This week our journalism course honed its attention in on the world of social media, the Twitter-sphere in particular, and its relationship with traditional news media.
I found it an interesting topic and, when asked by a presenting student whether or not I believe what our generation considers to be 'newsworthy' has been influenced by the Internet's influence over the media, I found that I had to force my brain to divorce online and digital media from our traditional concept of news.
I think I found this question particularly difficult, and especially interesting, because I have become a student of the media in a day and age in which it is near impossible to accept the two as different things.
What came to my mind as an answer to this question was, 'everything and nothing'.
In this day and age, it is rare to find current affairs and political news to exist separate from social media.
Social media network has formed a tight grip on what is happening in our world, in the way this news is delivered, in the way it is viewed by its audience and, sometimes, in the way it is formed. It is from this perspective I feel that social media has effected what we as a 21st Century people deem to be newsworthy.
But to zoom out on the effect the new media platforms and social media spheres have on modern news, I would suggest that what is 'newsworthy' is selected by our subconscious and by what we essentially are as humans. We will always innately know what is newsworthy and what is not.

