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Media narratives are driven by trajectory.
Things get better or worse. People rise and fall. Maybe there is an upstart sensation who threatens the establishment. Maybe there is a spectacular fall from grace. Maybe there is a comeback. Regardless of the story, the direction of movement is what matters.
President Joe Biden got caught in one of those narratives: that things were going badly and people were losing confidence. Then, of course, the polls backed up that narrative, which provided a patina of proof.
But the truth is that news narratives and polls are symbiotic. The narratives help shape what people believe, which is then captured by the polls, and those polling results are then fed back into news narratives as separate, objective and independent fact.
"Joe Biden can't catch a break" was a neat narrative. Every new disappointing data point fit snugly within it. But reality doesn't play by media rules. It is often much more nuanced.
As legendary football coach Lou Holtz once put it: "You're never as good as everyone tells you when you win, and you're never as bad as they say when you lose."