Check out
this correction from today's (Sunday December 25, 2005) Los
Angeles Times (emphasis mine):
Religion and government:
A Dec. 18 article defending the separation of church and state
stated that the Rev. Jerry Falwell claimed that Ellen DeGeneres
played a role in the 9/11 attacks and Hurricane Katrina because she
was the host of the Emmy Awards before both events. He made no such
claim.
The correction does not identify the original article or its author,
but the December 18 piece was called
"The wall that unites us," and it was written by Stephen Julius
Stein. So far, the correction has not been amended to the on-line
version.
The question: How on earth did such an outrageous
statement get past the editors at the Times? Is anyone
proofreading their submissions?
[Could it be ...? An on-line "urban legend" says that televangelist
Pat Robertson made a claim along these lines, but
snopes.com, an urban legend reference site, has debunked it. The
original source is an article of satire that some people took to be
real.]
Let's hope the Los Angeles Times makes a New Year's resolution
for better journalism!
TheMediaReport.com asks ... Does AP
stand for "Anti-President"??