The provided line chart illustrates the distribution of 4 distinct news sources that accessed by people over thirty-five years, from 1995 to 2030: figure are measured in percentages.
Overall, the data reveals a stark contrast trend, particularly for a significant growth in news access by internet, while other sources demonstrated gradual declines.
In term of internet access, people exhibited from unreached out of internet in the early examined year, before significantly increasing to 30% by 2010, and escalated to almost 60% in the final year, indicating a notable shift in the accessibility of internet, beginning from low interest and transitioning in more global digitality preference. Conversely, Television experienced an incrementally declines, starting from an impressive 70% before reducing to 58% in year 2000, and went more stable in the following years before dipping back until the end of period, which accounted at 50%. Notably, radio and newspaper experienced similar trajectory, radio commencing from 58% and reduced stably to 48% in 2010, and edging up at 32% by 2030. Newspaper initiated from 52% and finally dropped to just 28%, making it the lowest favored of news access. This overall suggests pronounced shift, transitioning from traditional behavior to more advance invention of news access over the years.
