News Opinons Politics

White House Hot Mic Catches Convo Between Reporter And NYT Photog: ‘We’ve All Been Vaccinated Around Here’

The White House press briefing room. (Photo by Ken Cedeno/Corbis via Getty Images)

On Monday, audio from a hot mic in the White House briefing room captured a conversation between Fox News reporter John Roberts and New York Times photographer Doug Mills discussing the China-originated novel coronavirus, according to Mediaite.

During the exchange, which seems to have taken place before President Donald Trump’s televised Monday evening briefing, Roberts tells Mills to take off his mask, since a new study out of California shows the COVID-19 fatality rate to be around past seasonal flu levels. In response, Mills tells Roberts that everyone “around here” has been “vaccinated” for coronavirus, apparently jokingly, Mediaite suggested in their report.

“When White House briefings are streamed live, some outlets carry the feeds — with audio and video — long before the events start,” explained the report. “On Monday, one such feed caught a sardonic masked White House denizen — who has now been identified as Mills — greeting Roberts as he emerged from the lower press office.”


“What do you know, buddy?” Mills says to Roberts, to which the Fox reporter responds, “You can take off the mask, the case fatality rate is 0.1 to 0.3 according to USC.”


Instagram Rolls Out PG-13 Algorithm Blocking Teens from Seeing Sex, Drugs After Facing Years of Criticism and Lawsuits
Trump boards AF1 quickly, using small stairs due to ‘increased security measures’: WH official
These Middle Eastern Christians Want Easter Sunday as a Public Holiday
Trump taps Detroit entrepreneur Mark Savaya, who boosted Muslim turnout, as special envoy to Iraq
FBI investigating hunting stand with direct line of sight to Trump’s Air Force One
Breaking: Evidence Discovered of Potential Trump Assassination Plot, Hunting Stand Aimed Toward Air Force One
Potheads Overwhelm Police Department After City Asks for Volunteers to Help Train Officers to Recognize Signs of Impairment
Boston eyes city-run groceries to fight food insecurity, but skeptics remain doubtful
Santos says he’s ‘very grateful’ for Trump commutation, wants to pursue prison reform
BTK killer’s daughter calls him ‘subhuman’ after final prison confrontation ends relationship
Young Woman Dies in Freak Accident at Utah Concert After Strong Winds Send Debris Flying
FBI investigates hunting stand with sight line to Trump’s Air Force One exit area at Palm Beach airport
Cops Plead with Young People to Stop Pranking Loved Ones with ‘Dangerous’ AI Pics Showing Homeless Men in Their Houses
Trump calls Colombia’s Petro ‘a drug leader,’ says US aid will end payments
Trump posts AI video of himself showering protesters with brown liquid on ‘No Kings’ Day

See also  Israel claims a returned body by Hamas was not an Israeli hostage

Roberts was referencing a recent study by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on the infection rate in Los Angeles. The study found the virus to be far more widespread than testing has told us thus far, which suggests the fatality rate of COVID-19 is far lower than initially reported, “more in line with the 2017-2018 flu than what we’ve seen in some other areas of the world.”

“Really? That’s reassuring,” the Times photographer tells Roberts, adding, “Everybody here has been vaccinated anyway.”

“So it was a hoax,” Mills seemingly jokes after Roberts outlines the study. “No, I don’t think it was a hoax,” the Fox reporter responds.

During the briefing, Roberts asked leading voice on the White House coronavirus task force, Dr. Deborah Birx, about the study he mentioned to Mills.

As noted by The Daily Wire, “Dr. Birx responded by saying the task force is extremely interested in studies like the one being conducted in Los Angeles because they still have no definitive data on the number of asymptomatic cases, which is crucial to understanding the infectious rate and the mortality rate. While she said the team is looking at the potentially significant findings of the study  which its lead researcher said could require authorities to ‘recalibrate disease prediction models and rethink public health strategies’  Birx also cautioned that testing is not always ‘100% accurate.’”

See also  Top Houthi military leader killed in Yemen by ‘Israeli-American’ airstrike

Birx then added “that they are ‘looking at all those studies very carefully,’ but suggested that they are handling them with caution because many tests give false results,” The Daily Wire noted. “‘These tests are not 100% sensitive or specific,’ Birx emphasized. That said, the idea that more people have carried and are carrying the virus who are asymptomatic than confirmed cases indicate, she said, is something they are very interested in as they still have no hard data on it yet.”

LISTEN:

Story cited here.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter