Here is how it breaks down:
TRUMP VOTERS
30 percent say they paid a lot of attention to the news Tuesday; 12 percent followed news about Manafort and Cohen very closely
24 percent of those who followed the news at all Tuesday have a fair amount or a great deal of trust in the media
Top sources among those who followed the news: online outlets (43 percent), Fox News (42 percent), local TV (40 percent), radio news (34 percent)
HILLARY CLINTON VOTERS
44 percent say they paid a lot of attention to the news Tuesday; 34 percent followed news about Manafort and Cohen very closely
86 percent of those who followed the news at all Tuesday have a fair amount or a great deal of trust in the media
Top sources among those who followed the news: online outlets (52 percent), local TV news (41 percent), national TV news (37 percent), Facebook (28 percent), MSNBC (26 percent), CNN (25 percent)
NONVOTERS AND THIRD-PARTY VOTERS
12 percent say they paid a lot of attention to the news Tuesday; 6 percent followed news about Manafort and Cohen very closely
50 percent of those who followed the news at all Tuesday have a fair amount or a great deal of trust in the media
Top sources among those who followed the news: online outlets (34 percent), local TV news (33 percent)
OVERALL

Half of Americans say news and current events matter a lot to their daily lives, while 30 percent say the news doesn’t have much to do with them. The rest aren’t sure.

A quarter of Americans say they paid a lot of attention to the news on Tuesday, with 32 percent paying just some attention, 26 percent paying not very much attention and 18 percent paying no attention at all. Forty-seven percent thought the news was at least a little busier than average.

Of those who paid any attention to the news on Tuesday, 32 percent spent an hour or more reading, watching or listening. About 23 percent spent 30 minutes to an hour, 18 percent spent 15 minutes to half an hour, and 21 percent spent less than 15 minutes.

Just 15 percent of those who paid any attention to the news Tuesday have a great deal of trust in the media to state the facts fully, accurately and fairly. Thirty-eight percent have a fair amount of trust, 28 percent don’t have much trust in the media, and 11 percent have none at all.

Those who followed the news on Tuesday were most likely to say they had gotten their news from an online news source (42 percent) or local TV (37 percent), followed by national cable TV (33 percent), social media (28 percent), national network news (23 percent), radio (19 percent) and conversations with other people (19 percent). The least popular source was print newspapers and magazines (10 percent).
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...b0cd327dfca577

Guess that old what part of the elephant you are touching still rings true.