Did James Woods Play Rudy Giuliani in a Movie?
A scene from a 2003 made-for-television film took on new life on Twitter after the 2020 elections.
A scene from a 2003 made-for-television film took on new life on Twitter after the 2020 elections.
Some well-placed underscores had readers thinking the former New York City mayor had embarrassed himself again.
A political blog purportedly identified a major error in one of attorney Lin Wood’s documents contesting the results of the 2020 election.
After The Hill tweeted that 46 percent of Americans believe that U.S. President Donald Trump should concede, “so 54%” became a Twitter trending topic.
A viral tweet breathed life into rumors that an audit “found” large batches of votes, purportedly including a 9,626 “vote error” in the state of Georgia.
The Facebook chief executive officer had previously claimed that “terrorist content” would be enough for an instant ban on the platform.
The social media platform appears to be labeling attempts at election interference with an even weaker disclaimer than before.
Aerial photographs of an impressively large crowd spread widely on Parler, Twitter, and 4Chan, captioned, “we the people are no longer silent.”
A claim about the purported arrest of a man named Dallas Jones in Texas relies on a photograph that actually shows actor Cuba Gooding, Jr.
While the agency’s interim director is still on the platform, the agency’s account no longer exists.