80% of news bulletins now contain multiple crisis stories
Modern news increasingly feels less like a sequence of separate events and more like a continuous condition of pressure, according to a major new report from Be Broadcast’s Mission Control division.
The report, The News and the State of the Nation, analysed every BBC and ITV News at Ten bulletin broadcast between September 2025 and March 2026, tracking thousands of individual stories by topic, emotional tone, escalation, repetition and resolution.
The findings reveal how heavily modern news coverage is now structured around crisis, conflict and consequence. More than 80% of bulletins contained at least two crisis or scandal-led stories, while more than a third contained four or more. By contrast, just 3% of stories focused primarily on resolution or progress.
Negative emotions accounted for around 65% of all coverage, with concern emerging as the dominant emotional state. The report argues this repeated exposure to instability, uncertainty and escalation is helping shape a wider atmosphere of pressure that audiences increasingly carry through daily life.
Alongside the content analysis, Be Broadcast also surveyed broadcast journalists working across national and international television and radio. Around 70% said they struggle to switch off from work, while 65% said repetitive crisis coverage leads to emotional fatigue or overwhelm. More than 80% described the current news environment as mostly or predominantly negative.
The report suggests the findings have implications not only for journalism and politics, but also for brands, public trust and wider communications. Rather than responding with louder positivity or distraction, the analysis argues organisations increasingly need to communicate through clarity, usefulness, reassurance and genuine human connection.
Josh Wheeler, founder of Be Broadcast, said the research was designed to better understand “the cumulative effect created when people are repeatedly exposed to conflict, instability, consequence and uncertainty over long periods of time, often with very little visible resolution”.
The full report is available at https://bebroadcast.co.uk/