Imagine scrolling through your social media feed. You see a mix of posts—some positive, some neutral, and some negative. Which one grabs your attention? Chances are, the negative post does. Whether it ...
A man wakes up, grabs his phone, and scrolls the news. "Economic collapse coming." "Violence surging." "Everything is broken." By 8 A.M., his brain is already in a threat state. His heart rate is up.
Source: Zeyad Taha/Unsplash Why does bad news often overshadow good news? Psychologists point to the negativity effect—the tendency for negative events to impact us more strongly than positive ones.
Emily Reynolds is the founder & CEO of the award-winning R Public Relations, providing expert-level PR, publicity & crisis comms services. Transparency, adaptability and consistency are crucial to ...
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Miami Dolphins fans on media bias

Miami Dolphins fans share their take on if the national media has a bias against the team.