Read: Media Mistakes in the Trump Era here
54. Oct. 28, 2022
Numerous media outlets were duped into falsely reporting that, upon Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter, Musk fired engineers “Rahul Ligma” and “Daniel Johnson.” In fact, the two men simply posed as fired engineers and the reporters apparently did nothing to confirm the men were who they said they were, or that the events the men described had actually happened.
“Ligma” is a reference to a popular Internet gaming reference.
The duped included ABC7 Bay Area reporter Suzanne Phan. Bloomberg, the Daily Mail and NBC were among those reported layoffs were underway after the pranksters spoke.
CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa tweeted Friday that an “entire team of data engineers” was let go after Elon Musk officially took the helm at Twitter. She later apologized for not checking her facts.
53. Sept. 9, 2022
Duke University female volleyball player Rachel Richardson alleged that observers repeatedly used racial slurs against her during a Brigham Young University-Duke volleyball match on Aug. 26 but that she had bravely played on. (BYU beat her team.)
Many in media, including People and ESPN, reported the allegation as if it were corroborated. Jason Duaine Hahn of People stated that “Rachel Richardson, a 19-year old student at Duke University, was called the ‘N-word’ by a Brigham Young University fan as she competed in a volleyball match.”
Mike Freeman in USA Today also declared, though he could not not possibly known, that Richardson was telling the truth. He likened the skepticism of her claims to “QAnon. Or mass voter fraud. It’s another conspiracy theory.”
But like many “conspiracy theories,” this one also apparently turned out to be true.
Brigham Young University says it “reached out to more than 50 individuals who attended the event” as part of its investigation, and reviewed all available video and audio recordings, and found no evidence to corroborate Richardson’s claims.
No word on whether Richardson will face discipline, or apologize to Brigham Young fans.
Meantime, South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley reportedly cancelled her team’s basketball series with Brigham Young based on Richardson’s allegations. After the results of the investigation were made public, Staley reportedly says she stands by her decision, anyway.
52. Aug. 16, 2022
CBS anchor Norah O’Donnell tweeted a false claim from a Dept. of Justice official that contradicted Trump after the FBI raid on his Mar-a-Lago home. The claim was that the FBI did not have Trump’s passports, as he had publicly stated. However, the passports had, in fact, been confiscated, and were eventually returned to Trump.
51. Aug. 10, 2022
After four Muslim men were killed over a 9 month period in Albuquerque, NM, many in the news media joined political advocates and analysts in the unfounded conclusion, without evidence, that the murders were “anti-Muslim hate crimes.”
That appears not to be the case, according to police. The ‘primary suspect’ arrested for the crime, 51-year-old Muhammad Syed, is also a Muslim, and the crimes were allegedly committed over inter-personal conflicts.
The strange and unjournalistic practice of assuming racism or “hate” involving crimes committed against a victim who is or was part of a minority group, but never making the assumption when crimes are committed against whites, is widespread.
Of the murders, prior to the Muslim suspect being arrested, President Biden tweeted, “These hateful attacks have no place in America,” that he was “angered and saddened” by the killings, and that his administration “stands strongly with the Muslim community.”
As of this publication, he has not corrected the record publicly to acknowledge the apparently mistaken, and racist assumption.
50. July 29, 2022
Medscape’s Cheryl Clark incorrectly reported that Dr. Simone Gold had lost her medical license after she was convicted of trespassing in the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. In fact, her license had been placed on inactive status.
49. June 30, 2022
Good Morning America wrongly tweeted that Ketanji Jackson is the first black US Supreme Court justice. Clarence Thomas (1991) and Thurgood Marshall (1967) beg to differ.
48. June 25, 2022
USA Today removed more than two dozen articles, including “Anti-vaxxer pushes urine therapy as ‘COVID antidote’ without scientific evidence” after reporter Gabriela Miranda was allegedly found to have committed many fabrications.
47. June 1, 2022
After a jury ruled the Washington Post op-ed by Amber Heard (drafted by the American Civil Liberties Union) contained multiple false and defamatory statements against Johnny Depp. The Post issued an amendment but allowed the defamatory headline to remain in place.
