(no title)
andy_xor_andrew | 6 months ago
But I'm interested in the reporting. There are, you know, journalistic standards, which are considered kinda "journalism 101"! For instance, getting the basic facts of a story correct - especially the facts stated in the headline.
So I'm curious, did the reporter do their due diligence, and write the article in a way that is factually correct, but highly misleading? Or did they simply not follow basic reporting protocol?
jasonlotito|6 months ago
> The MP initiated a conference call with Lockheed Martin engineers through the on-duty supervisor of flying (SOF). The MA held for approximately 50 minutes while the team developed a plan of action.
Seems accurate to what CNN was reporting. It's simplified a bit, but it's not misleading to me.
I mean, I guess if you want to nit pick and suggest "No the pilot wasn't literally on a phone and there was an intermediary in between" or some such, but the report makes it seem like CNN is accurate.
https://www.pacaf.af.mil/Portals/6/documents/3_AIB%20Report....
hluska|6 months ago
the__alchemist|6 months ago
hnburnsy|6 months ago
Every single story is like this, every one, and f-them for not linking to the source documents.
throwawayoldie|6 months ago
Pretty sure you meant to use the past tense here: "There _were_ journalistic standards..."
mulmen|6 months ago
Are there? What are they?