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How To Discern Fake News From Legitimate Reporting

Ron Sachs is a media consultant, former journalist, and former communications director for the late Gov. Lawton Chiles.
sachsmedia.com
Ron Sachs is a media consultant, former journalist, and former communications director for the late Gov. Lawton Chiles.
Ron Sachs is a media consultant, former journalist, and former communications director for the late Gov. Lawton Chiles.
Credit sachsmedia.com
/
sachsmedia.com
Ron Sachs is a media consultant, former journalist, and former communications director for the late Gov. Lawton Chiles.

News is available at our fingertips. What constitutes news, and when should it be designated as “fake?”

The Capital Chapter of the Florida Public Relations Association is hosting a luncheon on Thursday, June 21, to discuss how news consumers can discern what’s truthful and what’s less-than-factual.

Sachs Media Group Founder and CEO Ron Sachs will present tips on how to help stop the spread of misinformation – like keeping our own biases and emotions in check.

Here's what Sachs says we should be wary of when clicking links to news items.

  • Different kinds of fake news: “You could flip the channel between Fox News and CNN and hear two widely different views of the same world,” Sachs says. “You see reporters not interviewing but prosecuting questions…Then there are these new era media platforms that sound legitimate because they have the word ‘news’ in them or ‘fact’ or anything like that. They’re not practicing journalism. They’re practicing pushing points of view on all of us.”
  • Just the facts: “At the heart of good journalism, just give me the facts – who, what, when, where, why, and how.”
  • The source of the story being spread: “We’re in a selfie journalism area where we can record our own events and build an audience…The danger is when we put too much credibility into questionable sources.”


More information is available at the News Literacy Project.

Listen to the interview with Ron Sachs and WFSU’s Gina Jordan.

Listen as media consultant Ron Sachs talks about fake news.

Copyright 2018 WFSU

Gina Jordan reports from Tallahassee for WUSF and WLRN about how state policy affects your life.
Gina Jordan
Gina Jordan is the host of Morning Edition for WFSU News. Gina is a Tallahassee native and graduate of Florida State University. She spent 15 years working in news/talk and country radio in Orlando before becoming a reporter and All Things Considered host for WFSU in 2008. She left after a few years to spend more time with her son, working part-time as the capital reporter/producer for WLRN Public Media in Miami and as a drama teacher at Young Actors Theatre. She also blogged and reported for StateImpact Florida, an NPR education project, and produced podcasts and articles for AVISIAN Publishing. Gina has won awards for features, breaking news coverage, and newscasts from contests including the Associated Press, Green Eyeshade, and Murrow Awards. Gina is on the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Board of Directors. Gina is thrilled to be back at WFSU! In her free time, she likes to read, travel, and watch her son play football. Follow Gina Jordan on Twitter: @hearyourthought