The future of news: What matters to young audiences

The future of news: What matters to young audiences



The way younger people get their news looks a lot different than it did a generation ago.  

For many millennials and Gen Z, it’s not about watching the 6 o’clock news or reading the headlines in the Sunday paper. 

Instead, it might be watching a quick video on TikTok, spotting a trending post on Instagram or listening to a favorite podcast on a commute. 

MPR News guest host Catharine Richert and her guests talk about what’s shaping the way young people stay informed, what holds their attention, what doesn’t, and why it matters for the future. 

Two women pose for a portrait
Olivia Cordova Kramer (left), a high school student at the Breck School in Golden Valley and previously a newsroom intern at the Minnesota Star Tribune, and Anne Guttridge (right), a video producer for MPR News and part of Reverb, an MPR News initiative and reporting team focused on serving younger Minnesotans, pose for a portrait in the Kling Public Media Center in St. Paul on Monday.
Nikhil Kumaran | MPR News

Guests:

  • Anne Guttridge is a video producer for MPR News and part of Reverb — an MPR News initiative and reporting team focused on serving younger Minnesotans.  

  • Olivia Cordova Kramer is a high school student at the Breck School in Golden Valley. She was a newsroom intern at the Minnesota Star Tribune.  

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Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.     

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