46. May 31, 2022
Politico reported the opposite of what the Supreme Court ruled in the case of a Texas law banning social media companies from moderating based on people’s political views. Politico originally stated the court had allowed the law to continue. In fact, the Court temporarily blocked the law.
45. May 21, 2022
The New York Times’ Apoorva Mandivilli falsely reported that 4,000 children ages 5-11 had died with Covid-related multisystem inflammatory syndrome. In fact, that was the number of children diagnosed, not dead.
Days earlier, a NYT article had noted fewer than 400 Covid deaths in that age group in the last 2 years even using the all-encompassing definition.
Mandivilli’s previous errors have been responsible distributing for other Covid misinformation.
Up there in the same league as gems like this.
Anyone spy a pattern? pic.twitter.com/Q0alfPK8Rm
— Shamik Dasgupta (@ShamikDasgupta1) May 19, 2022
44. March 29, 2022
The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and Robert Costa break the “news” making much out of a supposedly suspicious 7 hour gap in Trump White House phone records on Jan. 6, 2021, the day of the Trump rally and Capitol riots. The Atlantic CBS News, Rolling Stone, NPR, the BBC, Forbes, USA Today, the New York Post and many others follow up, writing articles nearly identical in content. Democrat Jamie Raskin told reporters that Congressional investigators were very interested in the gap.
Days later, observers point out an obvious detail that had eluded the some of the supposedly best journalists in the business: there were many ways Trump likely would have communicated during the “gap” period while he was not physically at the White House, without committing crimes, such as on cell phone calls not routed through the White House switchboard.
43. Wed. Jan. 19, 2022
NPR’s Nina Totenberg reported that Supreme Court Justice John Roberts had instructed all Justices to mask, (despite being fully vaccinated and boosted), and that Neil Gorsuch refused. “His continued refusal since then has also meant that Sotomayor has not attended the justices’ weekly conference in person, joining instead by telephone,” reported Totenberg.
Thousands of news stories and commentators accepted and amplified the anonymously-sourced allegations– which included no comments from those involved– as if they were proven true, disparaging and smearing Gorsuch.
However, on January 19, all of those mentioned said, in official statements on the record, that Totenberg’s story is false.
Just in: Statement by Justice Sotomayor and Justice Gorsuch:
Reporting that Justice Sotomayor asked Justice Gorsuch to wear a mask surprised us. It is false. While we may sometimes disagree about the law, we are warm colleagues and friends.
— Robert Barnes (@scotusreporter) January 19, 2022
42. January 2022
The fact checker for the Washington Post, Glenn Kessler, gave Sen. Tom Cotton a rating indicating Cotton wasn’t telling the truth in March of 2021 when Cotton accurately tweeted that under the Biden administration’s Covid relief initiative, murderers like convicted Islamic extremist terrorist Dzhokhar Tsarnaev from the Boston Marathon bombings would receive a Covid stimulus check.
It turns out Cotton was spot on; it was the fact checker Kessler who was mistaken. A local news reporter recently turned up information that, just as Cotton had predicted, Tsarnaev received a Covid stimulus check in prison.
The Washington Post didn’t discover and revisit its error on its own: Cotton’s representative reportedly asked the newspaper to correct its false information. Still, the Post couldn’t bear to honestly state that its fact check was embarrassingly wrong. Instead, Kessler reduced his “Pinocchio” rating of Cotton’s accurate statement from two Pinocchio’s to one, still claiming that Cotton’s prediction “lacks some context.”
41. Fri. Jan. 7, 2022
The Huffington Post published a headline to an obituary mistakenly saying that Sidney Potier was the first black actor to win an Academy Award. Actually, that distinction went to Hattie McDaniel 24 years earlier. McDaniel was the first black actor to win an Academy in Award in 1940 for her supporting role in “Gone With The Wind.”
The Huffington Post later fixed the headline but did not note it had made a mistake or a correction.
40. Thurs. Dec. 2, 2021
Philip Bump of The Washington Post repeats Media Matters false claim, stating that the forensically-proven government intrusion of Sharyl Attkisson’s CBS computers never happened.
39. Fri. Nov. 19, 2021
Countless media outlets defamed and otherwise published false information about Kyle Rittenhouse, who was found not guilty of all charges by a jury.
After the verdict, The Independent published an article that falsely claimed Rittenhouse “shot three black men.”
None of the people who were shot were black; they were all white.
38. Fri. Nov. 12, 2021
Testimony, even from the opposing side, in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse proved the falsity of hundreds of media reports.
Rittenhouse, who went to Wisconsin in August 2020 to protect storefronts and businesses being looted and burned by rioters, shot and killed two attackers during violent protests, and shot a third man.
Media reports widely declared Rittenhouse, then 17-years old, to be a murderous white supremacist (although all three of the men shot were white and, according to evidence, had been attacking or pointing a loaded gun at Rittenhouse at the time).
37. Fri. Nov. 12, 2021
The Washington Post belatedly “corrected two articles [one from 2017 and one from 2019] and altered a dozen others” regarding its false reporting about the anti-Trump opposition research compiled by Democratic operative and ex-British spy Christopher Steele to use against then-presidential candidate Donald Trump.
As Epoch Times explains, “The Post, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, had long insisted that Sergei Millian, a Belrusian-American businessman, was one of Steele’s sources. But its stories, which relied on two sources it did not name publicly, were increasingly undermined as time went on, most recently a grand jury indictment against Igor Danchenko, who has been described as Steele’s ‘primary sub-source’.”
36. Fri. Nov. 12, 2021
Tommy Christopher of Mediaite falsely declared that “No, Joe Biden Did Not Refer to Satchel Paige as a ‘Negro’ During Veterans Day Speech.”
In fact, Biden had done just that.
BIDEN: “I’ve adopted the attitude of the great negro at the time… his name was Satchel Paige.” pic.twitter.com/NOi6c09tBd
— Benny (@bennyjohnson) November 11, 2021
35. Mon. Oct. 25, 2021
The Washington Post corrects an article by Ashley Parker and Carissa Wolf. It falsely claimed that a pro-Trump crowd broke into a chant of “Let’s Go, Brandon!” during a speech by Donald Trump, Jr. in Georgia.
The Post says the editor is responsible for the fabricated claim. The crowd was actually chanting an expletive: “F– Joe Biden!”
In fact, the chant, “Let’s Go, Brandon!” was not first created until after the speech as a result of a sports reporter mistaking or misrepresenting the “F– Joe Biden!” chants from a crowd during a live television interview as if they were congratulating the winner of the car race she was interviewing, who’s named Brandon.
Now, the chant “Let’s Go, Brandon!” is understood to be a less profane version of the same slur against Biden.
The Post correction reads:
“Correction: A previous version of this article incorrectly said a crowd broke into a ‘Let’s go Brandon’ chant during a Donald Trump Jr. speech in Georgia. The crowd broke into a ‘F— Joe Biden!’ chant at that speech in September. The error, which was inserted by an editor, has been corrected.”
34. Sat. Oct. 23, 2021
An article in Medscape states that myocarditis, a form of heart inflammation reported in some people– particularly in young people and children– after Covid-19 vaccination is “rare and temporary.
However, scientists say the disorder can have permanent impacts and even be fatal.
It’s unclear why Medscape misstates the potential outcome.
33. Tues. Oct. 19, 2021
These media mistakes took place over a period of time, but came to widespread attention as a result of a Joe Rogan podcast with CNN’s Sanjay Gupta, in which Gupta acknowledged his network’s misreporting.
CNN falsely reported that Rogan had taken a “horse” medicine for Covid-19.
In fact, as many Americans have, Rogan says he took the doctor-prescribed human version of ivermectin, which some medical experts say has proven safe and effective for some patients as off-label treatment for Covid-19.
Many other news outlets, such as NBC/CNBC’s Doha Madani, falsely reported that Rogan and others were taking “horse dewormer” or veterinary medicine.
32. Thurs. Oct. 7, 2021
The New York Times makes several corrections to an article by Apoorva Mandavilli.
First, it incorrectly stated that Sweden and Denmark had begin offering single doses of Moderna vaccine in children after safety issues were raised. Both countries actually halted use of the vaccine in children.
