Fake news alert: Vin Diesel names Rockford his beloved city, PolitiFact Illinois
Fake news alert: Vin Diesel names Rockford his dearest city
By Matt Dietrich on Thursday, April 13th, two thousand seventeen at 1:15 p.m.
If you`re a major movie starlet driving a rental car in Illinois this year, you may want to avoid Rockford. Or perhaps make a beeline there.
In March, the website WBN twelve News had the hearts of at least a few Twitter and Facebook users in and around Rockford racing with a heartwarming story about “Quick & Furious” starlet Vin Diesel`s mighty praise of the town`s people and cuisine.
“During a radio interview this morning, Hollywood actor Vin Diesel took a moment to praise Rockford, Illinois residents who had helped him with a mechanical issue with his rental car as he passed through the city recently,” read the post.
The story then describes Diesel praising the people of Rockford as “the real deal” and voicing his plans to retire in Rockford when his acting days are over. He also applauds the “fine freakin` burger” he had at Rockford`s GreenFire restaurant. Indeed there is a restaurant in Rockford called GreenFire and a quick skim of its menu indicates that its burgers likely would earn the “superb freakin`” label. (Ex.: “BEEF & DUCK BACON brioche bun. grass fed beef. yellow cheddar. duck bacon. $13.” Sounds freakin` excellent to us.)
The story then describes Diesel praising the people of Rockford as “the real deal” and voicing his plans to retire in Rockford when his acting days are over. He also applauds the “superb freakin` burger” he had at Rockford`s GreenFire restaurant.
Indeed there is a restaurant in Rockford called GreenFire and a quick skim of its menu indicates that its burgers likely would earn the “superb freakin`” label. (Ex.: “BEEF & DUCK BACON brioche bun. grass fed beef. yellow cheddar. duck bacon. $13.” Sounds freakin` good to us.)
RULE No. 1: READ THE DISCLAIMER
There`s slew in this post to create a veneer of truth. Who`s going to argue that the people of Rockford aren`t a friendly and helpful bunch? After all, this is the town that gave the world Cheap Trick, perhaps the world`s most affable and hard-working rock band.
The “WBN News 12, Violating news, local news” banner at the top of the page certainly looks like something you`d find on a news website.
But when a story shows up under a heading that contains a link labeled “disclaimer,” it`s a clever news consumption practice to click that link.
In this case, doing so gives the reader vital information: “wbn12.com is a satirical and fantasy website. None of the articles on wbn12.com should be considered true and are simply works of satire or fantasy meant for entertainment purposes. The satirical and fantasy articles on wbn12.com poke joy at our celebrity obsessed cultures and the politically correct world we`re compelled to live in.”
A latest Pew Research probe found that thirty five percent of news consumers use social media as their primary pathway to news — harshly equal to the thirty six percent who said they go directly to news sites. So when a joke gets collective on social media as real news, there`s significant potential for confusion.
“‘Fake news` propagated by endless (social media) ‘printing presses` can be a source of entertainment and amusement that is appreciated for its satirical presentation but too often is taken much too gravely,” says Jim Grubbs, associate professor of communication at the University of Illinois-Springfield.
When that happens, it creates a dilemma for legitimate media. Has the phony story become so rampant that it merits coverage? On this one, the response was “no” for the Rockford Register Starlet.
“The staff here was aware of the Vin Diesel report and checked it out,” said Mark Baldwin, executive editor of the Rockford Register Starlet. “When we discovered there was nothing to it, we dropped it.” The paper didn`t want to call undue attention to the story or confuse readers by reporting on it, Baldwin said.
Kudos to Rockford radio personality Mark Charvat for using his blog on station WXXQ-FM 98.Five`s website to call out the Vin Diesel story as fake.
When we plugged a chunk of the “Vin Diesel” quote into Google, we learned that WBN News twelve is just one lump of a satirical website empire. Vin Diesel fans who believed the Rockford story likely would have been crestfallen to learn that the actor had said the very same things about Norwalk, Ohio, on the website Local thirty one News, which carries a strikingly similar disclaimer to that of WBN News 12.
While Rockford fed Diesel a mere burger, Norwalk feted him with a “superb freakin` steak” at Berry`s.
Rockford residents, however, need not feel jilted by Diesel`s affection for Norwalk. They`ve also got Johnny Depp raving about their hospitality.
As reported by the website Daily News Ten, the “Pirates of the Caribbean” actor had mechanical problems with a rental car when he was passing through Rockford. He, too, found Rockfordians to be “the real deal” and, like Diesel, plans to lodge in Rockford when his acting days are over.
Depp`s Rockford helpers treated him to a “superb freakin` burger,” but it was at Acquaintance`s, not GreenFire.
Another Rockford radio personality, Mandy James, is worth credit for flagging that one as phony in a Jan. Three blog post.
PolitiFact editor Angie Drobnic Holan noted on International Fact-checking Day that in an age of ever-more-slick websites putting out articles that, at very first glance, seem legitimate, news consumers need to be especially vigilant.
Before sharing an article on social media, check its original source. In the examples above, an visible disclaimer fairly screamed that the articles were not to be taken gravely. Yet they still were collective is if they were true.
“If a headline strikes you as so shocking that you want to instantaneously tell all your friends about it, take a quick pause. It might well be fake. You can do your homework by probing the source of the news story,” Holan cautions. “Is it a news organization you`ve heard of? Look at the web address. Is it a clever knock-off? For example, abcnews.com.co is a phony version of the actual news site abcnews.go.com and is a purveyor of fake news.”
There`s certainly no harm in imagining Vin Diesel or Johnny Depp getting a lesson in Heartland hospitality in Rockford, Norwalk, Ohio, or any other off-the-beaten-path Midwestern town. The sites that suggested those articles accomplished their clearly stated aim of poking joy at our celebrity-obsessed culture.
But sites that traffic in more serious “fake news” don`t put disclaimers on their articles. They`re out not to entertain, but to agitate.
Know the warning signs and be a brainy news consumer.
Anyone who eyed the Vin Diesel or Johnny Depp posts should have been tipped off about their nature by the “disclaimer” tab above the headline. Even the most cursory 2nd look at this claim would have exposed it worthy of our Pants on Fire rating.