Share this @internewscast.com

At first blush, a headline Reba McEntire posted to her Instagram account looked like a salacious tidbit from a gossip magazine. 

The headline claimed that McEntire, who performed “The Star-Spangled Banner” at the Super Bowl last month, called Taylor Swift an “entitled brat” for “laughing and drinking” during the performance. After McEntire called out the headline to her 2.6 million Instagram followers and praised Swift, several news outlets published stories saying McEntire had used her post to quash so-called rumors of a feud.

In her post, McEntire offered some good advice: “Please don’t believe everything you see on the Internet.”

The headline was from a satire account on Facebook created by self-proclaimed professional troll Christopher Blair. 

He said she took it too seriously.

“I have to believe it was just a knee-jerk reaction or something. She figured it was horrible, and she reacted,” Blair said of McEntire’s post. “On today’s internet, you have to be better than that.” 

A representative for McEntire declined to comment.

Blair runs some of the most successful satire pages on the internet meant to target conservatives who don’t bother to click beyond his fictional and farcical headlines. His main Facebook account, America’s Last Line of Defense, is part of a network of parody accounts including the one called America Loves Liberty, on which he published the McEntire article.

Those pages link back to his satire news website, The Dunning-Kruger Times, which hosts all manner of fake, newsy articles, almost all of them under the byline “Flagg Eagleton — Patriot.” On his pages, accounts and website, Blair cautions readers that “nothing on this page is real.”

Although some might find Blair’s methods questionable, he stays within the bounds of Facebook’s rules by disclosing at the top of the page that nothing he writes is real — though that does little to dissuade many people from taking his articles seriously. 

The pages and McEntire’s post offer a sense of the ongoing issues with social media, misinformation and disinformation. Many experts have continued warning about the ease with which fake news spreads online — especially in the lead-up to the presidential election. 

Although Blair’s posts tend to be generally benign fodder for quick-fingered Facebook users to share, they show how easily some people can fall for disinformation.

Meanwhile, Meta has in recent years turned Facebook and its powerful recommendation system away from mainstream news outlets.

Blair calls his satire pages a “social experiment,” one he uses for a very particular purpose: to trick conservatives, particularly “geriatric Trumpsters,” as he calls them, who are too eager to dunk on the left. 

“The ultimate goal of the operation is truth, believe it or not,” he said. “The people who tend to believe these stories are on the right, and the more the story confirms their bias, the less they need to prove that it’s true.”

But Blair said his goal isn’t necessarily just to make a statement about mis- and disinformation. 

“The goal is it’s a liberal troll honey pot that’s a lot of fun, that makes a bunch of money,” he said with a laugh. “I try to be as obvious as possible about it so that people like Reba McEntire, when they come across something like this, they say, ‘Jesus Christ who said that about me?’ and they click and they say, ‘Oh, these idiots.’”

Blair, a lifelong Democrat who created his page in January 2016, said people’s eagerness to share his content without fact-checking has made him wildly successful. He said engagement remains high — his most recent Facebook post, which jokingly claimed singer Garth Brooks “looked tired, depressed, and at least 40 or 50 pounds overweight” during a recent performance, got nearly 800 comments in 18 hours. He said his page at one point could bring in $15,000 in a good month.

The issue of people taking misinformation at face value is now well-recognized. A 2021 study conducted by a group of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Regina in Canada, University of Exeter Business School in the United Kingdom and the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics in Mexico found that 51.2% of participants in an experiment shared misinformation online because they weren’t paying attention to accuracy — not because they couldn’t tell the difference between real and fake news. 

“People are often capable of distinguishing between true and false news content, but fail to even consider whether content is accurate before they share it on social media,” study co-author Gordon Pennycook, an assistant professor of behavioral science at the University of Regina, told Nieman Lab in 2021. 

Blair said he was surprised not only by McEntire’s response to the story but also by how many news outlets ran stories about McEntire’s squashing rumors of a feud with Swift without disclosing that she was responding to a parody headline.

“If everybody who read one of my headlines, who appears on my page, complained about it and told their fans that it wasn’t true, you would never hear about anything but me,” Blair said. “I’d be in the news nonstop.”

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Bank of America Chicago Marathon 2025: More than 50K athletes step off from marathon route at Grant Park; street closures in place

2025 Chicago Marathon: Over 50,000 Runners Hit the Streets from Grant Park; Road Closures Announced

CHICAGO (WLS) — Tens of thousands of runners stepped off for the…
Blue city DA says repeat drug offenders 'will not respect the law' under current system

District Attorney Criticizes Current System, Claims Persistent Drug Offenders “Disregard the Law” in Blue City

In San Francisco, Democratic District Attorney Brooke Jenkins has taken a stance…
New Jersey declares emergency as nor'easter approaches, while Alaska flooding carries away homes

New Jersey Issues Emergency Alert for Nor’easter; Flooding in Alaska Sweeps Away Homes

A nor’easter moved up the East Coast on Sunday, leading to road…
Assault on Columbus statues sparked Italian-American groups to band together and fight back: community leader

Vandalism of Columbus Statues Unites Italian-American Organizations to Defend Their Heritage: Community Leader

Five years after statues of storied Italian explorer Christopher Columbus were toppled,…
Sand cliffs in Fernandina Beach

Fernandina Beach’s Sandy Cliffs

The City of Fernandina Beach reports some of the cliffs are as…
Pigmented Black Fine Art Faire to celebrate art, culture and legacy at Zhou B Art Center in Bridgeport, Chicago.

Celebrate Art, Culture, and Heritage at the Pigmented Black Fine Art Fair in Chicago’s Zhou B Art Center.

CHICAGO (WLS) — Pigment International’s first-ever Pigmented: Black Fine Art Faire is…
Trump writes message to Israelis after all living hostages released by Hamas

Trump Sends Message to Israelis Following Release of All Hostages by Hamas

President Donald Trump on Monday celebrated a “new chapter” for the Middle…
Ben Crump to represent woman detained by Jacksonville police

Ben Crump Represents Woman Detained by Jacksonville Police

“No mother should be brutalized in front of her child and community…
Israel says Hamas hands over the first 7 hostages to the Red Cross as part of the Gaza ceasefire

Israel Reports Hamas Transfers First 7 Hostages to Red Cross Amid Gaza Ceasefire

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip — On Monday, Hamas handed over seven hostages…
4 dead, 20 injured in shooting at South Carolina bar: authorities

Four Dead, 20 Injured in South Carolina Bar Shooting: Authorities Report

BEAUFORT COUNTY, Ga. (WSAV) — Authorities have confirmed that an overnight shooting…
Blinken Reportedly Gets Kicked Off Beach, While New Video of Biden Is Concerning

Unbelievable: Antony Blinken Praises Biden for Gaza Agreement, and the Situation Escalates Further

When I penned my article on Saturday suggesting that the foreign policy…
'Family Matters' star Darius McCrary arrested near U.S.-Mexico border

‘Family Matters’ Actor Darius McCrary Detained Close to U.S.-Mexico Border

(KTLA) — Darius McCrary, an actor and singer recognized for his role…