The Most Important Thing That Happened This Year Was the Heat | And yet you really wouldn’t know it from reading the wrap-ups of the year’s news now appearing on one website after another.
The Most Important Thing That Happened This Year Was the Heat | And yet you really wouldn’t know it from reading the wrap-ups of the year’s news now appearing on one website after another.
The Most Important Thing That Happened This Year Was the Heat

In a sense, though, that’s the problem. Those stories in the Times and Post were a way to search for a new angle to a story that doesn’t change quite fast enough to count as news. (In geological terms, we’re warming at hellish pace; but that’s not how the 24/7 news cycle works.) It’s been record-global-hot every day for months now: The first few of those days got some coverage, but at a certain point editors, and then readers, begin to tune out. We’re programmed—by evolution, doubtless, and in the case of journalism by counting clicks—to look for novelty and for conflict. Climate change seems inexorable, which is the opposite of how we think about news.