News Overload Is Killing Us

Even journalists sometimes have to ditch the 24–7 news cycle

Cherie Berkley
ZORA
Published in
7 min readOct 21, 2020

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Smiling Black woman with headphones on looking at her computer with a cup of coffee in her hand.
Photo: 10'000 Hours/Getty Images

From Covid-19 and a high-stakes presidential election to domestic terrorism and reckoning with racial injustice, it seems harder than ever to stay informed while also staying emotionally intact. These uncertainties have made the world more on edge and less hopeful. It’s easy to get sucked into the news cycle for extended periods because there is so much happening and so much we need to know.

News overload is taking a toll on us. Studies show that negative news can impact our emotional state, causing anxiety, stress, fear, irritability, and general unhappiness. Personal relevance impacts how deeply we become engaged with a story, how we evaluate it, and the degree to which a news story affects us. That’s why I took a media break. Though it was difficult, it was the best thing I could do for my mental health.

“When uncertainty is high, it generates a lot of anxiety, which drives our brains to seek as much information as possible to feel more in control,” says Jacqueline Bullis, PhD, a licensed clinical psychologist and researcher at McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School. But the fact is that people can’t control news-making events, and this in turn can create more stress.

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Cherie Berkley
ZORA
Writer for

Cherie Berkley is an Atlanta-based multimedia journalist. She specializes in health and lifestyle topics. She is a foodie and enjoys exotic travel.