National Review’s tweet linking to its story about the death of Stuart Scott features an image of John J. Miller, who is the author of the story, instead of Scott.
https://twitter.com/NRO/status/551803970621308929/
It happens. Unfortunately for NRO, it didn’t go unnoticed.
Uhhh RT @NRO: Stuart Scott, R.I.P. http://t.co/XhVba5nz1G http://t.co/ICaZSukjv9
— Clara Jeffery (@ClaraJeffery) January 4, 2015
“@NRO: Stuart Scott, R.I.P. http://t.co/l9XIkNDZ1x http://t.co/vddWs0Rty5” whoops…
— Pat Chiesa (@PatChiesa) January 4, 2015
https://twitter.com/BeckDuggleby/status/551805968334745600
@ClaraJeffery @NRO oops. oh dear…..
— J. McCavendish (@limitlesskait) January 4, 2015
@marcusgilmer it's the author of the post — clearly just a mix-up
— Katherine Miller (@katherinemiller) January 4, 2015
Exactly. As we know, the world of online publishing and tweeting can sometimes be tricky.
https://twitter.com/lachlan/status/551809437544226816
Related:
‘RIP Stuart Scott’: Popular ESPN anchor dies after ‘long fight’ with cancer
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