Another year, another year-in-review article.
In the sea that is breaking news, 2014 was a tsunami. A multitude of tumultuous events shook the world this year (sometimes literally). And although it'd be silly to attempt to quantify the "most important" stories, it is worth looking at the topics that American audiences were most drawn to and that seemed to have the greatest impact. As a gauge, these are the results from the Associated Press' annual poll of U.S. editors and an independent survey of Twitter's biggest news-related trending topics.
Associated Press' nationwide news poll
In the Associated Press news agency's annual poll, 85 editors and news directors at media outlets around country voted on the year's top news stories. The overwhelming first pick was the police killings of Michael Brown and Eric Garder, and subsequent protests. In second place, the Ebola outbreak. The survey was conducted before news of the U.S. and Cuba re-establishing diplomatic relations, the Sony Pictures' hack and the missing AirAsia plane. Click on the image to see AP's interactive visualization.