Media Ignores 90% Coronavirus Death Collapse In Country

On Sunday a major positive milestone was reached for the first time, coronavirus deaths declined by 90% in this country from the high set on April 21st. That's an incredibly positive story about our national battle with the virus. Yet, shockingly, it has received almost no media attention. (UPDATE: On Monday deaths were also down 90% from the April 21st peak, meaning there were two straight days this occurred, again, with almost zero media coverage).

That's indefensible because this is not complicated data to track down. You can see it yourself on this chart here, on April 21st 2,693 people died of the coronavirus. Yesterday 267 died. Putting that number into perspective, an average of 7200 people died on Sunday of something other than the coronavirus and those deaths received almost no media attention at all.





That's a monstrous 90% drop in deaths the space of two months, a tremendous sign of positivity which clearly suggests that the worst of the coronavirus outbreak has now passed. But the media mostly ignored it in favor of a continuing embrace of fear porn. (For the coronabros out there, yes Sunday tends to be the lowest day of the week, but if you want to use the seven day moving average instead of Sunday, the data still reflects a 70+% decline in mortality, a similarly wildly positive story.)

Yet look at all the Monday morning headlines that have been collated by Outkick readers beneath my original tweet featuring the New York Times own Monday morning web headline, which didn't even take note of the collapsing death totals. This is a particularly glaring failure in light of the New York Times electing to make its cover story last month a recitation of people who had died of the coronavirus.








Almost no mainstream media outlets in the country have made note of the collapsing coronavirus death total in this country.

Why is that?

It's certainly not because the media is attempting to share fair and balanced journalism with its audience, it's because they've recognized fear porn drives engagement, even if it isn't reflecting reality. Scaring people to death works. Emotion is the coin of the social media realm and logical analysis of facts is disfavored if it doesn't elicit the same firestorm of social media pandemonium.

Put simply, the mainstream media doesn't exist to inform any longer, it exists to emote.

Worse than that, rather than share the actual factual data, they are now selling you stories that are simply not true.

Rather than talk about the good news -- deaths have plummeted across the country over the past two months -- the media has focused on states like Florida, Texas, and Arizona, in an effort to sell the narrative of New York like resurgence in those states.

Only the data doesn't actually support that argument at all.

Look at the data shared from Florida governor Ron DeSantis. Data which received almost no attention despite the fact that he held a press conference on Friday with the mayor of Miami and then shared his own data to discuss this as well.

Far from a New York like collapse, the state of Florida has seen the mean age of infected patients dive by thirty years and has fewer hospitalized patients in the ICU and on ventilators than they had in April. Yet most of you are probably just seeing this data for the first time.






















Instead of actual data from the state of Florida reflecting real news, you've probably seen viral pronouncements of disaster circulating widely on social media. This, as well, is a failure of social media. When the data shared by governors receives a fraction of the attention of the fear porn shared by loony bin members on social media, something is profoundly wrong with the marketplace.

We're all entitled to our own opinions, we aren't all entitled to our own facts.

The coronavirus -- as well as the coverage of the protests in the wake of George Floyd's death -- represents a fundamental failure of the national media. The media has given up reporting facts in favor of reporting emotional anecdotes. We've gone from a society based on logic to one based on emotion.

And it's occurring across all forms of media.

This weekend you saw a tremendous amount of fear porn surrounding college football players testing positive for the coronavirus at Clemson and LSU. The media didn't put in their headlines that the cases were mostly asymptomatic and came about because college kids, who had been cooped up at their parent's houses for months, suddenly got back on campus and could do what most college aged guys do when they get back on campus -- chase girls.

The infections came from parties and barhopping, aka the usual way college kids spend their free time.

As a result the usual coronabro suspects commenced their wailing about how it's unsafe to have kids back on campuses and how playing sports isn't safe either.

Yet this isn't remotely true either. First, European soccer has already safely started back up in England, Spain, and Italy, three countries with nearly double the per capita death rates as the United States from the coronavirus. (The media focuses on the total number of deaths in the United States without focusing on the per capita death rate in the world. On a per capita basis western democracies Belgium, Andorra, England, Spain, Italy, Sweden, and France have all had more people die than our country. The United States death rate is nearly identical to the Netherlands and Ireland.)

