I believe that one must read/view news as presented by a wide variety of sources, some liberal, some conservative and take it all “cum grano salis”.
Biases are a given; while there used to be at least an attempt to come across as objective, it seems that the facade has been dropped. (Walter Cronkite, cited by a previous poster as representing the good old days of straightforward journalism, was actually possessed of quite a liberal bias… read the Cronkite biography by Douglas Brinkley.)
My husband has been a local TV news anchor for more than 35 years and has taught broadcast (now “multi platform”) journalism for decades at a local Catholic college. He is appalled at the decline in the quality of local broadcast journalists; they get younger and younger, have no knowledge of or sense of history, and lack basic writing skills. They also work for next to nothing, as it is the bottom line that is most important to the companies that own the stations. It is abundantly clear that “you get what you pay for”. He is constantly having to edit scripts and catch egregious errors.
The local paper is just as bad; it is now published only 3 days a week, with many fewer reporters and much of the “news” coming out of a larger city 5 hours from here. Misspellings and grammatical errors are rampant and the “news” is several days old by the time much of it gets into print.
A sad state of affairs entirely.