<p>In the suburbs of Madrid, four young women are hard at work creating videos summarising the news that is viewed every day by millions of people on TikTok.</p>.<p>They are part of a growing army of young people making content about current events which attract more viewers on social media than videos published by the traditional media.</p>.<p>The idea emerged when two of the women were studying in London between 2016 and 2020 as Britain was preparing to leave the European Union.</p>.<p>"We would read a bunch of articles but we weren't able to get a broad understanding" of the topic, said 26-year-old biotechnology graduate Gabriela Campbell.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/app-never-shared-us-data-with-chinese-government-tiktok-ceo-1202480.html" target="_blank">App never shared US data with Chinese government: TikTok CEO</a></strong><br /><br />"We thought if it's hard for us, there must be more people like us too," she told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>So the pair joined forces with two other friends to launch an account on TikTok called "ac2ality" in June 2020, just as the popularity of the Chinese short-video sharing app was soaring among young people.</p>.<p>Nearly three years on, the account has 4.3 million followers -- more than the majority of major media outlets.</p>.<p>That makes ac2ality the top news account in Spanish on TikTok, according to the University of Oxford's Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.</p>.<p>The four do not consider themselves journalists, saying instead they "translate the news" in one-minute videos made with a smartphone and a circular light to ensure well-lit images.</p>.<p>Their video narrating the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, was seen over 17 million times.</p>.<p>Social networks like YouTube, Instagram and TikTok have become the main source of news for young people, according to several studies, including one by Britain's media regulator Ofcom.</p>.<p>Some initiatives offering news content "designed by young people for young people", such as French firm Brut, have already become heavyweights, said Reuters Institute researcher Nic Newman.</p>.<p>Thanks to algorithms, news accounts run by individuals and "not necessarily companies" can now "reach huge numbers of people" on social media, he said.</p>.<p>In France, HugoDecrypte is one of the most followed news accounts on social media and has broadcast interviews with French President Emmanuel Macron and Bill Gates.</p>.<p>Its founder, 25-year-old YouTuber Hugo Travers, told <em>AFP</em> he knows "how to talk to a generation" that simply "tunes out" when news is presented in a more traditional format.</p>.<p>Susana Perez Soler, a journalist and digital communications expert at Barcelona's Ramon Llull University, said such accounts owe their popularity to their lighter tone, creative formats and short lengths.</p>.<p>In cases like ac2ality, they are providing a "summary" of the news and "not journalism", which requires "investigative work, finding sources and checking their reliability", she added.</p>.<p>The millions of subscribers these accounts attract have aroused the envy of major media outlets which struggle to reach young people.</p>.<p>A large Spanish media firm made a bid for ac2ality but the four founders wanted to maintain their independence.</p>.<p>Co-founder Daniela Alvarez said "one of the keys" to ac2ality's success was "not being associated with the mainstream media" which can sometimes be "politicised" or burdened by cumbersome procedures.</p>.<p>Some journalists who work for traditional media outlets also run their own news accounts on social media.</p>.<p>Sophia Smith Galer, a 28-year-old British journalist with Vice News, has an account on TikTok where her videos on sexual health have been watched more than 130 million times.</p>.<p>"You don't have to convince a gate-keeping news editor why a story is important," she told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>"I am my own editor on that," she said.</p>.<p>"What young people consider to be newsworthy is not necessarily what traditional news media think is newsworthy."</p>.<p>Those between 15 and 30 do still turn to traditional media in some cases, said the researcher, Newman.</p>.<p>"When you talk about something like Ukraine, a lot of young people don't want that presented to them by 18-year-olds," he said.</p>.<p>"They want the news presented by people who are actually in the war zone and really know what they're talking about."</p>
<p>In the suburbs of Madrid, four young women are hard at work creating videos summarising the news that is viewed every day by millions of people on TikTok.</p>.<p>They are part of a growing army of young people making content about current events which attract more viewers on social media than videos published by the traditional media.</p>.<p>The idea emerged when two of the women were studying in London between 2016 and 2020 as Britain was preparing to leave the European Union.</p>.<p>"We would read a bunch of articles but we weren't able to get a broad understanding" of the topic, said 26-year-old biotechnology graduate Gabriela Campbell.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/app-never-shared-us-data-with-chinese-government-tiktok-ceo-1202480.html" target="_blank">App never shared US data with Chinese government: TikTok CEO</a></strong><br /><br />"We thought if it's hard for us, there must be more people like us too," she told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>So the pair joined forces with two other friends to launch an account on TikTok called "ac2ality" in June 2020, just as the popularity of the Chinese short-video sharing app was soaring among young people.</p>.<p>Nearly three years on, the account has 4.3 million followers -- more than the majority of major media outlets.</p>.<p>That makes ac2ality the top news account in Spanish on TikTok, according to the University of Oxford's Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.</p>.<p>The four do not consider themselves journalists, saying instead they "translate the news" in one-minute videos made with a smartphone and a circular light to ensure well-lit images.</p>.<p>Their video narrating the start of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, was seen over 17 million times.</p>.<p>Social networks like YouTube, Instagram and TikTok have become the main source of news for young people, according to several studies, including one by Britain's media regulator Ofcom.</p>.<p>Some initiatives offering news content "designed by young people for young people", such as French firm Brut, have already become heavyweights, said Reuters Institute researcher Nic Newman.</p>.<p>Thanks to algorithms, news accounts run by individuals and "not necessarily companies" can now "reach huge numbers of people" on social media, he said.</p>.<p>In France, HugoDecrypte is one of the most followed news accounts on social media and has broadcast interviews with French President Emmanuel Macron and Bill Gates.</p>.<p>Its founder, 25-year-old YouTuber Hugo Travers, told <em>AFP</em> he knows "how to talk to a generation" that simply "tunes out" when news is presented in a more traditional format.</p>.<p>Susana Perez Soler, a journalist and digital communications expert at Barcelona's Ramon Llull University, said such accounts owe their popularity to their lighter tone, creative formats and short lengths.</p>.<p>In cases like ac2ality, they are providing a "summary" of the news and "not journalism", which requires "investigative work, finding sources and checking their reliability", she added.</p>.<p>The millions of subscribers these accounts attract have aroused the envy of major media outlets which struggle to reach young people.</p>.<p>A large Spanish media firm made a bid for ac2ality but the four founders wanted to maintain their independence.</p>.<p>Co-founder Daniela Alvarez said "one of the keys" to ac2ality's success was "not being associated with the mainstream media" which can sometimes be "politicised" or burdened by cumbersome procedures.</p>.<p>Some journalists who work for traditional media outlets also run their own news accounts on social media.</p>.<p>Sophia Smith Galer, a 28-year-old British journalist with Vice News, has an account on TikTok where her videos on sexual health have been watched more than 130 million times.</p>.<p>"You don't have to convince a gate-keeping news editor why a story is important," she told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>"I am my own editor on that," she said.</p>.<p>"What young people consider to be newsworthy is not necessarily what traditional news media think is newsworthy."</p>.<p>Those between 15 and 30 do still turn to traditional media in some cases, said the researcher, Newman.</p>.<p>"When you talk about something like Ukraine, a lot of young people don't want that presented to them by 18-year-olds," he said.</p>.<p>"They want the news presented by people who are actually in the war zone and really know what they're talking about."</p>