Fact ChecksMedia Matters
Rumors, legends, and stories about the news and those who cover it.
The New York Times printed its Sunday crossword puzzle that was questioned on social media for resembling a swastika shape.
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A fake tweet attributed to Elon Musk reads, 'You know, in some parts of the world, journalists get murdered for crossing the wrong people. Banning the reporters I don't like from my own platform feels like a pretty innocuous alternative to me.'
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Matt Walsh did not tweet that taking advantage of a drunk girl is not rape.
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Elon Musk, owner of Twitter
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Have Some Fun. Beat Your Wife Tonight.
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A meme titled nobody wants to work anymore was described as a brief history of capitalists complaining that nobody wants to work for starvation wages.
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Tie, Accessories, Accessory
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Tie, Accessories, Accessory
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Person, Human, Advertisement
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A headline said Missippi's literacy program shows improvement and claimed to be from the Associated Press in Mississippi.
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CNN correspondent Brian Stelter deleted a tweet that said we are not a few steps from The Handmaid's Tale.
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Microphone, Electrical Device, Person
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michael jackson and bruno mars
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Rumors circulated in May 2021 that Merriam-Webster changed or expanded its definition of "anti-vaxxer" in 2021, in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Comparisons to a recent attack on a woman in New York were made to the infamous Kitty Genovese case.
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