
Could the local evening news be so laughably depressing everywhere?
With the help of Asylum readers from 10 major U.S. cities, we found out. The answer: a resounding yes. That, and discoveries like Atlanta's inability to cope with snowfall and near incapacitation as a result of flurrying; Miami's use of alliterative story titles to terrify its viewers; and just about every city's reliance on heroic or rescued dogs to resuscitate viewers after miserable broadcasts.
The substance of the local evening news from the first full week of the New Year (Jan. 4-8, 2010) boiled down to the 10 categories of stories from accidents to crime to weather. Based on those categories, we created a "Misery Index," which accounted for how depressing each category is, and the percentage of time each broadcast devoted to each category.
The cities are ranked from least to most depressing, along with a pie chart and a highlight from each city's news coverage. We warn you, it's not pretty.
10. CLEVELAND, OHIO
Overview: It's snowing outside, with a chance of LeBron.
Human Interest: A feel-good story involving a dog, with a twist: A man fell on ice, fell unconscious and a dog licked him to wake him up. The news team tells viewers that the dog "licked the man back to life." That one kind of wrote itself.
T-8. NEW YORK CITY
Overview: New York City showed a fairly even distribution of stories and surprisingly came in tied for eighth overall. Maybe New Yorkers are already so jaded that news teams don't try to make it worse.
Health Advisory: The NYC Health Department is distributing 70,000 copies of its "how-to" heroin guide, aimed at telling heroin users how to inject themselves safely. Mayor Michael Bloomberg defended the Health Department's flier, "Take Charge, Take Care." I don't know if using a needle properly qualifies as "taking charge," but I guess you have to start somewhere.
T-8. WASHINGTON, D.C.
Overview: The nation's capital, not surprisingly, heavily covers government and national security stories.
Corruption: Baltimore mayor Sheila Dixon resigned due to a conviction last month for misappropriating $500 worth of gift cards. Gift cards! She's the poor man's Rod Blagojevich. At least he tried to sell a Senate seat. Go big or go home.
7. ATLANTA
Overview: Everyone freaks out about an anticipated snow dusting. The news team covers the story from every angle, real or imagined. Everything else -- combined -- is secondary.
Weather: One news team is panicking, but they don't want viewers to panic. Here's a sampling: "Be aware"; "There may be a dusting to a few inches of snow"; "Not wet [snow], likely it'll blow around. It won't stick, just kind of to the side of the road maybe. Just the kind I like"; "Look at these beautiful grains of snow."
One anchor comments amid all the snow hoopla, "I know the Northerners are making fun of us. We're just Southern pansies."
6. CHICAGO
Overview: A lot of crime and a bit of everything else in Chicago.
Health Advisory: One reporter advises viewers: "Staying single means staying skinny." Now that is really bad news for every overweight single chick in Chicago.
Part II of this story lists the Top Five most miserable news cities.


























Lingerie Worker Claims She Was Fired For Being 'Too Hot'
What Happened When Alex Kenjeev Paid His Student Loan in Cash
The Richest Woman in the World: How Gina Rinehart Earns her Billions
Preserve Your Budget by Freezing Foods -- Savings Experiment
Facebook's IPO Debacle, Day 3: Un-Friended and Dis-Liked on Wall Street
Grieving Pit Bull Refused to Leave Dead Companion's Side
It's Legal To Shoot And Kill Animal Poachers, Indian State Orders
Jennifer Lopez, Casper Smart TV Show: J.Lo to Star in Reality Series With Boyfriend (REPORT)
Vet Saves His Own Cat's Life After Car Accident







Comments:
Add a comment
Saturday 30 January
By Tammy
Apparently whoever made this biased news bit has never been to Kansas City, MO. Here we interupt one murder story for another on the 6 O'clock news. There are people dying in the streets every day here....so it's a war zone here too.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Ricardo
I used to manage a radio and a TV station and I can tell you that the cheapest way to " produce " newscasts is to source news stories from the Police blotter . This does not require digging up news stories nor the need for journalists . The Police blotter conveniently provides you crime , traffic , accidents and court cases all from one convenient source .
