For the UK Guardian, the news is the words the White House used while accusing Acosta of an action caught on video.
For Fox, Sanders was accused of sharing an allegedly “‘doctored’” video of a neutrally-identified “interaction.”
For the Washington Post, the White House “shares doctored video” — no accusation, no scare quotes.
Read these articles for yourself, not just the headlines. We learn by seeking evidence from multiple sources, rather than only accepting the spin that conforms best to our ideology.

Similar:
Public, Private, Political: Social Theories and Blogging Practices
Public, Private, Political: Social Theor...
Academia
In Changing News Landscape, Even Television is Vulnerable
The transformation of the nation’s news ...
Culture
Far-Right Twitter Trolls Won’t Admit They Were Wrong About Killing of a “Patriot” in Denve...
It was a reporter’s bodygu...
Culture
Pipe Trouble’s government woes highlight gaming illiteracy
Interesting discussion of a political ho...
Culture
Meet the guys who tape Trump's papers back together
I tell this old newsroom tale to my stud...
Culture
It's reckless and dangerous for a leader with a habit of doubling down in the face of crit...
Today my Facebook feed featured memes th...
Current_Events



Pingback: Headlines: Why editors matter in journalism. | Jerz's Literacy Weblog (est. 1999)