A video showing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) dancing from several years ago resulted in a number of misleading, clickbait headlines that claimed conservative news outlets were outraged by the video, according to a critic.
Ocasio-Cortez, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, is seen playfully dancing in the video in acting out a scene from “The Breakfast Club.” The video has been online for years, but it resurfaced on Twitter last week, drawing heavy media coverage.
The New York Times, GQ, Newsweek, Reuters, and other news outlets made claims that conservatives were outraged by the clip.
“It caused a social media stir, with the mainstream media and liberals lining up to cheer it and condemn conservatives for being offended by it. The only problem: Conservatives were not actually offended by it,” he wrote.
He noted that the Times posted a story, “Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Dancing Video Was Meant as a Smear, but It Backfired,” but the article doesn’t cite any evidence of conservative outrage.
“The video showed Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, 29, dancing barefoot on a rooftop. If it was meant to be an embarrassing leak, it backfired badly,” the Times said. It added that “some also saw a right-wing effort to undermine Ms. Ocasio-Cortez,” without offering any evidence.
Waters called articles about the alleged Ocasio-Cortez-triggered conservative outrage the “latest knee-jerk liberal mockery of conservatives” who are being “accused on absolutely no evidence of being offended by something.”
He added: “No one but the original Twitter poster (@AnonymousQ1776, now deleted) was scandalized by the clip. That doesn’t stop May from finding fans of the left-wing congresswoman:”
Newsweek was also slammed for its coverage of the alleged conservative outrage.
“The article mentions a single anonymous account. Not one conservative,” tweeted Dave Rubin, while posting emojis suggesting Newsweek is the equivalent of human waste.
“Which conservatives did this, @Newsweek? I’m only asking because your article names exactly zero of them. Kinda weird,” wrote Jerry Dunleavy.
Reuters also faced criticism for its coverage and headline.