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> CNN wonder if black hole cause MH370 to disappear, rolling news coverage decend into madnes

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TSrobertngo
post Mar 20 2014, 10:17 PM, updated 12y ago

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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/weird-ne...ry-9204742.html

In the face of little concrete information to go on, CNN has been struggling to fill its hours of rolling coverage of the Malaysia flight MH370 disappearance this week, leading it to at one point broadcast a panel discussion on the conspiracy theories circulating.

"Is it preposterous to consider a black hole was involved?" CNN's Don Lemon asked a panel of floating heads to their bemusement.

Mary Schiavo, a former Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Transportation, shut the debate down fairly quickly, replying: "A small black hole would suck in our entire universe, so we know it’s not that."

Lemon also plundered the depths of similarities between the mystery and the shows Lost and The Twilight Zone, and was surely seconds from questioning the Illuminati's part in all this.

Black holes theory notwithstanding, two large pieces of debris have been found four hours from the Australian coast today that authorities say is their "best lead" yet as to the plane's whereabouts.
TSrobertngo
post Mar 20 2014, 11:42 PM

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QUOTE(LiMi @ Mar 20 2014, 10:41 PM)
next, ancient aliens
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the ancient aliens guy will go on CNN soon to share his theory
TSrobertngo
post Mar 21 2014, 10:08 AM

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QUOTE(661188 @ Mar 21 2014, 12:16 AM)
blackie in no put
it's worm hole
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vroom?
TSrobertngo
post Mar 21 2014, 02:41 PM

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QUOTE(Mustadio @ Mar 21 2014, 10:51 AM)


user posted image

This is one of the most surreal cable news segments you’ll see.

There have been many different conspiracy theories thrown out about the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370, but on Wednesday night CNN speculated whether a “black hole” could be involved.

CNN anchor Don Lemon brought up the idea when prompted by a tweet from a reader — a segment that was first noted by Mediaite. He also brought up tweets comparing the situation to the television series “Lost” and “The Twilight Zone.”

“That’s what people are saying,” he said. “I know it’s preposterous — but is it preposterous?”

Mary Schiavo, a former Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Transportation, said it was indeed preposterous.

“Well, a small black hole would suck in our entire universe, so we know it’s not that. The Bermuda Triangle is often weather. And ‘Lost’ is a TV show.”

She added that she did “love” the theories, however.
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hard hitting news
TSrobertngo
post Mar 21 2014, 03:43 PM

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Media coverage of MH370 enters ‘Twilight Zone’, says columnist

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysi...-says-columnist

The non-stop global media coverage of the missing flight MH370 has entered the “Twilight Zone”, says a Washington Post op-ed piece today.

Eugene Robinson said he did not dispute the fact that the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight 370 was a mystery but hit out at the “orgy of... pure speculation” surrounding the search for missing Boeing 777-200ER (9M-MRO).

The plane disappeared on March 8 with 239 people on board en route to Beijing. That is the only indisputable fact at this point.


Yesterday, Australia released satellite images of objects found floating in waters 2,500km from Perth.

Robinson was particularly scathing about the way cable television networks – singling out CNN – have responded to the search for MH370, which enters its 14th day today.

“CNN has soared to the top of the cable news ratings – at times besting even behemoth Fox News – by covering the story ceaselessly, and by that I mean you wonder when the anchors get a chance to go to the bathroom,” Robinson said.

After the Australians released the satellite images, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper tweeted that he was rushing back to the studio to cover this breaking development.

This was despite the fact that all the Australians had were photographs of two pieces of debris, which might or might not be from MH370.

Cooper turned up at the studio to “tell us the same thing, as if we were hard of hearing”, said Robinson.

He attributed the frenzy of reporting in the past week to less and less information being disclosed by the Malaysian authorities.

“Speaking of the Malaysian authorities, they have poured buckets of gasoline onto this bonfire of speculation. They have given so many different versions of basic facts – when was the plane last heard from, which way it was heading – that 'according to Malaysian officials' has become shorthand for 'don’t take this too seriously',” he said.

Their reticence to disclose information is behind much of the media guesswork.

Robinson said the best educated guess was, for example, the “clever satellite triangulation that indicates searchers should concentrate on a wide arc stretching north into central Asia and south into tracts of the Indian Ocean far from shipping lanes”.

This was confirmed by the debris spotted in the Indian Ocean, which is close to that arc.

Echoing Robinson's view is the Los Angeles Times, which said reporting on flight MH370 has “turned into a spectacle – not the good kind”.

Meghan Daum, writing in the American paper in its online edition, said that “the lack of any real information has pushed television news to new levels of unintentional self-parody. Commentators have used desktop model planes as props. Aviation experts seem mostly engaged in finding newer and pithier ways to say 'I don't have the faintest idea'.”

Taking a more charitable view, Daum said: “A situation like this one, in which there's barely a 'who, what and when', much less a 'where and why', defies quick answers. It asks us not only to be patient but to accept the possibility that we may never know what happened. And for a culture that's not only addicted to information but expects to have its questions answered instantly, that's intolerable.” – March 21, 2014.
TSrobertngo
post Mar 21 2014, 10:26 PM

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QUOTE(kaffra @ Mar 21 2014, 06:20 PM)
lol bomoh king surely feels vindicated tongue.gif
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next week he will be on CNN

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