
Image source: YouTube video screenshot
CNN's Brian Stelter recently interviewed 8th-grade students and their teacher at P.S. 207 in Queens, New York, about their class on how to detect "misinformation" online.
In a video published Sunday, Stelter — CNN's chief media correspondent — spoke to teacher Barbara King, who said she began teaching media literacy 10 years ago and that it's "a skill my students really need; there's too much misinformation around us in the world."
The clip shows King telling her students about satire, false context, imposter content, manipulated content, and fabricated content.
Stelter also interviewed students outside classroom time about how they've been using what they've learned. One student said his family believed COVID-19 was a "hoax" when the pandemic was breaking but that he argued back that it was real.
With that, Stelter emphasized the tendency of some who want to believe untruths — and then added that instead "you gotta face reality head-on."
As readers of TheBlaze know, Stelter and CNN repeatedly have been called out for pushing misinformation and bias.
The latest example appears to be Stelter running "cover" for NPR's report — refuted as fake news — claiming Chief Justice John Roberts "in some form" asked justices to wear masks because Justice Sonia Sotomayor has diabetes and that Justice Neil Gorsuch refused, Fox News reported.
All that to say, a number of commenters under CNN's YouTube video of Stelter's report about the "misinformation" class mocked the notion of him interviewing teenagers about the subject:
Don't forget that CNN just last week announced that it's putting together a news team "dedicated to covering misinformation." The announcement also was met with derision.
These students are learning how to spot misinformationyoutu.be