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The image consists of three pie charts labeled as teenagers, young adults, and old people. For teenagers, the distribution is 37% TV, 7% printed newspapers, 52% online news sites, and 4% others. For young adults, the allocation is 35% TV, 6% printed newspapers, 33% online news sites, and 26% others. For old people, the breakdown is 42% TV, 29% printed newspapers, 6% online news sites, and 23% others.
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The pie charts compare the main news sources for young adults and old people according to a survey in 2022.
Overall, television was the most popular source of news for both age groups. It was chosen by 42 per cent of old people, and more than one third of young adults. Meanwhile, more young adults turned to the Internet for news. The figure was 33 per cent for young adults (3) as opposed just 6 per cent for old people.
By contrast, printed newspapers were the second choice of while news source for old people with 29 per cent while only 6 per cent of young adults reported getting their news from printed newspapers. In both age groups, around a quarter relied on other sources for news
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