Teo Torres
Teo Torres is a member of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity. In the winter of 1993, he trained for an acting audition at The Julliard School in New York City and decided to change career paths. He can't sleep with a closet even open a crack and if you read Stephen King, just reference "The Boogeyman.". Teo Torres sailed the Turkish Aegean/Mediterranean on a 100-foot wooden gulet. At age 20, he was the lead singer of a heavy metal band called Liquid Bliss. His first on-air job was as a weekend weather anchor in Twin Falls, Idaho and his most memorable interview has to be Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin when he asked him what it was like on the moon.
54%
The Daily's Verdict
This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.
Bias
75%
Examples:
- It was the tenth launch for the first-stage booster used on this flight.
- The launch sent 22 Starlink satellites to low-Earth orbit.
Conflicts of Interest
50%
Examples:
- Article mentions SpaceX previously launched two missions for US Space Development Agency and seven other Starlink missions without providing any details about these previous launches
- Photo shows people watching from Griffith Observatory but does not mention if they could have watched it elsewhere or had issues viewing it there
Contradictions
80%
Examples:
- Article mentions SpaceX previously launched two missions for US Space Development Agency and seven other Starlink missions without providing any details about these previous launches
- Photo shows people watching from Griffith Observatory but does not mention if they could have watched it elsewhere or had issues viewing it there
- The launch was on Saturday not Monday night as stated in the article
Deceptions
30%
Examples:
- Article mentions SpaceX previously launched two missions for US Space Development Agency and seven other Starlink missions without providing any details about these previous launches
- Photo shows people watching from Griffith Observatory but does not mention if they could have watched it elsewhere or had issues viewing it there
Recent Articles
SpaceX's Starlink Launch Successful, Marking Next Step for Starship
Broke On: Monday, 18 March 2024On March 18, 2024, SpaceX's Starlink Launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California was a success. The Falcon 9 rocket carried second-generation internet satellites into space and marked the latest test flight for Starship. Despite reports of a 'jellyfish effect,' the launch was visible from hundreds of miles across the U.S West Coast due to its dusky evening timing.