Second, the article wildly overstated the number of U.S. children hospitalized with Covid-19 from August 2020 to October 2021. (It’s unclear whether that number includes children hospitalized for other causes who happen to test positive and are asymptomatic.)
The article stated the number was 900,000. It was actually 63,000.
Also, the article had the wrong date for an FDA meeting about approving the Pfizer shot for children.
31. Thurs. Oct. 7, 2021
Business Insider publishes an allegation in a book by former Trump White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham. In the book, Grisham reportedly claimed that First Lady Melania Trump dissed the family of Rep. Steve Scalise during a White House visit after he was shot by a radical Bernie Sanders supporter at a Congressional ball game.
After the article was published, Scalise disputed the claim. Business Insider apparently did not interview him for the original story. The publication updated its story to reflect Scalise’s challenge, which included photos of Melania Trump meeting with the Scalise family at the White House.
According to the updated story, Grisham said there was a different incident Scalise may not have known about. The updated story did not carry a notification pointing to the corrections or amendments.
30. Mon. Sept. 27, 2021
Some media, such as Axios, began deleting their unsupported reporting that claimed Border Patrol agents were whipping Haitian immigrants who had illegally crossed the border.
We deleted a previous tweet that referred to Border Patrol agents as whipping at Haitian migrants.
The story has been updated to include comments from some journalists on the border who did not see whipping occur.
— Axios (@axios) September 26, 2021
29. Thurs. Sept. 9, 2021
Washington Post reporter Jacob Bogage broke the news that U.S. Postal Service (USPS) workers were not included in President Biden’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate.
“That’s a massive chunk of the federal workforce — 644k & growing — that’s not required to be vaccinated,” tweeted Bogage.
However, Bogage and the Post later corrected the story to say that USPS workers are part of the mandate, after all.
28. Monday Sept. 6, 2021
On August 25, Associated Press corrects a false report it published, that was widely distributed, on August 23.
The report falsely stated that 70% of recent calls to the Mississippi Poison Control Center were from people who had ingested the medicine ivermectin to try to treat COVID-19.
The actual number was reportedly 1.4%, not 70%.
27. Sunday Sept. 5, 2021
Rolling Stone had to retract a false story it published claiming an Oklahoma hospital had been overrun by people who poisoned themselves with the Covid-19 treatment ivermectin, and that had resulted in gunshot victims and others being turned away or were left waiting for emergency care.
After the story was published, the hospital issued a statement that prompted a correction.
It turns out the one doctor quoted in the story hadn’t worked in the hospital in months, and the hospital had treated no patients related to ivermectin. Additionally, the hospital said, it has not turned away or delayed any patients in the ER.
KFOR News in Oklahoma reported the story but had an uncorrected version still published as of this publication.
Rolling Stone called its correction, which admitted it could not verify the allegations in the original story, and that the hospital had denied them, an “update.”
Many in media and online (including MSNBC, a podcast entitled “No Lie,” Daily Mail, Newsweek, NY Daily News, The Hill, Journalism professor Jason Johnson, Daily Kos and medical professionals) passed along the false report, as detailed in this thread by commentator Drew Holden.
26. Thursday Sept. 2, 2021
Slate and other media falsely labelled a complaint about a man in the women’s spa locker room a “transphobic hoax.”
According to the complaint by women at the spa, one of whom recorded some of the aftermath and posted the video on social media, the man allegedly exposed his penis to a group of women in the locker room.
But some in the media chalked it up to a tale fabricated by the women as part of an anti-transgender hoax.
However, on Aug. 30, police actually filed charges of indecent exposure against the man, Darren Agee Merager. Meranger is reported to be a “serial sex offender.”
According to the New York Post, Merager is also facing multiple felony charges of indecent exposure over a separate incident in Los Angeles. He reportedly denied the allegations to the Post and said he is the one who is the victim of harassment.
25. Thursday Sept. 2, 2021
USA Today corrects a fact check that had bad facts.
A fact check article by David Funke had falsely claimed that President Biden only checked his watch after a ceremony in which the bodies of U.S. soldiers killed in Afghanistan were returned.
In the false article, Funke made liars of the family members of fallen soldiers who saw Biden check his watch and said so to news reporters.
In correcting the article, USA Today continued to cling onto its narrative that there was something inaccurate about the watch-checking claim by changing the ratings from “partly false” to “missing context,” even though there was no relevant content missing.
24. Monday Aug. 30, 2021
Scientific findings effectively debunked reporting by media outlets such as Wired, which reported that social media videos showing Covid-19 vaccine injuries in January were “dangerous” misinformation.
In fact, the videos garnered the attention of scientists who investigated and concluded the videos depicted a Covid-19 vaccine adverse event called Functional Neurological Disorder (FND).
Researchers in the United Kingdom recently identified for study two additional cases of (FND) in women in their 30s after receiving Covid-19 vaccines. Read more here.
FND is a neurological disorder involving malfunctioning of the nervous system and how the brain and body transmit signals. Symptoms can include limb weakness, paralysis, tremor, spasms, problems walking, speech problems, tingling, vision loss, seizures, fatigue, anxiety, chronic pain, memory symptoms, and blackouts.
An analysis of Covid-19 vaccine adverse events showed hundreds of thousands of reports of such symptoms.
23. Saturday Aug. 28, 2021
Writing about a major study in Israel that finds, like many others, natural immunity is far superior to vaccination for Covid-19, Meredith Wadman falsely writes in the journal Science that those who were infected with Covid-19 and gained natural immunity still benefitted from vaccination afterwards.
When the false information was flagged by a reader, Science deleted the false information and posted a clarification.
No word on how the fabricated science could have appeared in the article.
However, the mistake mirrors the same disinformation the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) got caught distributing in late 2020 and early 2021. The agency also falsely claimed studies at the time showed there was a benefit for previously-infected people if they got vaccinated. The studies showed the opposite. (More below the photos.)
When Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) flagged CDC’s false information, signed off by their entire top team of immunization advisers, CDC top officials and scientists promised to correct it. However, the CDC scientists and officials continued to make the false claims to doctors and the public.
When Massie flagged it again, CDC’s ultimate correction was so obtuse, it continued to give the same wrong impression.
CDC continues to recommend that people with natural immunity get vaccinated, despite studies showing no benefit.
22. Saturday Aug. 28, 2021
PBS’ Hari Sreenivasan and others wrote that video of a violent passenger at Miami International Airport showed a “tantrum…like a 5 year old” against mask rules. Sreenivasan used the hash tag #COVIDIOTS.
However, according to news reports the incident involving a mentally troubled military veteran had nothing to do with masks.
21. Thursday Aug. 12, 2021
The Texas Tribune “overstates” the number of children hospitalized in Texas with Covid-19 by a factor of more than 40 times. The article initially claimed more than 5,800 children had been hospitalized during a seven-day period in August. However, the true number was about 142 children in a week.
When the Texas Tribune corrected the story, it did not provide the correct number for the seven-day August time period during which it initially claimed 5,800 child Covid-19 hospitalizations. Instead, the newspaper gave a corrected total that spanned a period of five-and-a-half weeks: 783 children between July 1 and Aug. 9.
As an aside, while Covid-19 is grabbing the headlines, it was actually a different virus that was filling up more of those Texas ICU beds, according to the article: an unseasonable outbreak of respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV: “a highly contagious virus that can require hospitalization mostly among children… Within Texas Children’s, more than 45 children were hospitalized with COVID-19 on Wednesday, and hospital staff members have diagnosed over 1,600 cases of RSV.”
20. Thursday Aug. 12, 2021
Web MD, USA Today, and others falsely call the 2020 Sturgis, South Dakota Motorcycle Rally a Covid “Super Spreader” event. Dr. Anthony Fauci had furthered the false narrative on Meet the Press. But the “Super Spreader” claims about the event were false. Data analysis showed the rally wasn’t associated with anywhere near the national average of cases, and especially not the quarter million that some original claimed. Additionally, it was shown that many media reports used photos of a previous year’s rally, misrepresenting and misdating those photos as if they were taken during the pandemic.
