Abstract
ABSTRACT This article examines how young people (18–24) in England who experience social inequality consumed news during the first national Covid-19 lockdown. Described as “infodemically vulnerable” due to their reliance on social media for news, I draw on 25 interviews to consider if this underresearched population was exposed to harmful information. Contrary to fears, participants maintained a constant awareness of essential Covid-19 information throughout this period. They used substantively different consumption practices as the lockdown progressed. Initially, interviewees turned to trusted information from broadcast media news, replacing their dependence on social media. This was short-lived, as participants later avoided television news due to its impact on their wellbeing and frustrations that coverage did not relate to their lived experience. The paper demonstrates how structural factors, like age and inequality, can act as catalysts for selective news avoidance. Avoidance, however, did not result in interviewees missing critical updates. They adopted a “News Finds Me” perception, whereby individuals remained informed indirectly through relatable information from trusted contacts received on private messaging applications. Rather than being exposed to an infodemic, this article shows how accidental exposure to news on social media provided information perceived as more useful and representative of their lived experience.
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