Michelle R. Smith And Johnatan Reiss
This Wednesday, May 12, 2021 image shows a website featuring Ty and Charleen Bollinger advertising their video series, The Truth About Vaccines 2020. The Bollingers are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts that stoke fear and distrust of COVID-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false information. (AP Photo) May 13, 2021 - 3:06 PM
The couple in the website videos could be hawking any number of products.
âYouâre going to love owning the platinum package,â Charlene Bollinger tells viewers, as a picture of a DVD set, booklets and other products flashes on screen. Her husband, Ty, promises a âdirectorâs cut edition,â and over 100 hours of additional footage.
Inside a network of ‘vaccine safety advocates,’ one of many profiting from spreading disinformation
Updated May 13, 2021;
Posted May 13, 2021
This Wednesday, May 12, 2021 image shows a website featuring Ty and Charleen Bollinger advertising their video series, The Truth About Vaccines 2020. The Bollingers are part of an ecosystem of for-profit companies, nonprofit groups, YouTube channels and other social media accounts that stoke fear and distrust of COVID-19 vaccines, resorting to what medical experts say is often misleading and false information. (AP Photo)AP
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The couple in the website videos could be hawking any number of products.
“You’re going to love owning the platinum package,” Charlene Bollinger tells viewers, as a picture of a DVD set, booklets and other products flashes on screen. Her husband, Ty, promises a “director’s cut edition,” and over 100 hours of additional footage.
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By Dan Armitage, host of Buckeye Sportsman, Ohio’s longest running outdoor radio show
It’s been almost three years since the Sandusky River’s controversial Ballville Dam near Fremont was removed, in part to allow fish species such as walleyes and white bass to move farther upriver to spawn. But so far, that’s not happening.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) figured it might take a few seasons for fish to make their way upstream during their annual spring spawning migrations, but they didn’t know how long the natural process would take. Since 2019, ODNR has been conducting post-dam removal studies to determine changes in fish populations.