A headline is supposed to hook you into reading a story. But sometimes, a headline can misconstrue what was actually said and this is certainly the case with Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and the issue of several teammates choosing not to go to the Trump White House later this year. USA Today published a story in which it used a Brady quote of “putting politics aside” and making a misleading headline.
Here’s the headline which was tweeted by the USA Today Sports account:
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“There’s certain years, like a couple years ago, I wanted to go and didn’t get the opportunity based on the schedule — we didn’t get told until I think like 10 days before we were going, and at that point I had something I’d been planning for months and couldn’t get there. . . . It really is a great experience. Putting politics aside, it never was a political thing. At least, it never was to me. It meant you won a championship and you got to experience something cool with your team, with your teammates. Everyone has their own choice. It’s an offseason. These days are valuable for everybody. You only get so much time with your family and friends, and if people don’t want to go they don’t want to go and that’s their choice.”
The reaction to the misleading heading was swift:
.@USATODAY warps Tom Brady's words regarding White House visit https://t.co/2LfxtjAohn
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) February 14, 2017
Headline writers can be the worst. Brady doesn't say this at all. https://t.co/5EDkFRXUIG
— BucciOT.Com (@Buccigross) February 14, 2017
This is what Tom Brady actually said, and why the USA Today headline was so negligent. https://t.co/9nmSsu6kfe
— Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) February 14, 2017
To its credit, USA Today has revised its headline, but its original tweet and story still has some buzzing.
It’s one thing for a headline to be clickbait, but it’s totally another thing to misconstrue what was said. USA Today has to do better here.