Eagles’ Super Bowl winner kicked me out and joined Hinge — while I’m 8 months pregnant: ex-girlfriend

New York Post
ANALYSIS 30/100

Overall Assessment

The article centers on unverified allegations from a single social media source, framed through a highly emotional and moralized lens. It prioritizes drama over verification, using loaded language and personal narrative to engage readers. Minimal effort is made to balance perspectives or provide context.

"If, hypothetically, those situations were true, those would be some pretty s–tty f–king people in my opinion. But just wondering what you guys think."

Appeal To Emotion

Headline & Lead 30/100

The headline prioritizes shock value over factual clarity, using dramatic personal accusations to drive clicks.

Sensationalism: The headline uses emotionally charged language and personal drama to attract attention, focusing on scandalous elements like being kicked out while pregnant and using a dating app.

"Eagles’ Super Bowl winner kicked me out and joined Hinge — while I’m 8 months pregnant: ex-girlfriend"

Loaded Language: Phrases like 'Super Bowl winner' and 'kicked me out' frame the story as a fall from grace, inviting moral judgment rather than neutral reporting.

"Eagles’ Super Bowl winner kicked me out and joined Hinge — while I’m 8 months pregnant: ex-girlfriend"

Language & Tone 20/100

The tone is heavily slanted toward the accuser’s emotional perspective, with minimal effort to maintain neutrality.

Appeal To Emotion: The article reproduces the accuser’s emotionally charged monologue without counterbalancing tone, encouraging reader sympathy rather than neutral assessment.

"If, hypothetically, those situations were true, those would be some pretty s–tty f–king people in my opinion. But just wondering what you guys think."

Editorializing: The inclusion of the woman’s rhetorical questions and moral judgments without journalistic distance blurs the line between reporting and opinion.

"I think it’s really sick that people put the blame on women for truly just believing in and trusting the man that they fell in love with."

Framing By Emphasis: The article emphasizes the emotional narrative of betrayal and victimhood while downplaying the lack of independent verification.

"I am so used to people’s judgements and opinions and whatever they want to say about what I share on the internet."

Balance 40/100

Heavy reliance on one-sided social media content with only token acknowledgment of the other party’s stance.

Cherry Picking: The article relies solely on TikTok videos and social media posts from one party, without independent verification or meaningful response from the accused.

"Taking to his Instagram Story, Johnson did not directly address her allegations, but shared messages about mastering your emotions and others spreading rumors."

Vague Attribution: Claims are attributed only to social media content without confirming their truth, presenting allegations as facts through passive framing.

"Alyssa Okada, who referred to herself as his 'now ex-girlfriend,' made the accusations..."

Balanced Reporting: The article notes Johnson’s indirect response via Instagram stories, which is a minimal attempt to show both sides, though it lacks direct engagement with the claims.

"Taking to his Instagram Story, Johnson did not directly address her allegations, but shared messages about mastering your emotions and others spreading rumors."

Completeness 30/100

Lacks essential context and verification, instead framing the story as a moral drama.

Omission: The article fails to provide background on the relationship timeline, prior public behavior of either party, or any investigation into the claims.

Selective Coverage: The story appears chosen for its scandalous potential rather than public interest, with details emphasized beyond journalistic necessity.

"He was not shown in her social media posts from her joint birthday and babymoon vacation in late April."

Narrative Framing: The article constructs a moral narrative of betrayal and abandonment, fitting the facts into a pre-existing 'fallen hero' trope.

"I just truly think it’s time that people stop blaming women for the partners they choose, and start blaming partners for pretending to be something that they’re not."

AGENDA SIGNALS
Identity

Individual

Trustworthy / Corrupt
Dominant
Corrupt / Untrustworthy 0 Honest / Trustworthy
-9

Fred Johnson is framed as morally corrupt, deceitful, and lacking integrity

[loaded_language], [framing_by_emphasis]

"Hypothetically, if a man were to kick out his eight-month pregnant girlfriend and unborn daughter and to then be on Hinge the very next day looking for women to have fun with. Hypothetically you would not think that that type of man is a good man or good father. You would probably not think that that type of man has integrity, or morals or any form of decency, right?"

Society

Relationships

Stable / Crisis
Dominant
Crisis / Urgent 0 Stable / Manageable
-9

Romantic relationships are framed as sites of deception and crisis, particularly for pregnant women

[narrative_framing], [selective_coverage]

"I just truly think it’s time that people stop blaming women for the partners they choose, and start blaming partners for pretending to be something that they’re not."

Identity

Women

Included / Excluded
Strong
Excluded / Targeted 0 Included / Protected
+8

Women are portrayed as vulnerable and systematically blamed for male betrayal, deserving protection and validation

[appeal_to_emotion], [editorializing]

"I think it’s really sick that people put the blame on women for truly just believing in and trusting the man that they fell in love with. That’s just something I continue to see and truly it hurts to see the way women are consistently invalidated and blamed for somebody else’s actions."

Society

Family

Safe / Threatened
Strong
Threatened / Endangered 0 Safe / Secure
-8

The pregnant woman and unborn child are framed as abandoned and at emotional and physical risk

[sensationalism], [narr游戏副本_framing]

"Eagles’ Super Bowl winner kicked me out and joined Hinge — while I’m 8 months pregnant: ex-girlfriend"

Culture

Public Discourse

Legitimate / Illegitimate
Strong
Illegitimate / Invalid 0 Legitimate / Valid
-7

Public judgment of women in relationships is framed as illegitimate and harmful

[editorializing], [appeal_to_emotion]

"No woman ever knowingly goes into a situation thinking this person is going to hurt me, this person is going to lie to me, this person is going to turn out to be a completely different person than the one he is showing me."

SCORE REASONING

The article centers on unverified allegations from a single social media source, framed through a highly emotional and moralized lens. It prioritizes drama over verification, using loaded language and personal narrative to engage readers. Minimal effort is made to balance perspectives or provide context.

NEUTRAL SUMMARY

A woman identifying as Fred Johnson’s former partner has made allegations on TikTok that he ended their relationship while she is eight months pregnant and subsequently used a dating app. Johnson has not directly responded but shared indirect messages on Instagram about rumors and resilience. The claims remain unverified by independent sources.

Published: Analysis:

New York Post — Culture - Other

This article 30/100 New York Post average 42.2/100 All sources average 46.6/100 Source ranking 23rd out of 26

Based on the last 60 days of articles

Article @ New York Post
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