News channel caught using AI to make ICE shooting victim look 'handsome,' because apparently reality isn't 'sympathetic' enough – We Got This Covered
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News channel caught using AI to make ICE shooting victim look ‘handsome,’ because apparently reality isn’t ‘sympathetic’ enough

That's really twisted.

MS NOW admitted they swapped out the original image of Alex Pretti after viewers and commentators noticed the photo looked suspiciously different from other public images of the man, according to Fox. Pretti, a 37-year-old Minneapolis resident, was tragically killed last Saturday by a U.S. Border Patrol agent during an immigration enforcement operation.

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He was an ICU nurse who dedicated his career to caring for veterans before his killing. The controversy centers on a segment that aired on Monday, hosted by Nicolle Wallace. She was reporting on the ongoing tension between Minneapolis residents and federal immigration authorities, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

As she spoke, a photo of Pretti wearing his nurse scrubs was superimposed on the screen. Using AI to clean up an image or adjust lighting is one thing, but significantly altering a victim’s appearance feels like a strange step toward creating a synthetic reality.

Don’t modify photos like this

Many viewers quickly pointed out that the image shown on MS NOW looked considerably different from a photo provided by the Service Employees International Union, where Pretti was a member. The criticism was amplified by podcast host Joe Rogan, who compared the two photos during his show on Wednesday. He didn’t hold back his reaction to the digital alteration.

“They made him handsome, so people would be more sympathetic to him getting shot, which is kind of wild,” Rogan said. He added, “Like, are ugly people less valuable to [the network]? That is crazy to me.” That’s a pretty intense accusation, but when you look at how obvious the digital changes were, it’s hard not to raise an eyebrow.

During the initial report, Wallace used strong language to describe the event, linking the killing to broader political conflict. “The people there were pushed to the brink over the weekend, again in the wake of another killing of a nonviolent bystander by ICE agents in Minneapolis,” Wallace said in the segment.

She continued by claiming that President Trump and his administration were “demanding once again that you not believe your eyes and ears.” She then stated that Americans were rejecting “Donald Trump’s lies and his administration’s lies and reject a smear campaign by Donald Trump and his administration that is intended to somehow justify the unjustifiable, state-sanctioned act of brutality on the streets of an American city.”

The network eventually responded to the outcry by removing the segment from its official YouTube account and replacing it with an edited version. They included an editor’s note confirming the use of the manipulated photo.

The note was short and to the point. “MS NOW swapped out the original thumbnail image for this video. The previous thumbnail used was an AI-enhanced image of Alex Pretti,” the note read. It’s good that they admitted the mistake, but it definitely raises questions about how other images might be quietly manipulated across media platforms.


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Jorge Aguilar
Aggy has worked for multiple sites as a writer and editor, and has been a managing editor for sites that have millions of views a month. He's been the Lead of Social Content for a site garnering millions of views a month, and co owns multiple successful social media channels, including a Gaming news TikTok, and a Facebook Fortnite page with over 700k followers. His work includes Dot Esports, Screen Rant, How To Geek Try Hard Guides, PC Invasion, Pro Game Guides, Android Police, N4G, WePC, Sportskeeda, and GFinity Esports. He has also published two games under Tales and is currently working on one with Choice of Games. He has written and illustrated a number of books, including for children, and has a comic under his belt. He does not lean any one way politically; he just reports the facts and news, and gives an opinion based on those.