OOF: Marriage Is Upper Middle Class WHITE SUPREMACY, Says ... Upper Middle Class...
MLK Jr. Spirit Award Winner Wishes Utter Death and Worse to Those Who...
MSNBC: Jon Stewart Learns From Complaints, Stops Making Biden Jokes
White House: Senate Republicans Are Relentlessly Smearing Biden's Judicial Nominee
Vanderbilt Tampon Tantrum Takes Terrific Turn
Here Are More Harrowing Details About Nex Benedict
Idaho Tribune Announces Cash Reward for Evidence of 'Hate Crime' Against Basketball Team
Fascism Alert: Washington State to Offer Cash Reward for Reporting 'Hate Speech' and...
BREAKING: Democratic Mega Donor Sam Bankman-Fried Sentenced for Crypto Crimes
Jewish Democrats Endorse Challengers to Squad Members
That's Gonna Leave a Mark: Riley Gaines SCHOOLS Scott Wiener After He Calls...
Politicizing the Baltimore Bridge Tragedy and Attacking Conservative Media is a New Low...
Missouri Attorney General Announces Suit Against Biden’s Student Loan Cancellation
The LEAST They Could Do: IL Parole Board Members Resign After Prisoner They...
Righteous Anger Boils Over as NYPD Union Tells City Council NOT to Attend...

PR geniuses who tried to quash exposé of Women's March leadership got the story tweeted more

As Twitchy reported earlier, a lot of journalists were reporting Wednesday that they’d received a sort of offer they couldn’t refuse (but did anyway).

Advertisement

Tablet Magazine recently had published a thoroughly researched exposé of the anti-Semitism present at the very origins of the Women’s March, and just about any reporter who even retweeted the link to the story received an email offering them a “fact-check” of Tablet’s reporting — on the condition that they deleted their tweets about the original piece.

Oh, and also that they promised to run anything they intended to publish by the PR outfit first to “secure their agreement.”

At least one journalist decided to go for it and see this “fact-check” for herself:

The New York Times’ Byron Tau also thought the heavy-handed email made the original piece worth another retweet:

Advertisement

Here’s the New York Times’ Nick Confessore:

As Twitchy reported earlier Wednesday, “the email appears to have been sent by Inarú Meléndez, communications coordinator for Megaphone Strategies, a self-described ‘not-for-profit social justice media strategy firm.’ Megaphone Strategies was also co-founded by … Van Jones.”

Advertisement

Bang-up job there, Megaphone. You did get Tablet to update its piece. Drum roll, please …

So now that the piece has been fact-checked and fixed, go read it (again):


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement