“I don’t trust the media.”
Among Azerbaijani youth, this sentence is not a provocation or a political statement. It is said calmly, often without emphasis, and usually followed by action: opening Telegram, scrolling Instagram, clicking through YouTube, or checking a news site.
Despite widespread mistrust, media consumption has not declined. News is read, compared, questioned, forwarded, and filtered on a daily basis. What has changed is not whether young people consume media, but how they relate to it. In this context, many young people describe consuming news less as an act of belief and more as a practical necessity.
This article draws on interviews with Azerbaijani youth and a sociologist to examine how young people navigate a media environment they do not fully trust and what this reveals about life after trust.
