Unspun Amanda Sturgill
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- News
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Unspun is critical thinking about the news. Hear real examples, past and present, of newsmakers attempting to mislead you and understand how they manipulate the truth. Learn how to avoid being swayed by fake news and misinformation. Get Unspun, because you deserve the truth.
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Episode 17.5 Are press briefings PR?
In this minisode of UnSpun, Dr. Sturg breaks down how press conferences work and how they are used to shape the public's view of what a newsmaker is doing.
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Episode 17: The final word on bad analogies (feat. Frangela)
In an MSW Media podcast crossover, the funny and insightful Frances Callier and Angela V. Shelton, aka Frangela, join Dr. Sturg to discuss the lives of content creators and why you might find a comedian house party very strange. Plus, Dr. Sturg breaks down false analogies - bad comparisons of things that aren't really comparable at all.
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Episode 16.5: Should journalism try for objectivity?
It is always fair for journalists to include both sides? Dr. Sturg breaks down the history and future of objectivity in this miniepisode of UnSpun. Plus, test yourself with some newsmakers in a little logic review.
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Episode 16: Freedom from Disinformation (feat: Barbara McQuade)
Both news media and news makers can do more to protect democracy. Dr. Sturg talks about the research on how elections get covered and the appeal to nature fallacy. Our guest: author, professor and NBC contributor Barbara McQuade talks about her new book and the ways that lawmakers could act to help audiences protect themselves from disinformation.
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Episode 15.5: Why WhatsApp is great for privacy but bad for misinformation
What's even worse for carrying disinformation than social media? Messaging apps! In this episode, Dr. Sturg reviews a deceptive tactic with some new clips and goes over the research on how apps like WhatsApp and Telegram make it very hard to stop Fake News from spreading.
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Episode 15: How do search engines work? (feat. Matt Diamante)
Do search engines like Google give you the best information? Dr. Sturg and digital marketer Matt Diamanté from Canada's Hey Tony agency break it down. Plus, composition: the Fallacy when the whole isn't actually as good as the sum of the parts.