Live sports have long been celebrated as one of the last true connective tissues to a mass audience, but TV news media deserves more credit than it gets. For brands that need credibility, reach, and relevance during key cultural moments, TV news has always had a seat at the table.
The challenge is that the way it’s bought, sold, and consumed has fundamentally changed. As audiences splinter across linear broadcasts, streaming platforms, and social media, advertisers face a pressing question: how does TV news fit into the modern media mix?
TV news still holds its own
Compared to the blockbuster audiences that tune in for live sports, news operates at a smaller scale, but what it lacks in size, it makes up for in consistency and loyalty. Viewers tend to be deeply committed to their news sources, treating them as trusted, daily habits rather than occasional destinations. From a performance standpoint, TV news has historically been one of the more reliable environments for advertisers. It’s not flashy, but it delivers.
Audience migration or audience adoption?
One of the biggest questions in the industry is whether viewers are leaving linear news or simply adding new ways to consume it. The evidence points to the latter. Traditional linear news audiences, which tend to skew older, aren’t abandoning their nightly broadcasts. They may be picking up new platforms as options expand, but the core behavior remains largely intact.
What’s actually happening is that younger viewers are discovering news through entirely new channels like TikTok and Instagram rather than transitioning from traditional outlets. Today, nearly 60% of people consume news through streaming or social media in some form. It’s become a multi-screen, multi-layered experience and not so much of a one-for-one swap.

Fragmentation is forcing smarter planning
With news audiences now scattered across linear TV, FAST channels, streaming apps, and social platforms, media buyers have had to evolve their approach. Linear television remains the foundation, but how it’s packaged and targeted looks very different from how it did even a few years ago. Buyers are layering in news-targeted streaming buys, activating against FAST channel inventory, and depending on the brand, incorporating social media into the mix as well.
The right approach depends entirely on the objective. Broad reach still points toward broadcast, while engagement and targeting lean toward cable or digital. The good news is that news inventory is more accessible than ever across more formats, but planners need a clear strategy before they start spending.
Which news formats are winning in streaming?
Not all news content translates equally in a streaming environment. Short-form, highlight-driven content tends to perform better on digital platforms, where viewers are looking for quick, digestible hits rather than a 30-minute broadcast. Long-form, anchor-driven programming still has an audience, but that viewer is more likely to be watching on linear.
Even within streaming, there’s no universal formula. FAST (Free Ad-Supported Television) channels might be the sweet spot for some clients trying to attract a younger viewership, while on-demand segments outperform for others. TV news on FAST channels accounted for 8.5% of total viewing hours, a figure that held steady outside of major breaking news events or election cycles.
Brand safety in a polarized news environment
Political polarization in news media isn’t new, but the number of platforms amplifying it certainly is. News has always carried some degree of ideological lean, and that tension has always been part of the advertising calculus. The best approach is to stay anchored to the objective, know the audience, and keep a close eye on the environment without overreacting to every news cycle.
Outlets shift over time. What feels risky in one moment can stabilize the next. Brand safety in news is less about avoiding the category altogether and more about being intentional and staying informed.
Is news still a must-buy?
For certain categories, financial services, mortgage, healthcare, and other high-consideration verticals, news remains an important part of the mix. The viewership is reliable, the context is credible, and the performance data support it. For brands chasing younger demographics, the calculus is different, and the budget might be better allocated toward digital and social.
The honest answer is that news isn’t a universal must-buy anymore, but it’s far from irrelevant. It’s a situational buy that, when matched to the right brand and the right objective, continues to deliver.
The TV news media landscape in 2026 is more fragmented, more polarized, and more complex than ever, but it’s also more accessible and targetable than it’s ever been. Brands that approach it with a clear objective, a flexible strategy, and a willingness to pivot will find that news still has plenty to offer.
Know your objective, be mindful of the environment, and don’t be afraid to adjust when things change.
To learn more about how you can level up your media strategy and investment, contact us!