Second, newsflash, college kids are far more likely to die of pneumonia or the flu than they are the coronavirus.






















Yet I've never heard anyone call for the cancellation of any college sporting event over either pneumonia or the flu.

The reality is college kids are more likely to die driving to campus for workouts than they are from the coronavirus.

And they all know it!

Which is why they're out chasing girls.

As long as we don't start playing football games at nursing homes, we're going to be fine.

In fact -- and I'm going to write on this later in the week -- you can argue the best thing that can happen for our country is for college-aged kids to get this virus. As long as they got the virus and stayed away from the elderly or already sick, they'd rapidly help us to attain herd immunity without having dire health consequences themselves.

Don't believe me, look at how few people under 24 are dying of the coronavirus compared to other causes.


















This data is all out there, ready to be shared, yet it's mostly being ignored by the sports media in favor of fear porn.

Now some people want to argue, well, what about older coaches or teachers on campus? Well, those coaches need to make smart decisions for themselves and their family by analyzing their risk factors based on all the publicly available data. If they feel like they are in particular danger from the coronavirus, they should be able to take the year off and receive full pay, while working remotely.

I'd bet a tiny percentage of coaches and professors would want to do this, but they should have that option.

And either way we can't shut down the entire country -- potentially for years -- as we wait for a vaccine for a virus that has almost no risk to most people in this country. Especially when the vaccine might never arrive or work as we'd hoped it might.

Again, the media has done an awful job of explaining all of these facts to the general public, but look at the death chart by age linked above. The average age of death for coronavirus patients -- remember also these are people dying with the coronavirus not, not necessarily because of it -- is older than the average age of death in this country.

That's why I believe the number of 2020 deaths in in this country -- there are 2.8 million people a year who die, an average of roughly 7,500 a day -- is unlikely to change much this year compared to last years.

What's more, it's likely that over half of all deaths in this country have occurred in nursing homes. (New York's numbers are wildly inaccurate here since we know it was sending patients back into nursing homes that led to a massive increase in death. If New York's numbers resembled the rest of the country it's likely that nursing homes, where only .6% of all people live, would represent around 60% of all deaths.)

All of these data points tell the same story -- we should be playing sports and we should be playing sports now. Little league kids are twenty times as likely to die of the flu as coraonvirus, college kids are too. The odds of a young and healthy pro athlete dying of the virus aren't zero -- it's impossible to eliminate all risk in life -- but they are close to zero.

Ultimately, facts matter and the media is doing a disastrous job of sharing them. Instead of relying on a common foundation of facts, the media has embraced their own narratives.

And as a result the country is more divided and much worse informed by listening to most media than they would be if they just turned off their televisions.

The data is clear: it's way past time for all lockdowns to be over and for almost everyone to be back to work.






















Written by
Clay Travis is the founder of the fastest growing national multimedia platform, OutKick, that produces and distributes engaging content across sports and pop culture to millions of fans across the country. OutKick was created by Travis in 2011 and sold to the Fox Corporation in 2021. One of the most electrifying and outspoken personalities in the industry, Travis hosts OutKick The Show where he provides his unfiltered opinion on the most compelling headlines throughout sports, culture, and politics. He also makes regular appearances on FOX News Media as a contributor providing analysis on a variety of subjects ranging from sports news to the cultural landscape. Throughout the college football season, Travis is on Big Noon Kickoff for Fox Sports breaking down the game and the latest storylines. Additionally, Travis serves as a co-host of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, a three-hour conservative radio talk program syndicated across Premiere Networks radio stations nationwide. Previously, he launched OutKick The Coverage on Fox Sports Radio that included interviews and listener interactions and was on Fox Sports Bet for four years. Additionally, Travis started an iHeartRadio Original Podcast called Wins & Losses that featured in-depth conversations with the biggest names in sports. Travis is a graduate of George Washington University as well as Vanderbilt Law School. Based in Nashville, he is the author of Dixieland Delight, On Rocky Top, and Republicans Buy Sneakers Too.