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Nevilledog

(55,083 posts)
Sun Jul 17, 2022, 02:51 PM Jul 2022

NPR launches Disinformation Reporting team [View all]





https://www.npr.org/sections/npr-extra/2022/07/15/1111727112/npr-launches-disinformation-reporting-team

Shannon Bond needs little introduction. Shannon is currently a tech correspondent based in the Bay Area. That beat has already given her extensive experience and sourcing in the disinformation world. Shannon joined NPR in 2019 from the Financial Times and quickly became known as an unflappable and generous colleague who's stayed on top of breaking news about Meta, Twitter and other tech platforms while also finding time to report out original stories, like the existence of computer-generated fake profiles on LinkedIn. Shannon's first day on the disinformation beat will be August 1st, though she'll continue to help the Business Desk with breaking technology news while fellow tech reporter Bobby Allyn is on a fellowship in Germany.

Lisa Hagen joins NPR from member station WABE in Atlanta. Her first day is July 18th. Working with NPR's investigations team, Lisa reported and co-hosted the No Compromise podcast about the most radical wing of the gun rights movement. That serieswon the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for audio reporting. Her reporting illuminates and helps humanize the unfamiliar, which should come in useful on the disinformation beat. She's fascinated by how we arrive at our beliefs and navigate who to trust in these strange times. In Georgia, Lisa covered criminal and social justice in addition to guns for WABE. Before that she worked as a stringer for the New York Post. While Lisa is originally from Hawaii, she would like everyone to know that she does not surf.

Huo Jingnan has been with NPR since 2018, most recently as an associate producer with the investigations team. In Jingnan's new role as a data-savvy reporter focusing on disinformation, she'll work on both her own projects and with reporters on the team and around the newsroom to flesh out patterns and money trails related to the spread of false information. During her time with the investigations team, Jingnan quantified the extent of toxic silica exposure the federal government knew that coal miners had undergone and looked for lessons learned from courts that ran remote jury trials during the pandemic. Jingnan will start on the disinformation beat later this month and she'll continue to be based in the Washington, DC area.

Brett Neely has worked at the intersection of political coverage and collaborative journalism since he arrived at NPR in 2015, including leading our coverage of voting rights and election security through the 2016 and 2020 elections. When we launched the pop-up disinformation team last year, Brett took on the beat and has worked with reporters from the Washington, Science, Business and National desks as well as member stations to deepen our coverage. As the disinformation team's Supervising Editor, he'll continue to lead that coverage and work with partners across the newsroom and public radio network. Brett remains based in Colorado, where he moved after the 2020 election.

Nancy and Terry

*the end*


All the proof that this is needed is contained in the responses to this rather innocuous announcement.
24 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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will they report on themselves when they do their typical "both sides do it" bullshit? NewHendoLib Jul 2022 #1
+1 musette_sf Jul 2022 #2
That's not disinformation, that's bad reporting. Nevilledog Jul 2022 #3
If that thought stream among themselves and keep reporting it its disinformation no? tia uponit7771 Jul 2022 #6
I'd call that misinformation. Nevilledog Jul 2022 #7
Oh, both sides do it, the difference is in orders of magnitude Warpy Jul 2022 #21
Bout damn time irisblue Jul 2022 #4
Ok, who let that name happen? gulliver Jul 2022 #5
my thoughts exactly. Especially after 2000 Mules Hamlette Jul 2022 #11
Are they stopping it or spreading it? Hard to tell sometimes. Nt Fiendish Thingy Jul 2022 #8
They lie so much, it would be nearly impossible to keep up. Meadowoak Jul 2022 #9
You can bet NPR - and Public Broadcasting - will be on the chopping block if Repugs get back in peppertree Jul 2022 #10
"On average, less than 1% of NPR's annual operating budget Pinback Jul 2022 #12
NPR has advertiser and can tell repukes to f off. The Jungle 1 Jul 2022 #14
NPR does great work. The Jungle 1 Jul 2022 #13
Me too. I hope this is a successful project for them. jaxexpat Jul 2022 #15
NPR fabricated doubt about Hillary Clinton and normalized Pisswig Ponietz Jul 2022 #16
Not being a smart ass but what is Pisswig The Jungle 1 Jul 2022 #22
'Pisswig' refers to the former guy Ponietz Jul 2022 #24
I used to support and listen to NPR. But not any more. totodeinhere Jul 2022 #17
NPR is not a public network. The Jungle 1 Jul 2022 #23
It's about damn time somebody did something. hadEnuf Jul 2022 #18
They are gonna be busy... real busy... Blue Owl Jul 2022 #19
I hope it lasts longer than the midterms or Inauguration Day 2025 DFW Jul 2022 #20
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