Get access to Brad Slager's "Riffed From the Headlines," a daily VIP feature where he looks to bring accountability to the mainstream media. Use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your VIP membership!
Prose & Contradiction – CNN
That is twice now this week, Brian…
Earlier, we covered how CNN was compelled to take down a post that was sympathetic to the New York City ISIS bombers. In trying to sell this as little more than a social media fumble, Brian Stelter declared that the article it featured was “sound.” Then it was explained how the wording from the post had been direct from the article, and that passage was struck from the piece.
Well…it happened again. It all begins with Pete Hegseth this morning at a Pentagon presser, slamming CNN for suggesting that the military had never planned for Iran wanting to close down the Strait of Hormuz. There was pout-rage across the network, and Brian announced that the network was steadfastly standing behind its reporting.
Then, later, it was seen that the network actually went in and altered the reporting, and followed with a second correction – that it was fully backing.
Recommended
"The network stands by its reporting."
— Brad Slager: CNN+ Lifetime Subscriber (@MartiniShark) March 13, 2026
What does @BrianStelter now say as the network went in and altered that story? https://t.co/LyUrC23vd9 pic.twitter.com/QUZcBuRJyS
Body Checking the Fact-Checkers – ASSOCIATED PRESS
Quoting a report directly earns you a FALSE grade if they don’t like it. Or…you.
The AP decided that it would address what it considered to be a falsehood told by Karoline Leavitt. The key phrase there would be "what it considered," because ultimately, what they showed was Leavitt being 100 percent accurate.
Here are the contested words of the press secretary:
LEAVITT, at a White House press briefing on Tuesday: “The bipartisan 2005 report of the Commission on Federal Election Reform, shared by, of all people, former President Jimmy Carter and former Secretary of State James Baker, concluded that, quote, ‘absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential voter fraud.’”
Melissa Goldin, delivering the alleged corrections, went on at length about how former President Carter supported mail-in balloting based on words from his family, saying she “falsely claimed that Carter was against the use of mail-in and absentee ballots.” Except…Leavitt never made that claim.
She was pointing out the findings in that report made by Carter, and she accurately quoted directly the words printed therein.
FACT FOCUS: The Trump administration is falsely claiming Jimmy Carter was against mail-in voting https://t.co/Dq8UqpZQ0k
— L.A. Daily News (@ladailynews) March 11, 2026
Reporting on the Mirror – BUZZFEED
Here’s a list of all the Chapters the company is filing – Number 11 will blow your mind!
In its most recent earnings report, BuzzFeed has declared that it may not be able to remain viable much longer. After losing more than $50 million last year, the owner of HuffPost and Eater has run out of sustainable cash.
BuzzFeed says it’s exploring strategic options to help offset financial challenges and that there is “substantial doubt” about the media company’s ability to stay in business https://t.co/oQUXdNKhJy
— Bloomberg (@business) March 12, 2026
Gilded Reframe – ABC NEWS
You all should have used the “Sheepish” font for this.
Yesterday, we covered how ABC News got much of the media sphere all hot and bothered that Iran might use drones to attack Southern California, and how this was based on an FBI report that signified the lone source of this had been unverified.
The network has since issued a correction, claiming that the FBI has now “posted a fuller version” of this report, despite the disqualifying word “unverified” appearing in the original posting by the Bureau.
UPDATE: The FBI has posted a fuller version of its alert to California authorities, which includes that the information was unverified. The latest version of this story has been updated with the full statement.https://t.co/JmElj1xjxI https://t.co/B8KJXuUmWQ
— ABC News (@ABC) March 12, 2026
Artisanally-Crafted Narratives – USA TODAY
You should eat a Snickers, you do not sound like yourselves…
Joining in on the idiotic attack fray of Pete Hegseth’s food purchasing for his department – and ultimately the soldiers – USA Today rides in to insinuate that he dropped nearly $140,000 on donuts. For…himself.
Opinion: While you were putting off a necessary surgery so you could afford gas, the Department of Defense was, in one month, dropping $139,224 on doughnuts. https://t.co/yrmzdUPQAD
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) March 13, 2026
Both Kinds of Standards – MS NOW
So…you are focused on him focusing on the wrong topic…?
Following the Pentagon briefing this morning, MS NOW decided it had caught Pete Hegseth in some kind of trap. General Dan Caine joined him in the presser and opened his comments by mentioning the loss of crew members in the recent plane crash in Iran. Willie Geist of “Morning Joe” had his Ah-Ha! moment by pointing out that Hegseth started his comments by slamming CNN, and did not discuss the plane crash and losses until later.
So…you cannot complain that he ignored the deaths, then it becomes that he talked about them out of order. Not…petty…at…all.
MSNOW: General Caine immediately talked about the American service members killed… It took Hegseth several minutes. He first complained about the media and whined. Sort of tells you the whole story about where his mind is—deeply worried about the way the war is being perceived. pic.twitter.com/R3xgiCE7Ue
— Acyn (@Acyn) March 13, 2026
Anti-Social Media – THE NEW YORK TIMES
Is there a reason we need to romanticize these ISIS bombers?!
Just a refresher that The New York Times is still pimping for these two SOBs.
At 19 he was applying to the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. At 56 the Soviets were shelling his Führerbunker in Berlin. pic.twitter.com/fE4BIQsU5h
— Rabbi Poupko (@RabbiPoupko) March 13, 2026






