TL;DR
Former BBC News head Deborah Turness warns that traditional broadcasters face an existential threat from 'creator journalism,' as audiences increasingly turn to platforms like YouTube and TikTok for news. She highlights a significant decline in TV news viewership, urging broadcasters to adapt quickly.
Broadcasters must urgently adapt to an existential threat from “creator journalism” that is causing audiences to shun traditional television news, the former boss of BBC News has said.
Deborah Turness, who resigned from the BBC alongside the former director general Tim Davie last year, said “news consumption is collapsing” for traditional television news, which is facing “a profound moment of disruption”.
She said that a new habit of following personality-led journalism on digital platforms such as YouTube, TikTok and Substack was now in the process of replacing traditional news. She said the impact of the shift may be “greater than the advent of the digital age, or the arrival of social media”.
In her first intervention since stepping down from the BBC after the corporation’s edit of a Donald Trump speech, Turness said traditional broadcasters had to quickly react to the “existential nature” of the revolution taking place.
Turness pointed to a major decline in TV news audiences, stating that nearly 4 million fewer people source their news from TV in the last five years, including streaming. “At the same time, we’ve seen a trebling of the number getting their news from YouTube – a 10-fold increase from TikTok,” she said.
Giving the Sir David Nicholas memorial lecture in London that is named after the pioneering former ITN editor, Turness said she had spent her time since leaving the BBC examining the new form of “one-to-one” journalism, which is delivered through digital platforms.
She said it went against “the polished, controlled formality that is in the DNA of the established media”.
She said that trust in individual figures was behind the shift away from broadcasters, pointing to the huge audiences already assembled by some creators. She singled out Joe Rogan, who has 20.9 million subscribers on YouTube; the former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson, who has 5.6 million; his fellow rightwing commentator Megyn Kelly, with 4.2 million; and , with 1.95 million.