Television lies and the public no longer buys the story

Published on June 08, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Some television networks insist on offering biased information, omitting relevant data and prioritizing their own agenda. However, viewers are no longer passive. Just a quick look at social media comments shows how more and more people are detecting inconsistencies and denouncing information manipulation.

fragmented television screen displaying a news broadcast, cracks spreading across the glass, a hand holding a smartphone with social media comments overlapping the broken image, digital distortion waves emanating from the screen, cinematic photorealistic style, dark studio lighting with harsh blue and red glows, multiple reflection layers showing confused audience silhouettes, static interference patterns, ultra-detailed screen pixels and phone display, dramatic tension, technical visualization of media manipulation

The algorithm that reveals bias in real time 📊

There are sentiment analysis and natural language processing tools that allow cross-referencing news headlines with Twitter trending topics or Reddit threads. These systems detect spikes of contradiction between what is broadcast and what is commented on. For example, when a media outlet omits a protest, users on X generate a volume of data that disproves the official version within minutes.

The journalist who deletes tweets and the cloud never forgets ☁️

The irony of the matter is that the same presenters who demand journalistic rigor then spend the night deleting their posts so they won't be caught contradicting the morning news. But hey, let them keep at it. In the end, their strategy is reminiscent of a magician who, after failing the trick, insists that the rabbit was indeed in the top hat. The audience is no longer applauding.