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Double Down News
British digital newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Double Down News (DDN) is a British alternative media outlet founded in 2017 by Yannis Mendez.[1] Funded through Patreon, it produces films and interviews from a left-wing perspective.[2] Double Down News' contributors have included Peter Oborne, George Monbiot,[3] Guz Khan,[4] Nabil Abdul Rashid[5] and David Graeber.[6] The outlet has produced content sympathetic to Jeremy Corbyn[7] and critical of the Conservative Party.[8]
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Content and coverage
Funded through Patreon, it produces interviews, films and short films from a left-wing perspective.[2]
DDN contributors have included former Daily Telegraph journalist Peter Oborne, Guardian columnist George Monbiot,[3] Darryl McDaniels,[9] Chris Packham,[10] Ken Loach,[11] Guz Khan,[4] Nabil Abdul Rashid,[5] Owen Jones,[12] David Graeber,[6] John McDonnell,[13] Peter Jukes,[14] and Matt Kennard.[15]
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History
In August 2017, DDN published a video related to "Traingate", when Jeremy Corbyn had been accused of lying about a Virgin train being full and him being forced to sit on the floor. Jasper Jackson of the New Statesman reviewed that though its video "tells a convincing and detailed account of the whole affair", and reflects poorly on mainstream media reporting, the video was misleading. It presented widely broadcast footage as "never-before seen" and does not disclose that the videomaker capturing footage for Corbyn was a director of DDN.[7]
In October 2018, due to a "violation of community standards", Facebook removed a DDN video featuring Monbiot talking about the alleged atrocities of Christopher Columbus.[16] It was restored the following day, accompanied by an apology.[3]
In October 2022, it published a video by Oborne talking about the Conservative Party having been taken over by the super rich who pushed for tax cutting policies which was in the mini budget and then a U-turn was made by Liz Truss's government.[8]
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See also
References
External links
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