
Why do Europeans watch America more than Europe?
I live in Denmark, in Europe, and yet a strange amount of my daily attention is spent on America.
Turn on TV 2 News on an ordinary day and there is a good chance you will meet Donald Trump before you meet anyone from Brussels. You will hear about Washington, primaries, court cases, tariffs, culture wars, and White House strategy. Often you will hear all of that long before you hear anything substantial about Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission, or the slower political processes that shape the continent I actually live on.
That is not completely irrational. The United States is still one of the most powerful countries in the world. Its economy, military, technology companies, and elections affect the rest of us. But even with that said, the balance still feels weird.
We live in Europe, but we are trained to watch America as if that is where the real drama is and where history properly happens.
America arrives as a story
Part of the explanation is simple: America is easy to cover because America arrives already formatted as narrative.
It has characters, slogans, villains, heroes, rallies, courtrooms, countdowns, and a gigantic media machine that exports all of it in real time. American politics is loud, visual, emotional, and personalized. It behaves like television, which makes it perfect for television.
That matters. In a competitive media environment, the thing that is easiest to package, explain, and emotionally follow tends to win.
Donald Trump is not just a politician. He is also a media object. He produces conflict, spectacle, and reaction at industrial scale. Every newsroom understands immediately how to frame him. He gives you the headline, the clip, the panel discussion, and the follow-up all at once.
Europe arrives as a process
Europe is almost the opposite.
Europe is procedure, law, negotiation, coalition, amendment, translation, and compromise. Europe is directives, votes, committees, implementation, and institutional drift. Europe often matters more than it performs.
That is part of the problem. The European Union shapes privacy law, competition policy, digital regulation, migration rules, climate frameworks, agriculture, trade, and energy. In other words, it shapes a great deal of the architecture of everyday life in Denmark. But it does not usually arrive with the narrative clarity that television prefers.
So Europe often appears in national media only at the moment of crisis or climax. A summit. A war. A debt fight. A migration dispute. An election. A scandal. Then it falls back into the background.
The result is that Europeans can end up feeling globally informed while being locally or continentally half-blind.
A rough Danish proxy for the imbalance
There is no easy, clean, public dashboard that tells us exactly how many times Danish television news has mentioned Trump versus von der Leyen over the last year. But even publicly documented programming choices tell a story.
TV 2's own press releases show that it devoted more than a full day of live coverage to the 2024 U.S. election, and nine hours to Trump's inauguration in January 2025. By contrast, the big joint Danish TV debate before the 2024 European Parliament election, organized by TV 2 and DR, was scheduled for 21:00-22:30.
That is not a full content audit. But it is a revealing proxy for editorial energy.
And the wider attention economy responds. In April 2025, Danske Medier said Danish national news sites saw daily pageviews rise by 11% in the first quarter of 2025 compared with the fourth quarter of 2024, explicitly tying that surge to the period after Trump's return to the White House.
Meanwhile, TV 2 says it was in contact with 9 out of 10 Danes every week in 2024. So these editorial choices are not niche. They help shape the national attention economy.
The broader media context
The broader European data points in the same direction. According to a European Parliament / Eurobarometer survey, 75% of EU citizens say television is a primary news source, 72% say they have recently read, seen, or heard something about the EU, and 57% say the same about the European Parliament. In that same survey, 46% said European and international affairs interest them.
That is the paradox. The appetite for this material clearly exists. Europeans are not indifferent to Europe. But Europe still struggles to become a sustained, emotionally legible public story inside national media systems.
And research on EU media coverage keeps reaching the same general conclusion: there is a gap between the political output of the EU and the amount that is actually carried through national broadcast and news systems. One recent comparative paper puts it plainly: there is a gap between the news produced by the European Union and what is broadcast at national level.
What this does to us
If you spend enough time watching another country define the stakes of public life, you start to absorb its hierarchy of importance.
America becomes the main stage. Europe becomes the waiting room.
That is a strange thing for Europeans to accept. It encourages a kind of political outsourcing, where we instinctively look to Washington for drama, moral clarity, and consequence, while treating Brussels as a distant administrative machine rather than part of our own democratic story.
It also flattens Europe itself. Instead of understanding Europe as a living political space with genuine conflict, competing visions, and real power, we learn to think of it as bureaucracy interrupted by crisis.
That is not only inaccurate. It is disempowering.
What would a healthier balance look like?
I do not think the answer is to stop paying attention to America. That would be naive. The United States matters too much.
But I do think Europeans should expect more from European coverage, especially in national news systems that still reach most of the population.
A healthier balance would mean:
- more routine coverage of European institutions, not only crisis coverage
- more reporting on how European decisions affect everyday Danish life
- more attention to European political personalities before they become symbols of emergency
- more willingness to treat Europe as a real public drama, not just a technical backdrop
Because the strange thing is not that Denmark watches America.
The strange thing is how often Europe still feels foreign to Europeans.
Maybe the problem is not that we know too much about the United States.
Maybe it is that we still do not know how to pay enough attention to the continent we actually live in.
Notes
The chart above is deliberately modest. It is not a full content analysis of Danish news output or a full mention count of Trump versus EU figures. It is a simple proxy built from publicly documented broadcast windows and audience data. Even so, it captures something real about editorial scale and political attention.