This is a (the?) standard challenge to the idea of adopting an information diet for personal gain, and it’s presented lucidly.
Another implication: The threat imposed by a news reading public (who are itching to be frenzied), is a powerful incentive for prominent (and usually powerful) individuals to act in accord with public sentiment. Perversely, if the threat is effective, then the actual threat mechanism may appear useless (because it is never used).
This isn’t always good, because the public can be wrong, but there seem to be morally mundane cases.
An example: If you live in California, should you read a story about a corrupt and powerful mayor in a small town in Iowa? It really does seem like the “media frenzy” is a primary vector for handling this type of situation, which may otherwise continue because the actors directly involved don’t have enough power.
This also justifies the seeming capriciousness of the news cycle: Why this particular outrage at this particular time? Why not this other, slightly more deserving, outrage? Because this is a coordination game, and the exact focal point isn’t as important as the fact that we all agree to coordinate.
This is a (the?) standard challenge to the idea of adopting an information diet for personal gain, and it’s presented lucidly.
Another implication: The threat imposed by a news reading public (who are itching to be frenzied), is a powerful incentive for prominent (and usually powerful) individuals to act in accord with public sentiment. Perversely, if the threat is effective, then the actual threat mechanism may appear useless (because it is never used).
This isn’t always good, because the public can be wrong, but there seem to be morally mundane cases.
An example: If you live in California, should you read a story about a corrupt and powerful mayor in a small town in Iowa? It really does seem like the “media frenzy” is a primary vector for handling this type of situation, which may otherwise continue because the actors directly involved don’t have enough power.
This also justifies the seeming capriciousness of the news cycle: Why this particular outrage at this particular time? Why not this other, slightly more deserving, outrage? Because this is a coordination game, and the exact focal point isn’t as important as the fact that we all agree to coordinate.