Tag: news

  • The Bite Back: Part 1: How soundbite culture has shaped our society

    The Bite Back: Part 1: How soundbite culture has shaped our society

    The 1980s: Campaign ads, catchphrases, and the birth of the 8-second soundbite

    This piece is the first in a five-part series tracing the evolution of soundbite culture and how it’s shaped the way we consume information, debate ideas, and trust (or don’t trust) the media. Each decade tells a different part of the story. This series starts with the 1980s, when political campaigns, corporate advertising, and media consolidation collided to shrink our attention spans post-Cronkite era journalism. From there, I’ll look at the 1990s tabloid boom and reality-TV era, the rise of the internet in the 2000s, the weaponization of social media in the 2010s, and finally, the algorithm-driven attention economy of today. Together, these chapters reveal not only how our media ecosystem has transformed, but how it’s changed our society and psychology at the same time.

    The death of critical thinking

    Debates, in all forms, used to hinge on facts, context, and persuasion. Now, facts themselves are treated as weapons, used only when they reinforce the arguer’s side, and often dismissed as “fake news” when they don’t.

    We now duel through social media memes, TikToks, emojis, and comment chains–often sharing outrageous content before verifying it. Think about the evolution of presidential debates, for instance. Complex policy questions have become condensed into soundbites like “eating cats” and “woke slurs,” and later recirculated as punchlines and weaponized in both mainstream news media and social media discussions.

    Whether the platform is a presidential debate stage or a Facebook post, there’s become a staunch refusal to admit when one side has more to learn. Disagreements based on opinion are nothing new, but when facts collide with beliefs, acknowledgement now gets replaced by deflection, denial, and a culture of gaslighting that turns every exchange into a battle for dominance rather than understanding.

    This culture continues to divide society, leaving us walking on eggshells in all facets of our life. But this extreme polarization isn’t an accident—it’s the logical endpoint of 40 years of shrinking conversations into slogans and memorable phrases to appeal to soundbite culture.

    Read the full blog on the Bite Back Substack.

  • Midland man runs 60 miles on 60th birthday, raises over $2,100 for West Texas Food Bank

    Midland man runs 60 miles on 60th birthday, raises over $2,100 for West Texas Food Bank

    LUBBOCK, Texas — A Midland man celebrated his 60th birthday by doing his favorite thing this week — running, and running far. Nopporn ‘Popcorn’ Leonard ran 60 miles on his 60th birthday while raising money for an important cause inspired by the pandemic.

    “I just feel like I need to do my part giving back to the community,” said Leonard.

    Leonard has raced in two marathons a year since he was 38-years-old. However, when the pandemic hit, that wasn’t possible.

    “I was training for Boston Marathon and it got canceled due to Coronavirus, of course,” said Leonard. “So I was looking for something to do after that.” 

    He saw on the news that there was a long line at his local food bank right at the start of the pandemic. Realizing how big that need was, he decided to do something to give back.

    “So I was like, Well, you know what? So my birthday, eight days before my birthday, I decided I’m gonna run 59 miles and try to collect money for West Texas Food Bank,” said Leonard.  

    Read the full article on everythinglubbock.com, published April 15, 2021.

  • Tenant reveals poor living conditions at Spanish Oaks Apartments; owner says cause was ‘bad manager’

    Tenant reveals poor living conditions at Spanish Oaks Apartments; owner says cause was ‘bad manager’

    LUBBOCK, Texas — In one of the most poignant moments from the city’s last Charter Review Meeting, Rosa Saiz came forward to tell everyone about the poor living conditions she’s been enduring at the Spanish Oaks Apartments complex. 

    Saiz told us that she thought the buildings needed to be condemned — and KAMC News took a look to see what was really going on. The owner said it was all a result of bad management. 

    “We are asking already for a safe place to take my family. Enough is enough,” said Saiz. 

    After hearing silence from her apartment complex following a number of work orders for dangerous living conditions, Saiz turned to her city leaders for help.

    “It’s not okay to have your kids running through sewage,” said Saiz. “It’s not okay to have them through the winter with cardboard … It’s not okay that these leaks have turned into mold.

    Those are just a few of the problems Saiz dealt with since moving into the Spanish Oaks Apartments over a year ago. She said that every work order she filed from gas leaks, backed up sewer lines and broken windows were ignored.

    Read the full article on everythinglubbock.com, published April 14, 2021.