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newsworthiness

Newsworthiness is the quality that makes a news item worthy of coverage by a news organization. It is a normative concept used by editors and producers to decide what to publish, broadcast, or post. Traditionally, news organizations rely on a set of news values or criteria that signal the potential interest, relevance, or impact of an event for an audience. Classic frameworks, notably Galtung and Ruge's 1965 analysis, identify factors such as frequency, threshold (scale), unambiguity, meaning (clarity), continuity, novelty, trend, proximity, prominence, human interest, conflict, and impact. In practice, many outlets also consider timeliness, proximity to the audience, economic or political consequences, usefulness, and the potential for shaping public discourse.

Editors weigh these values against constraints such as time, space, and resources, as well as editorial policy

Critics argue that the concept is inherently subjective and can be manipulated to favor sensationalism, dominant

See also: gatekeeping, news value, media ethics, gatekeeping theory.

and
audience
expectations.
With
the
rise
of
digital
media,
newsworthiness
is
increasingly
influenced
by
algorithms,
personalization,
and
engagement
metrics,
which
can
affect
visibility
and
reinforce
biases
toward
sensational
or
highly
shareable
content.
voices,
or
privileged
perspectives
while
marginalizing
minority
or
ordinary
experiences.
Proponents
contend
that
a
transparent,
consistent
set
of
criteria
helps
maintain
journalistic
judgment,
accountability,
and
informational
value.