Because they posted an article that Snow White is suspended from Disney Parks until further investigation. Just because that one ex-performer got fired over a robbery after revealing as a Snow White performer doesn't mean that Disney is suspending all meet and greets of Disney's first princess.
Is "Inside the Tragic" a great source for articles?
As of recent they've more often spread lies and clickbaity titles, caring more about traffic than accurate stories.
In this case, considering the circumstances it wouldn't be far fetched to temporarily suspend all meet and greets of that particular character but even then they claim it was a short investigation and I highly doubt anyone would care if they saw Snow White again at the parks after a short investigation they likely didn't know about.
Inside the Magic often lies or misrepresents the truth. They also end up appearing on a lot of search results and newsfeeds which leads to people thinking they are true.
Post by pizzarolls9000 on Apr 23, 2024 20:37:44 GMT
I never used that site to begin with. When I would be looking for disney park news, I'd go onto youtube instead.
"True crime youtubers talking about a real life murder vs lost media youtubers talking about a cancelled episode of SpongeBob" (This is from a meme please don't take this seriously) I am a funny person
Inside the Magic often lies or misrepresents the truth. They also end up appearing on a lot of search results and newsfeeds which leads to people thinking they are true.
Yeah, I have found their reporting pretty wonky. It's like they pick up on any and every rumor and just run with it like it's real. Or you click on it because the title implies fact, only to find out it's just another clickbait rumor. I think I remember their running an article on the "impending" repurchase of Stars Wars by George Lucas in collaboration with Apple? And whatdayaknow, here we are years later and Disney still very much owns the franchise.