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Los Angeles Times
| 11 months ago
Supreme Court healthcare ruling, a final media misstep following months of coverage that frequently predicted the high court probably would overturn President Obama 's signature domestic initiative. The mistaken coverage of the highly anticipated...
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The Tribune
| 11 months ago
Republican and tea party protesters on the steps of the court erupted, cheering and waving American and "Join, or Die" flags. "They've announced that there are limits on the federal government," a Republican protest leader announced to the cheering...
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International Business Times
| 11 months ago
Supreme Court voted to uphold President Barack Obama's Affordable Health Care act in a landmark, and unexpected, decision Thursday morning. But for a short time, those following CNN and Fox News (including the leader of the free world himself) were...
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AP Online
| 11 months ago
In the rush to report the Supreme Court's health care decision on Thursday, CNN and Fox News Channel initially got the story wrong, briefly worrying President Barack Obama, delighting Republican lawmakers and reminding journalists that accuracy...
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Orlando Sentinel Online
| 11 months ago
EDT , June 28, 2012 Today's breaking news flub by CNN and Fox News incorrectly reporting the Supreme Court had struck down the health care mandate shows the pressure news organizations are under when posting news first isn't always the best policy...
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Hollywood insider
| 11 months ago
But that urgency cost both CNN and Fox News today when both networks erroneously announced that the Supreme Court had overturned President Obama's health-care law. In fact, the Court upheld the law, with a surprising 5-4 decision authored by...
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Denver Post
| 11 months ago
Font Resize It may be remembered as our generation's "Dewey Defeats Truman" moment. Reporting the Supreme Court's momentous decision on health care, CNN and Fox News rushed dead-wrong headlines on-air. CNN blasted the incorrect headline onto social...
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Big News Network
| 11 months ago
Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the sweeping health care reform law. The court said that Congress acted within its power to levy taxes when it voted to require all Americans to buy insurance. The individual mandate is widely...
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The Guardian
| 11 months ago
CNN.com It was one of the biggest news days of the year so far, and within minutes of the supreme court ruling, " CNN " was trending on social media networks worldwide. Unfortunately for the news channel, it proved to be the wrong kind of trending...
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Los Angeles Times
| 11 months ago
The Supreme Court's opinion had always promised to be confusing and complex. Unfortunately, seasoned journalists let their anxiety/enthusiasm/thirst-to-be-first overwhelm their better judgment Thursday morning. Many who should have waited for clarity...
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NY Daily News
| 11 months ago
CNN appeared to have a major scoop Thursday morning, breaking the news that the Supreme Court had ruled Obamacare's individual health insurance mandate to be unconstitutional...A CNN Breaking News tweet just moments after the landmark health care...
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USA Today
| 11 months ago
The justices upheld the requirement that most Americans obtain health insurance coverage -- the piece of the law known as the individual mandate -- but said the provision is constitutional as a tax. CNN said on all of its platforms, including on...
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MarketWatch
| 11 months ago
It was the biggest Supreme Court decision in years, and CNN had it first the high court struck down the individual mandate. Great, breaking news journalism except that it was entirely wrong. The Supreme Court upheld the mandate and most of the...
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The New York Observer
| 11 months ago
Supreme Court Health Care Decision Really Confusing, CNN and Fox News Discover 11:24am twitter.com/jasonkeath In the race to cover the Supreme Court's ruling on President Obama's health care bill, Fox News and CNN found themselves on the wrong side...
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Washington Post
| 11 months ago
For the second time this week, initial reports about the Supreme Court's decision were flat wrong. The complicated nature of the court's decisions, along with the Twitter age and the race to be first, led at least two major news networks CNN and Fox...