BBC Gradually Discovers Terror Truck Had Actual Driver Behind the Wheel
The BBC’s coverage of a Jerusalem truck ramming terror attack eventually acknowledges that there was a driver behind the wheel of the vehicle.
The BBC’s coverage of a Jerusalem truck ramming terror attack eventually acknowledges that there was a driver behind the wheel of the vehicle.
The International Business Times makes a total failure of its coverage of a truck ramming terror attack in Jerusalem, using inappropriate, inaccurate images and video.
IDF soldier Elor Azaria is convicted of manslaughter. Some headlines fail to include that the Palestinian he killed happened to be a terrorist.
The International Business Times relies on a Hamas-supporting hate site to accuse Israel of using a Palestinian child as a human shield.
The New York Times, Associated Press and International Business Times all erroneously report that Israel is planning to build new settlements.
Headlines certainly deserve scrutiny. It’s well-known that we don’t read most of the articles in
The Times of London amends an inaccurate headline but merely compounds the error.
The Guardian and AFP are more concerned about the location of fires near Jewish settlements than the fires themselves.
The Times of London takes the comments of a minor Israeli government minister on the Trump election victory and creates a headline claiming a non-existent Israeli plan for a “settlement building spree.”
The Times of London story on a Jerusalem terror attack had a correct headline. So why was it changed to something so wrong?
Australia’s Channel 9 News publishes a headline accusing Israel of “executing” a Palestinian knife attacker who is referred to in the story as a “fellow.”
The National Post responds to HonestReporting and changes a headline that referred to the murder of Hallel Yaffa Ariel as “what Israel calls a terrorist attack.”
An Israeli teenage girl is brutally murdered in her bedroom by a Palestinian. NBC News reports that the assailant is a “suspected terrorist.”
A Palestinian terror attack on the Sarona market in Tel Aviv prompts some serious media fails in the immediate aftermath.
Time magazine’s inflammatory and inaccurate headline attributes Avigdor Lieberman as having called for “killing Palestinians.”
The New York Times’s Diaa Hadid implies that there is something nefarious about Israeli security measures designed to limit their impact on the wider Palestinian population.
An otherwise fair and balanced article in Newsweek includes an inflammatory headline referring to Israeli “apartheid.”
The Times of London’s headline describes a neutralized Palestinian terrorist as a “helpless man.”
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