Kids can sit down and watch 7-8 hours of streaming content though. I don't think it's neccessarily that kid's attention spans are completely broken, rather that they have so many things constantly vying for their attention that they dismiss content more easily because they've always known an abundance of media. A starving person won't turn away any sort of food, but someone who has never been hungry can refuse to eat something for the shallowest of reasons. Or something.
I'd say that's true, but also that many including myself put streaming vids and other such content in the background to create a secondary noise while we multitask on something else with brief moments of engagement. Also gotta say short form content that gets the message across far quicker than long form essays as well (Tiktok for instance has been pretty great at creating lots of short form leftist content to help inform). Still there's just a part of me that wonders whether some of the blame can be laid at the feet of new media formats and distributes wanting quicker higher engagement content, and how this isn't fostering healthy attention spans.
Kids can sit down and watch 7-8 hours of streaming content though. I don't think it's neccessarily that kid's attention spans are completely broken, rather that they have so many things constantly vying for their attention that they dismiss content more easily because they've always known an abundance of media. A starving person won't turn away any sort of food, but someone who has never been hungry can refuse to eat something for the shallowest of reasons. Or something.
I'd say that's true, but also that many including myself put streaming vids and other such content in the background to create a secondary noise while we multitask on something else with brief moments of engagement. Also gotta say short form content that gets the message across far quicker than long form essays as well (Tiktok for instance has been pretty great at creating lots of short form leftist content to help inform). Still there's just a part of me that wonders whether some of the blame can be laid at the feet of new media formats and distributes wanting quicker higher engagement content, and how this isn't fostering healthy attention spans.