Amid coronavirus news, many need to step away
NEW YORK — Heidi Van Roekel makes instructional art videos for YouTube when coronavirus news overwhelms her. Bill Webb takes his boat out. Stacy Mitchell searches her TV for something — anything — to make her laugh.
Paradoxically, Kevin Reed, a software designer from Kenmore, Washington, has binged “The Walking Dead” after turning off the news. He’d rather watch fake, flesh-eating zombies than a real-life pandemic.
It’s no surprise that news outlets are in demand with a story that directly affects so many people, whether they’ve gotten sick, lost jobs or are locked down at home. A Pew Research Center survey taken the third week of April found that 88 per cent of Americans said they were following coronavirus news either very or fairly closely.
Yet that takes a toll. Pew also found that 71 per cent of Americans said that they need to take breaks from the news. To watch something else. To do something else. To breathe a little.