CNN Cracks the Case of the Algae Bloom in Reflecting Pool While Serious Stories Fester

Earlier this week, CNN published the results of an investigation into the source of the “stubborn algae” that has plagued the newly renovated Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. As part of the $14 million project, President Donald Trump had selected a new flag-blue color for the water. Yet just one week after the renovation was completed, the pool turned a vivid shade of green, raising questions about what went wrong.

The project consumed significant journalistic resources, requiring three lead writers, two additional contributors, and input from several technical experts.

But you guessed it, in the end, CNN cracked the case.

The headline for the report, “Reflecting Pool woes: Trump administration turns to hydrogen peroxide in latest bid to beat back algae,” made it sound like there was something seriously wrong with the pool.

This is not exactly a mystery. As most pool owners know, when water chemistry falls out of balance, algae can quickly take hold and turn even the cleanest pool green. In many cases, a simple “shock” treatment quickly restores the water to its proper condition. It’s a fairly common occurrence after a pool has been drained and refilled.

Given the huge size of the reflecting pool, the onset of the algae and the process of restoring clarity to the water would naturally take longer.

CNN reported:

One day after fresh water had been put in, CNN first reported the presence of algae – in some areas, it could be seen from the water’s edge on the bottom of the pool. One worker who was wading in the water, vacuuming, told CNN the substance was algae.When asked initially, a spokesperson for the Interior Department said its Fish and Wildlife Services department wasn’t convinced it was algae.A few hours later, the department followed up to say the substance was “residual algae from supply lines,” which had been dormant during the eight weeks of construction.“It’s part of the normal startup process. We are removing the algae, and the nanobubblers will maintain the pool and keep it algae free,” communications director Kate Martin said in a statement last Wednesday.

One would think that would be the end of the story, but not for CNN. They had to find a way to disparage Trump:

Over the past week, the Trump administration has jumped into action, sending crews clad in hip-waders to vacuum up the clumps of algae and on Tuesday, dispatching workers to dump gallons of hydrogen peroxide in the pool.Nevertheless, the pool has grown increasingly into a murky shade of green – calling into question whether the president’s goal of cleaning and beautifying a pool he once disparaged as “disgusting” and “not representative of the country” can ever really be met.A worker who spoke to CNN on Tuesday quipped that it would take “an entire lifetime” to clean the pool.

In the clip below, a CNN reporter scoops up a water sample for testing and interviews a water-quality expert who bears a striking resemblance to former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, but I digress.

A narrator informs viewers: “CNN independently took the sample of water and consulted with a pool store … It showed phosphate levels far higher than what is recommended to keep algae at bay based on estimates for a pool that holds 6.5 million gallons of water.”

And on it went.

Cool story, huh?

As the X user rightly notes in the post below, “They did more investigation on this than the billion dollar fraud happening across the country.”

CNN’s idea of journalism: write a sensational headline, let people rage-share it, then admit, 3 paragraphs later, that it’s just residual algae from dormant supply lines and a normal startup process. This isn’t news; they’re manufacturing outrage, and the dummies all
fall for it.

https://x.com/EllaVator17f3k/status/2067343777249771551?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Leave it to CNN’s intrepid reporters to spare no effort in pursuit of answers. What they ultimately uncovered, however, was not a major scandal or systemic failure, but a routine algae bloom — the sort of maintenance issue familiar to countless pool owners. Yet because the issue occurred in a high-profile Trump administration project, it was treated as though it were a matter of national consequence.

The result was an investigation that seemed wildly disproportionate to the subject matter. Rather than exposing wrongdoing or uncovering a significant public-interest story, the network devoted substantial journalistic resources to explaining why algae appeared in a recently refilled pool. The exercise ultimately said more about CNN’s editorial priorities than it did about the reflecting pool itself.

Which raises an obvious question: If the network can marshal this level of effort and manpower to investigate a routine algae problem, why doesn’t it devote the same energy to uncovering the fraud, waste, and corruption that affect millions of Americans and cost taxpayers billions of dollars each year?

Tags: CNN, Donald Trump, Media, Media Bias

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