it is the job of the media to do that, but they don’t anymore. Not both ways anyhow. They have their audiences and they cater to them. It’s not a conspiracy, it’s simply capitalism. And capitalism and reporting the news do not blend.
An underrated problem is that the average journalist is a borderline moron. They are probably of average intelligence or close to it, but that average intelligence is not enough to let them realize that getting a degree in the easiest major possible does not really make them smarter than average, so they end up being effectively dumber because they don't understand their limitations at all.
You can basically assume that any article describing the effect of a law is incorrect in an important way and be correct almost 100% of the time. Maybe if you are reading in a trade publication there is a chance that it is portraying the law correctly. Most of it is that they want to portray it inaccurately, but they are also no where near capable of reading a statute or bill and understanding it themselves. That's not good because it takes a lot of effort to figure out bills sometimes. I took the time to spend about 20 minutes reading the changes to Mississippi's Major Economic Impact Act passed in 2024. That wasn't enough to figure out if ratepayers are protected when utilities enter into special contracts with data center owners. A brief reading, it could go either way, where the utility stands to gain a ton or lose a ton, or ratepayers stand to gain a ton or lose a ton. A credible press would be great, because that could be a really bad law that lots of republicans would be against. But I'm guessing virtually zero voters actually know how it works.
Same with any article touching on scientific articles.
Foreign policy they absolutely regurgitate talking points from somebody they view themselves as politically aligned with.
There's just no market for really good journalism unfortunately. The best journalism is probably in trade publications because they have access to subject matter expertise, but of course they are not just not unbiased, they are more or less interested parties on the issues they are knowledgeable about.