Break The Fake 2 – NASA shares first recording of Perseverance rover driving on Mars

I found this news posted by “Sky News.” This article shows a video of NASA’s Perseverance rover sent back the first sounds of it driving on Mars. Using the step I have learned from the previous video Break the Fake Learning Modules I discovered that although this image and the sounds were very real, it is actually FAKE.

I click into the source and saw the user was verified since it has the blue checkmark after their name, so I know that they are who they say they are.

I searched Sky News on Wikipedia to see if anything would show up and as I expected there was information on Sky News on Wikipedia, so it prove furthermore that this account is trustworthy

Although we have verified that the account is trustworthy; however, we still don’t know that if the article that has been posted by Sky News is real or fake. So I use Snope.com to search up the article and I found out that there is an article about “NASA shares first recording of Perseverance rover driving on Mars.” 

However, when I click on the article it only said the Perseverance rover landing, nothing about the sound of the Perseverance rover driving on Mars.

So I searched up “NASA shares first recording of Perseverance rover driving on Mars” and add fake at the end on google. I found videos and articles about the video shown by Sky News was actually fake, but the photo of the Presererance rover landing on mars was real

Who is Charles Schulz?

Born on November 26, 1922, Charles Schulz is known for the comic strip “Peanut.” The comic strip is base on highlights of his childhood in St. Paul and his love of sports. He began drawing as a child. Teachers predicted that he was going to be an artist. Things didn’t go as the teacher thought. During his high school, he got a C-plus for one of his art classes and failing almost every course. In 1947 he produced a cartoon named Li’l Folks. He made several submissions to different national companies but were all ejected. He never gave up, meaning that his chance is coming. Finally, in 1950 United Features Syndicate bought Li’l Folks and renamed it to what we knew “Peanut,” a name Schulz never liked. Why the UFS renamed the name? They had to rename the name because there was already a well-known comic strip named Little Folks. On October 2 that year, the comic strip was in seven newspapers. Eventually, the comic became a huge success and was seen in many countries. Since Schulz has a stroke, he announced his retirement on December 14, 1999. At that point, he only cares about tomorrow. Unfortunately, Schulz passed away on February 12, 2000. Although Schulz could no longer be with us, his drawing would still be around the world and sharing the artwork with children.