 Why does anyone pay for news in 2025? The most reliable reasons are the most obvious: A desire for a better understanding of the world. The need for insider intel to get ahead professionally. For some true sickos, a way to pass the time. Thereâs another powerful, if unreliable, force: sentimentality. NPR member stations have recorded record donations amid a clawback of hundreds of millions of dollars by the federal government, reflecting a swell of local pride among listeners. People tuned back into The Late Show in strong numbers following the announcement that CBS would be ending the show entirely next year, bringing to a close a franchise that has been a television staple for more than three decades. Of course, audience nostalgia can only go so far. NPR and PBS and their member stations may raise enough to slow the bleeding this year and next year, but what happens after, if Republicans maintain control of Congress and/or the White House beyond 2028? Interest in Stephen Colbert wonât get people to stop drifting away from linear television in favor of looser, more contemporary comedy podcasts. A lack of sentimentality probably saved Fox six years ago, when the Murdochs sold 21st Century Fox and much of the companyâs cable assets to Disney at the top of the market. Now, as Ben writes this week, after years of keeping an iron grip on its in-house talent, the company has shifted its attitude, letting its stars move between digital media properties. Itâs even building businesses around the Murdochsâ longtime nemesis, Google, in the form of YouTube. Also today: Michael Wolffâs den, Cory Bookerâs social media dreams for Democrats, and a job listing here at Semafor. (Scoop count: 2) |