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Reason: None provided.

Miller's tweet said this morning and the photo shows the wrong time of day for 5:34 am. So does that mean they actually met on April 5th when the article was published? Why is the headline photoshopped (you can see it overlays text). Is that to make the headline readable so it can be dated?

If you read further in the article you posted it says:

"In print, the coverage will be organized around four subject areas inside the A section Monday through Thursday: Mondays will focus on Careers & Leadership, incorporating regular contributions from Lynn Cook’s management team."

Career and Leadership topics are only published on Mondays.

On Tuesdays they publish:

"On Tuesdays, we’ll turn to Health & Wellness,"

The article is dated to April 4th. It could be an old paper, but the newspaper has some photoshopping on the article title and it's late morning (not 5:34 am). This can't be a photo of when Stephen Miller and Trump met. The newspaper, time of day and time of tweet tell us that.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Yet Miller's tweet said this morning and the photo shows the wrong time of day for 5:34 am. So does that mean they actually met on April 5th when the article was published? Why is the headline photoshopped (you can see it overlays text). Is that to make the headline readable so it can be dated?

If you read further in the article you posted it says:

"In print, the coverage will be organized around four subject areas inside the A section Monday through Thursday: Mondays will focus on Careers & Leadership, incorporating regular contributions from Lynn Cook’s management team."

Career and Leadership topics are only published on Mondays.

On Tuesdays they publish:

"On Tuesdays, we’ll turn to Health & Wellness,"

The article is dated to April 5th. It could be a day old, but the photo could not have been taken at 5:34 am when Stephen Miller tweeted out the photo. That means when Miller tweeted:

"Just had a terrific meeting with President Trump!" at 5:34 am on April 6th there is no way this photo depicts that meeting . Time of day and day of the article are all wrong.

Update: Checked the article again. I don't think it could have been published on April 5th since it was updated on April 4th.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Yet Miller's tweet said this morning and the photo shows the wrong time of day for 5:34 am. So does that mean they actually met on April 5th when the article was published? Why is the headline photoshopped (you can see it overlays text). Is that to make the headline readable so it can be dated?

If you read further in the article you posted it says:

"In print, the coverage will be organized around four subject areas inside the A section Monday through Thursday: Mondays will focus on Careers & Leadership, incorporating regular contributions from Lynn Cook’s management team."

Career and Leadership topics are only published on Mondays.

On Tuesdays they publish:

"On Tuesdays, we’ll turn to Health & Wellness,"

The article is dated to April 5th. It could be a day old, but the photo could not have been taken at 5:34 am when Stephen Miller tweeted out the photo. That means when Miller tweeted:

"Just had a terrific meeting with President Trump!" at 5:34 am on April 6th there is no way this photo depicts that meeting . Time of day and day of the article are all wrong.

3 years ago
1 score