According to TechCrunch, 62% of United States adults get their news from social media. People are looking for news that is short, with little effort. In Ray Bradbury's eerie society, reading is very short, and news are read in one column, two sentences form. In our world today, people want reading to be short, so they look to twitter for news with the 140 word count limit. But, news doesn’t have to be that short. Americans are turning to very short news, just like the people in Fahrenheit 451 did, and we could do better. In Ray Bradbury's eerie society, reading is very short, and news are read in one column, two sentences form. In the book Fahrenheit 451, it says, “Politics? One column, two sentences, a headline! Then, in mid-air, all vanishes!” Their society also listens to the news through seashells. Montag listened to the news while walking through the subway station. In Fahrenheit 451, they do not care about reading the news! …show more content…
People do not read real newspapers any more. People want reading to be short, so they look to twitter for news. Twitter has a word count of only 140 words. People are mad about the new 280 word count because news reporters will start to type up longer reports. People want the news to be short and right to the point. They do not want to have to read much at all. Overall, Americans are turning to very short news, just like the people in Fahrenheit 451 did. But, there are things we can do to prevent news vanishing completely. To start out, everyone can get free newspapers, so they will read real news columns. This will help people by having them read paper versions, rather than electronic news. Additionally, the Twitter app should just be deleted entirely. By doing this, people can focus on real life things, such as reading real news. Whereas Twitter has a bunch of fake news, and starts a lot of