Science Friday - Science Journalism Is Shrinking–Along With Public Trust In Science
Episode Date: January 10, 2024In 2023, a flood of science journalists lost their jobs. At the same time, public trust in science continues to decline.Last year was a tough one for science journalism. National Geographic laid off a...ll of its staff reporters, and Wired laid off 20 people. And the most recent blow came in November, when Popular Science announced it would stop publishing its magazine after a 151-year run, and laid off the majority of its staff.Beyond talented journalists losing their jobs, many people seem to be losing trust in science in general. A recent Pew Research Center survey found that only 57% of Americans think science has a mostly positive effect on society, down considerably since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.Is the waning trust in science reflected in the shrinking of science journalism?Ira talks about the current state of science journalism with Deborah Blum, science journalist, author, publisher of Undark magazine, and director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Sabrina Imbler, author and science reporter for Defector.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's been a rough year for science journalists.
We've seen a lot of layoffs.
Fewer writers and editors often mean fewer stories,
and every layoff represents a loss of institutional knowledge
that has helped make those stories better.
It's Wednesday, January 10th, and this is Science Friday.
Don't worry, we're not going anywhere.
Science publications like NACIO and Wired
laid off substantial numbers of staffers in 2023.
But maybe the biggest blow was when
popular science announced it would stop publishing its magazine after 151 years. And beyond talented
folks losing their jobs, a recent Pew survey shows that just 57% of Americans think science has a
mostly positive effect on society. This is down considerably since the beginning of the COVID
pandemic. Ira talks with two science journalists to help make sense of these trends.
joining me to talk about the current state of science journalism and maybe even provide a little hope for the future.
Are my guests, Deborah Blum, science journalist, author, publisher of Undark Magazine,
director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT,
and Sabrina Imbler, author and science reporter for Defector based in Brooklyn, New York.
Both of you, welcome to Science Friday. Welcome back.
Thank you. It's great to be here.
Thank you for having us.
You're welcome. Sabrina, let me begin with you because you wrote about the end of popular science, as we know it. We've seen a lot of science journalism jobs cut this year, as I say. What is the significance of this particular magazine going under?
Yeah, I mean, as you mentioned, Ira, it's been a big year for layoffs with, you know, National Geographic and wired and shuddering of climate desks at various publications. And popular science, the website will still.
be around. It's publishing podcasts and posts that feature, you know, a mixture of news and
aggregate of reporting. But the end of popular science, the magazine, you know, it's a huge
blow. It had just celebrated its 150 year anniversary. And the end of the magazine means an end to the
kinds of long-form features, investigations, and, you know, narrative stories that made the magazine
so popular for more than a century. And as long as I've worked in science journalism, there have been
outlets popping up with an infusion of funding and then ending when they couldn't become profitable.
You know, I think about BuzzFeed News, which had an amazing award-winning science desk.
But I guess I had this sense that the big legacy magazines, you know, that my dad read growing up
would always be around. So the end of popular science, the magazine, feels really huge.
I grew up with that also. I feel the same way. Deborah, we have seen journalism layoffs
across the board this year, as Sabrina says. And well, for the past,
Many years, is science journalism more imperiled than other beats?
I don't think so.
I think what we're seeing in science journalism is reflecting the general economic struggles for journalism in general.
And one of the things I've thought was most interesting is there was a period where journalism was really downsizing across the board.
But people were balking up their science staff.
Everyone was recognizing that climate change was lumbering towards a state.
like some runaway monster.
Everyone was dealing with the pandemic.
You saw a real strengthening.
And to some extent, I think what we're seeing now is a correction.
I don't want to call it right-sizing, but we are seeing science reporters pulled back in line
with other beats at this particular time.
So to me, it's kind of a mixed signal.
Yeah, that Pew study I mentioned also shows a partisan split confidence in science.
to act in the best interest of the public is much lower among Republicans as compared to Democrats.
Is this partisanship play how science is understood and reported on?
Yes, and it's not just Pew, but almost everyone who studies the sort of politics of faith in science finds the same thing, right?
Dan K.N. at Yale being a classic example of that, the Edelman Trust Barometer showing a very similar breakdown.
which is more of an international measure. I think you find, if you really parse those numbers,
that faith in science and the positive good in science tends to shade left more than right in general.
And that leads us into the kind of interesting political quagmire that we see for science today, I think.
What are we losing other than the jobs of our friends and our colleagues when science desks get eliminated?
outlets get shut down.
Let me ask you, Sabrina, to begin.
Yeah, I mean, first and foremost, we lose access to information that can help us
live healthier and safer lives.
Like, I think that was made abundantly clear during the pandemic.
Fewer writers and editors often mean fewer stories, and every layoff represents a loss of
institutional knowledge that has helped make those stories better.
I think we also lose access to stories that help expand our.
understanding of who science affects and who can participate in it. At popular science,
the layoffs affected all the full-time employees of color. And layoffs often disproportionately
affect staffers of color who are often more junior. And when you remove these voices from a newsroom,
you lose the ability to tell sensitively reported stories about marginalized groups. And we lose the
kinds of deeply reported powerful pieces that inspire people to become science journalists in
the first place. I think about the journalism pieces I studied in
college. And I wonder, would these stories still be able to be funded and published somewhere today
in these long and exhaustive states? You know, what kind of publications, aside from the New Yorker,
have robust fact-checking budgets these days? I just, I wonder about that. Yeah, that's very interesting.
And a good point, Deborah, would you agree? Yes, I agreed with everything Sabrina said there.
But I would add that when we lose the staff of a Wired or even a popular science, we're losing the reporters who really speak to the, what I think of is the people who are already around the science camp firm.
People who read Wired, people who read The New Yorker, people who read Science Times in the New York Times, they are already sort of get science and why it matters, right?
it's of equal concern to me that we see the loss of people who report on science at regional and smaller publications around the United States, that areas going back to your Pew study, red state areas where people really need to get this information are not getting it.
And so I think that ability to tell the story of science needs to be, you know, looked at in this much broader,
landscape of who do we trust and where do we get the news. Yeah, I agree. And these cuts are coming at a time
when the COVID-19 pandemic showed just how important quality science journalism really is, right?
I mean, what affected the pandemic have on how we cover science, Deborah? That is such a good
point. I don't know if you remember, but like when they would have those White House press conferences
during the Trump administration. And every science journalist I know was that.
listening to the questions asked by the more general assignment reporters and thinking, why don't
they have one science journalist in the mix, right? Why aren't they asking these questions? And so
back to Sabrina's point about the understanding of, in the terms of the pandemic, herd immunity
or vaccination that you have with trained science journalists, that's a real loss. People who
understand viral spread and people who understand your RNA vaccines and can report it accurately.
So I think we do pay a real price for this downsizing.
We're going to have another global pandemic.
Climate change is not magically disappeared just because we're downsizing our climate
desks.
I think it's a cost to all of us to see these positions disappear.
I think trust in science, as we've been talking about, has dropped since the beginning of COVID.
I think some of that has to do with the nature of science itself, that it's constantly evolving.
I mean, it struck me that the public.
public was getting a lesson during this period and how science really works in real time,
perhaps for the first time, how science shifts what we know as the data changes. But the public
had trouble dealing with the scientific method, I think, dealing with the change when it really
wants clarity. What do you think about that, Sabrina? Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of science journalism
sometimes focuses on discoveries or just the end result, you know, talking about something
only once it's been totally figured out, which, you know, in science it rarely is. But I think a lot of
science journalists like rose to the occasion during the pandemic to talk about the process of science,
as you were saying, Ira, and how messy and shifting that landscape can be. And I thought there were
some real wins in terms of how that was communicated to the public. But I also wonder if being
open about how messy it can be sort of helped erode some of the public trust in scientific findings,
when the results were often changing.
Debra, do you think it's possible to get that trust back somehow?
So one of the things that I want to say about science is that I don't believe that anyone should have sort of blind trust in any institution, right?
Science is a human enterprise.
We need to do full justice to that.
And we need to allow people to see that science is people at work trying to understand the world around them.
I actually think if the public understood that better, then they'd be less, you know, horrified when we have a, okay, wear masks, don't wear masks and some of the other things that came up during the pandemic because they would understand not only the process, but the human process of science.
So I don't like sit here, say, please trust everything about science because I don't think any good science, journalists entirely sits on that point either.
What I do think that we need to do better is make people understand how it works and give them the sort of toolkit that they can navigate this world in which science and technology are the most powerful transformative forces on the planet.
Speaking about toolkit, Sabrina, are there new ways to tell science stories that we should be exploring?
Definitely, Ira.
I mean, I think one of the problems of the industry right now
are a lot of the fates of these publications
sort of lie in the hands of venture capital firms
like the one that ended Popular Science Magazine
or media conglomerates like Disney,
which oversaw the layoffs at National Geographic.
And as long as these publications are, you know,
in the hands of these institutions and not journalists,
they're going to optimize for profit and not for journalism.
And so models that I'm very excited about, you know,
I work for a publication called Defector,
which is a worker-owned media site.
And we make 95% of our revenue from subscriptions
and we all own the site together,
meaning we're very stable.
We're not in danger of being purchased by a venture capital firm.
Working at Defector has been a life-changing experience.
You know, I have stability.
My colleagues and I do not fear our bosses.
And together we can kind of define the work that we want to do
and create the conditions that we need to make that work happen.
So if that's time and support to write long report,
features, that's what we give ourselves. And unlike more traditional newsrooms defector also allows me
to be my whole self and be open about my beliefs and how they affect how I see the world. And there are
some other exciting models in science journalism right now. I'm thinking about the sick times, which is a
newsletter founded by Betsy Ladiesets and Miles Griffiths, which is devoted to chronicling the long COVID
crisis and sort of sets itself up in opposition to more mainstream coverage that seeks to minimize the
experience of people who suffer diseases after COVID-19 infection. The Sick Times aims to be
reader-funded. I also think about the Xylem, which was founded by journalist Alex Ip. It's a
non-profit Gen Z science newsroom. I think about 404 Media, which is a new media company created
and owned by a group of technology journalists. You know, I think these models are popping up
everywhere as people understand there sort of needs to be another way to tell science journalism
stories. Interesting that you bring up DeFector where you work, because is it not mainly a sports
journalism outfit, and you're the only science writer on the staff? But that's how you might bring
science to people who might not be seeking out science news, right? Exactly. I mean, I think it was,
you know, when they first approached me about working there, I was confused. I was like,
why would you want someone writing about animals and natural history? But it's been a wonderful fit.
I mean, to your point, Ira, a lot of my readers at Defector are guys who, largely men, who subscribe to the site wanting to read about hockey or the NFL or basketball or baseball.
But they are interested in science.
They do like reading about, you know, the discovery of a rare frog somewhere or sort of the complicated science around bringing extinct species back to life.
And it's been a huge personal challenge to write to these audiences that don't seek out science news.
are interested in it. And it's a great idea to have more science journalism or science journalists
that cite that aren't science specific per Deborah's point to sort of bring new readers into the
fold. Because I think everyone is curious about science. Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. And I know,
Deborah, you must see some of this when you talk to folks about the books you've written,
right? I do. And it's one of the things that actually going to the subject of hope gives me hope.
of me, because when I go out on book tours and I talk to people who are not necessarily interested in science,
in my case, they're interested in murder or ghosts or poisoning, right, serial killers, which is my current book,
you know, then I realize that there's this whole landscape of people out there who really are fascinated by science in ways that we don't appreciate.
Or actually, some cases, know more than I do about poison.
and which happened to me at one particular book club.
It's so hard to believe, but true.
But the thing is that it reminds me that people really are in ways that we don't always appreciate,
figuring out ways that this matters in their daily lives.
And that's really what we're trying to get at.
Science matters in your daily life.
You know, it used to be, and we talk about this a lot on Science Friday,
that science fiction was always a way as the open,
door, right, to bring real science into reporting. But now it seems there are a lot, many more ways,
Sabrina. Yeah, I mean, I'm excited about maybe more places like Defector popping up, you know,
worker-owned models, maybe, you know, a culture website could hire a science journalist,
bringing in like the science of healthcare or the science of personal health. I'm excited by,
I guess, the next generation of journalists continuing to invent new models that I haven't even
heard of that maybe are better than the existing ones. And, you know, I'm inspired by just thinking
about hope. I'm inspired by the journalists who, despite being laid off once or, you know, many
times who continue to find ways to freelance or, you know, tell these science stories in whatever
way possible. But I also, I think about the journalists who have prioritized their own well-being
by leaving the industry for something more stable. And I'm inspired by that choice as well. And, you know,
I hope that we can work to make the industry better and more stable so that maybe some of those people can come back.
Good way to end this conversation.
I want to thank both of you for taking time to be with us today.
Thank you so much, Ira.
Thank you so much.
It's such an important issue.
Deborah Blum, Pulitzer Prize-winning science journalist, author of The Poison Squad, publisher of Undark Magazine,
director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT,
and Sabrina Imbler, author of How Far the Light Reaches, Coming Outer,
coming out in paperback. Sabrina's science reporter for Defector based in Brooklyn, New York.
That's all the time we have for now. A lot of folks help make the show happen, including
John Demkowski, Kathleen Davis, Dee Petersmith, Robin Kasmur. And many more. Tomorrow, inside NASA's
Cipher Project, how the human body changes in space. For now, I'm sci-fi producer Shoshana Bucksbaum.
We'll catch you next time.
