The term 'No Sabo Kids' has evolved from an insult to a source of pride for young Latinos, reflecting a shift in digital news consumption preferences among U.S. Hispanic adults. Nearly 9 in 10 Latinos now get news from digital devices, with 65% preferring this medium over TV, radio, or print. While U.S.-born Latinos overwhelmingly prefer English news, immigrant Latinos are more divided between English and Spanish sources.
Most U.S. Latino adults say they prefer to use digital devices over other platforms to get their news. 87% say they get news from digital devices at least sometimes, and 65% say they prefer this form of news over TV, radio or print. https://t.co/biljMhI17L https://t.co/CZwQS52V77
U.S-born Latinos overwhelmingly get their news in English, and prefer it in English. Meanwhile, 41% of Latino immigrants get their news mostly in Spanish, 26% get it primarily in English and 31% do both about equally. https://t.co/hZ9pIpNaVi
U.S.-born Latinos overwhelmingly prefer to get their news in English; about half of immigrant Latinos prefer it in Spanish https://t.co/Ucnv9cMxCo
Nearly 9 in 10 Latinos say they get news from digital devices at least sometimes, and 65% say they prefer this form of news over TV, radio, or print. The dramatic shift to digital news consumption comes amid rising concerns over online misinformation. https://t.co/1nwMp46RYa
Just over half of U.S. Hispanic adults (54%) get their news mostly in English – far higher than the share who get their news mostly in Spanish (21%). About a quarter (23%) say they consume news in both languages about equally.
Why do Latinos, more than other groups, prefer to get news on digital devices? https://t.co/6WqQY4sI5H via @azcentral
"'No Sabo Kids'? From insult to badge of pride for young Latinos." (via @azdangonzalez) https://t.co/Bp8mZIYIxR
'No Sabo Kids'? From insult to badge of pride for young Latinos https://t.co/xmVaGCvVjA via @azcentral