19. Sunday August 8, 2021
USA Today‘s Gabe Lacques, ESPN, The Denver Post, The Washington Post, Associated Press (AP), the New York Post, and other publications report, as if true without attribution, that a fan shouted a racial slur at a Miami Marlins player. However, an investigation revealed what many had said from the start: the fan was yelling the name of the Rockies team mascot, and that racist-minded observers mistook that for “the N-word.”
As of a week later, uncorrected headlines and/or with the false information remained accessible online (see below).
18. Monday July 26, 2021
The Associated Press corrects a story that falsely claimed CDC had released guidance in May stating that unvaccinated people don’t have to wear masks indoors. “The story should have said the CDC guidance released in May was that those who are vaccinated don’t have to wear masks indoors.”
17. Saturday July 24, 2021
The Associated Press corrects a story published July 24, 2021 that falsely claimed Florida had changed to weekly reporting on Covid-19 cases earlier in the month. Florida actually implemented the change a month before, in early June.
16. Monday July 19, 2021
The Associated Press corrects a story that falsely claimed a supposed decision not to prosecute former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross was made by the Department of Justice under the Biden administration. AP later said it was under the Trump administration.
15. Wednesday June 2, 2021
The Washington Post joins a cacophony of other media in finally correcting their false reporting that incorrectly claimed, early and often, that the Covid-19 “lab theory” was a “debunked” “conspiracy theory.”
Read and watch my Covid-19 origins investigation here.
14. Tuesday May 17, 2021
The Poynter Institute retracts a September 2020 Politifact fact check about a statement by Li-Meng Yan that falsely claimed, among other assertions: The genetic structure of the novel coronavirus rules out laboratory manipulation.
Many authorities have said that is not now and has never been the case. In light of growing recognition of that fact, Politifact added the following Editor’s Note to the original fact check:
When this fact-check was first published in September 2020, PolitiFact’s sources included researchers who asserted the SARS-CoV-2 virus could not have been manipulated. That assertion is now more widely disputed. For that reason, we are removing this fact-check from our database pending a more thorough review. Currently, we consider the claim to be unsupported by evidence and in dispute. The original fact-check in its entirety is preserved below for transparency and archival purposes.
13. Wednesday May 11, 2021
As people wait in long lines for gas, and even as the New York Times showed images of long lines in its news coverage, the newspaper claims in a Tweet that “there have been no long lines.”
Additionally, the same day the Tweet claims no “major price hikes,” consumers documented major price hikes up to $9.99/gallon, prompting President Biden to warn against gouging.
12. Saturday May 1, 2021
The New York Times, Washington Post and NBC News correct their false reporting about Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani. The articles all claimed Giuliani and/or One America News had received a “former warning from the FBI about Russian disinformation” prior to 2019 political scandals involving the U.S., Russia and Ukraine. Giuliani and One America News did not receive such so-called “defensive briefings,” after all.
The false New York Times article was written by William K. Rashbaum, Ben Protess, Maggie Haberman and Kenneth P. Vogel. Haberman and Vogel are repeat offenders on anti-Trump media mistake lists.
The false Washington Post article was written by Ellen Nakashima, Shane Harris, and Tom Hamburger.
And Ken Dilanian is on the error list again, at NBC News.
11. Friday April 30, 2021
NPR, like many in the media, reports (as if it as somehow confirmed firsthand) that “President Donald Trump’s… allegations of election rigging and widespread voter fraud” are “false.” Instead, the reports should or could accurately say that NPR and other news outlets have not uncovered evidence of widespread voter fraud; yet, there is no indication any outlets conducted a widespread firsthand investigation to find or eliminate fraud.
NPR also calls the media outlet “Newsmax” “far right”– when it is not. If NPR inserts such opinions and attacks in its news reporting, it should label them as opinions, or attribute them to a source, rather than claiming them to be fact.
10. Friday April 30, 2021
Newsmax corrects its 2020 election fraud reporting and apologized to Eric Coomer, director of product strategy and security for Dominion Voting Systems.
