Julie Miller

Julie Miller is an experienced journalist and author with over two decades of experience covering the entertainment industry for various publications. She has written extensively on topics such as celebrity gossip, red carpet events, and behind-the-scenes looks at Hollywood's biggest stars. Her work has been featured in numerous magazines and online platforms, including Vanity Fair, People magazine, Us Weekly and more.

49%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a poor reputation for journalistic standards and is not considered a reliable news source.

Bias

85%

Examples:

  • Gloria Guinness Capote considered three women to be the greatest beauties of his time: the film star Greta Garbo, his best friend and favorite swan Babe Paley, and Gloria Guinness
  • Guinness photographed inside her Waldorf Towers suite.
  • Guinness's backstory was always a point of confusion. (“All that is known reliably about the origins of Gloria Rubio von Furstenberg Fahkry Guinness is that she was born in Mexico to a left-wing newspaperman,” wrote The New York Times. “Very possibly she was a German spy during the Second World War.”)
  • Guinness took the job so seriously that she held a 1970 press conference during which she touted a column and dazzled reporters with her wit.

Conflicts of Interest

0%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

5%

Examples:

  • The article implies that Babe Paley, Slim Keith and Lee Radziwill are the three women who Capote considered his swans when in fact Gloria Guinness was also one of them. This is a lie by omission.

Deceptions

50%

Examples:

  • The article implies that Babe Paley, Slim Keith and Lee Radziwill are the three women who Capote considered his swans when in fact Gloria Guinness was also one of them. This is a lie by omission.

Recent Articles

Baby Reindeer: A Netflix Series Exploring Moral Ambiguity and Trauma

Baby Reindeer: A Netflix Series Exploring Moral Ambiguity and Trauma

Broke On: Thursday, 11 April 2024 Baby Reindeer is a Netflix series based on Richard Gadd's one-man play about his own experience with a stalker. The show explores moral ambiguity and cuts deep into Gadd's psyche, as he struggles to cope with the trauma of being stalked for years by Martha, who he gave a free cup of tea to in the pub where he worked. Despite police action being limited due to lack of obvious threat or fit within existing harassment laws, Gadd felt sorry for Martha and saw her as someone who needed help. The show is praised for its originality and compelling storytelling.