The next cheap source is simply reading off the local paper . This is newscasting for the illiterate .
All local broadcast newscasts , if you note , clearly come from the Police blotter.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Jim
If we really sit back and take a good look at today's events, we will be at war with each other in this country, a subject overlooked by our news media, because they are not allowed to say such things. As the economy gets worse and things like medicine, food, water, heat, become unaffordable to 95% of the public the only thing left will be self destruction, our government cannot afford to help American's, they are to busy shipping our medicine, food, water and other natural resources to other countries. A true president would clean up his or her own closet first, instead our country continues into the depths of no return, or even bankruptcy or is that the plan???
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By scott mccowan
What I find depressing and aggravating is how every 5 or so minutes they have to report the weather on the morning shows, or when it's just piddling outside they suddenly become the Weather Channel telling you crap that could be told in a scroll.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Jim
To continue, we cannot continue to be the 911 of the world, at present our GDP is around 13 Trillion per annum, our government has borrowed 11.5 Trillion at present, that means we can borrow 1.5 Trillion before we are considered a risk, that means bankruptcy for a NATION, our NATION folks, the sad part is we will never be told where the money really went. I'll bet things will change when you can't afford food, medicine, cloths, just any basic everyday item, then you will ask where did all the money go?, WE should be asking before it's to late, as long as we are getting what we want nobody will bother, watch the news and then you will understand why crime is on the rise, because it has already started, people can't get what they NEED, a shame indeed, wait until gas is five or six bucks a gallon, that will be more important than food, which we wont be able to afford, I hope someone can see the vicious cycle that has started in our country, the real question; we need serious people with the U.S.A. on their mind to fix the coming problem, THE WAR WITHIN, it will get so bad we will have to gaurd our own homes, while we feed the rest of the world, what about the real world here not to mention our veterans and elderly, all one has to do is read the right material and you will soon see I'm not some lunatic, but someone that was lucky enough to have the ability to read and understand that we American's are living a predetermined path, the shame is most wont realize this until it's too late.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Jim
I sit and read all your comments, the real deal is this, our media is subjected to heavy censored, this is why you continue hearing the same thing day after day, if you want to see the real news try looking at the over seas news paper's, thanks to our fighting men, some have been brve enough to bring the "real" news home with them, the story you get is not the story the rest of the world gets, we are being deflected, and told what they want us to be told, once you see other news from around the world, your eyes will widen and then it will hit you. Deflection, the adopted children from Haiti, that the government paid the adoptive parents to take these children in and we are going to pay the entire bill. What's more is, what about the children in America that need the same care and adoptive parents?, the sad part is that does not pay as well, let alone make a heart touching deflective story to avoid the real issues we American's have. Welcome to bureaucratic censorship folks, and it will only get more convoluted, does this strike you as being strange? Strange is when we have our politicians telling us to send CASH (untraceable) to help Haiti, I wonder when I'm told to send cash, wouldn't you?
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Carolyn
You should live in Oklahoma City if it rains, wind blows, ices up or snows all three local channels go into get the ratings mode and all regular programming is put on hold until the last drop of water, last leaf blows past and all ice and snow melts.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Bill
I noticed that Detroit wasn't on the list. I guess they all left town, so there is no one to report how bad this city really is. Oh well...
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By gr8bsn
How is Tucson not on that list? I spent only four months there and wanted to blow my brains out. I had to leave because the place was so damn miserable.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Suzie
I don't think the local news anywhere makes you feel all warm and cozy this day and time. However, being 20 miles from Charlotte, NC, I watch it and it down right depressing.
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By EdgarLongenecker
How many home invasion robberies and assaults, constitute reasonable doubt for the victim of Mesa, Arizonas' police indolence, incompetency, and criminality...???
Reply
Saturday 30 January
By Chica
I'm from the Chicago area and, believe me, Chicagoans don't get upset by much other than the gangs, knowing that problem is never going away, A long standing expression here is 'ship em all to Utah.' Meaning, get rid of the gangbangers in open territory where they can only do themselves in! Our state's political corruption doesn't seem to raise many eyebrows, everyone is used to it!
Reply