“Newsmax has found no evidence that Dr. Coomer interfered with Dominion voting machines or voting software in any way, nor that Dr. Coomer ever claimed to have done so…Nor has Newsmax found any evidence that Dr. Coomer ever participated in any conversation with members of ‘Antifa,’ nor that he was directly involved with any partisan political organization,” said Newsmax in a statement.
9. Tuesday April 27, 2021
A Politico article by with three bylines, EUGENE DANIELS, KRYSTAL CAMPOS and MICHAEL CADENHEAD, wrongly stated that Rep. Byron Donalds was “Florida’s first-ever Black Republican in Congress.”
In fact, he is third.
A correction added to the article didn’t explain how the basic research impacting the very premise of the article wasn’t done prior to publication.
8. Tuesday April 27, 2021
New York Post reporter Laura Italiano resigns after saying she was pressed to write an incorrect article claiming a book written by Vice President Kamala Harris was being distributed to children who illegally crossed the border into the U.S.
A correction to the Post article noted: “The original version of this article said migrant kids were getting Harris’ book in a welcome kit but has been updated to note that only one known copy of the book was given to a child.”
7. Monday April 26, 2021
Fox News corrects an earlier report that “incorrectly implied” a calculus involving Americans eating less red meat was part of “Biden’s plan for dealing with climate change.”
“That is not the case,” says Fox News.
https://twitter.com/oliverdarcy/status/1386757567750230019?s=20
6. Sunday, April 4, 2021
CBS’ 60 Minutes is accused of selectively editing a segment with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, in a story that implied he is guilty of “pay-for-play,” linking a campaign donation from Publix grocery stores to the selection of Publix as a major Covid-19 vaccine distribution center. Numerous media outlets picked up the narrative.
After the segment, numerous Democrat political figures in Florida confirmed that, contrary to the implication in the report, Publix was recommended by other state agencies rather than the governor’s office.
Florida Division of Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat, tweeted, “I said this before and I’ll say it again. [Publix] was recommended by [Florida Division of Emergency Management] and [Florida Department of Public Health]. Period! Full stop!…No one from the Governors office suggested Publix…It’s just absolute malarkey.”
In remarks edited out of the 60 Minutes story, DeSantis also had explained that other stores were actually chosen for earlier vaccine distribution jobs before Publix.
Palm Beach County Mayor Dave Kerner, a Democrat, accused 60 Minutes of reporting “intentionally false” information, saying that the TV program knew the county– not the governor’s office– had been the one to request “to expand the state’s partnership with Publix” to help get more of the county’s elderly vaccinated.
5. Thursday, April 1, 2021
NPR corrects its book review by senior editor and correspondent on the Washington Desk Ron Elving that falsely claimed U.S. intelligence had discredited the story of the FBI obtaining and investigating material on Hunter Biden’s laptop.
4. Wednesday, March 31, 2021
The Atlanta Journal Constitution falsely reports that Georgia’s new voting integrity law would “limit voting hours.”
A later correction acknowledged “nothing in the law changes” the hours: 7am to 7pm. It also pointed out that “experts say the net effect was to expand the opportunities to vote for most Georgians, not limit them.”
3. Monday, Jan. 18, 2021
AP incorrectly reports that 200,000 small flags were placed on the National Mall to honor Americans killed by Covid-19.
But the flags represented people who couldn’t come to the inauguration, not COVID deaths.
2. Saturday, Jan. 9, 2021
The Washington Post‘s Amy Gardner, AP, CNBC, Rolling Stone, and others falsely report that President Trump pressed a lead Georgia elections investigator to “find the fraud,” and told the investigator it would make them a national hero.
However, the actual recording of the call later made public revealed that Trump did not say either of those things.
1. Friday, Jan. 8, 2021
The New York Times reporters Marc Santora, Megan Specia and Mike Baker report Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick was killed by “pro-Trump supporters” who “overpowered” him and “struck him in the head with a fire extinguisher.”
But other reports the same day referenced Sicknick dying from a stroke.
The Times waited until mid-February to issue a correction, but still claimed– citing no evidence and no autopsy report– that Sicknick had died “from injuries in pro-Trump rampage.”
There was no explanation as to who fabricated the fire extinguisher story.
Read: Media Mistakes in the Trump Era: The Definitive List