viewership, especially among audiences who can fact-check instantly and compare narratives across decentralized information sources.
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OnchainHolmes
· 01-20 21:09
ngl traditional media has long been outdated, who still falls for this stuff...
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MidnightTrader
· 01-18 04:47
Old media really should reflect on themselves; predictive journalism has been played out.
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RatioHunter
· 01-18 04:12
Nah, traditional media's tricks should have gone bankrupt long ago. Who still believes in preset positions and storytelling?
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GmGnSleeper
· 01-17 21:48
Nah, this set of traditional media is already outdated. Who still believes in it?
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BearMarketBuilder
· 01-17 21:48
Nah, traditional media is like this; their tricks are worn out and no one buys it anymore.
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InfraVibes
· 01-17 21:43
Traditional media should have gone out of business long ago. Every time I see their news, I can guess the next sentence...
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TerraNeverForget
· 01-17 21:42
tbh mainstream media really got played by the internet, can't even keep up anymore lol
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ThesisInvestor
· 01-17 21:42
Honestly, traditional media has long been unable to keep up. In the Web3 era, who still buys into your preset narratives?
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MissingSats
· 01-17 21:34
NGL, traditional media should have been gone long ago; we stopped believing in it a long time ago.
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DarkPoolWatcher
· 01-17 21:24
ngl Traditional media should have been shut down long ago, predictability really has the strongest destructive power...
In today's information landscape, media outlets face a fundamental challenge: maintaining audience trust. The formula is actually quite straightforward. When outlets repeatedly get facts wrong or when audiences can anticipate their editorial stance on any given issue before the story even drops, people simply switch off. They stop listening. It's not about whether someone agrees or disagrees—it's about predictability bred from inconsistency. When your track record shows systematic errors or your narrative always fits a predetermined template, you lose the right to be heard. This erosion of trust explains why traditional media houses have struggled to retain viewership, especially among audiences who can fact-check instantly and compare narratives across decentralized information sources.