Skip to main content

Donate to Media Matters' Year-End Fundraiser Donate Arrow

  • Online media
  • Tariffs
  • Epstein
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • Take Action
  • Search
  • Donate

Media Matters for America

  • News & Analysis
  • Research & Studies
  • Audio & Video
  • Archives

Donate to Media Matters' Year-End Fundraiser Donate Arrow

Media Matters for America

  • Nav
  • Search
  • News & Analysis
  • Research & Studies
  • Audio & Video
  • Archives
  • Online media
  • Tariffs
  • Epstein
  • Take Action
  • Search
  • Donate
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
Sinclair-legacy-attack-immigrants.png

Melissa Joskow / Media Matters

Sinclair uses unproven COVID-19 treatment to promote false claims of social media “censorship”

Written by Alex Walker

Published 02/08/21 4:34 PM EST

In a recent segment for Sinclair Broadcast Group, national correspondent Kristine Frazao suggested that “censorship” was behind YouTube’s decision to remove a video promoting the unproven COVID-19 drug ivermectin.

Frazao’s report — which aired on at least 54 Sinclair-owned or -operated local stations in 27 states on February 4 and 5, according to a Kinetiq transcript search — highlighted YouTube’s decision to remove a video from a December 8 Senate hearing in which Dr. Pierre Kory promoted the drug ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19. Although Frazao noted that YouTube had cited the company’s policies against COVID-19 misinformation as the rationale behind the video’s removal, the segment implied that the platform instead censored Kory’s testimony. Frazao’s report included comments from Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), who just days earlier published an opinion piece about YouTube’s decision in The Wall Street Journal titled “YouTube Cancels the U.S. Senate.”

Video file

Citation

From the February 4, 2021, edition of KFDM's Live at Five

In choosing to frame YouTube’s decision as part of an ongoing battle over debunked conservative claims of social media censorship, Frazao ignored that there is little to no evidence supporting the use of ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment. The National Institutes of Health notes that there is “insufficient data” to support the use of ivermectin, and Merck, which manufactures ivermectin under the brand name Stromectol, released a statement on February 4 which reached the same conclusion.

Frazao also omitted criticism from some physicians who have specifically questioned Kory’s promotion of the drug. An analysis published in MedPage Today notes that Kory and a group he belongs to known as the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance are touting the drug despite a lack of large, randomized control trials that could prove its effectiveness. The Sinclair report instead featured an excerpt of Kory’s testimony about the drug’s “miraculous effectiveness” without pushback.

Coverage like Frazao’s report which fails to foreground scientific evidence risks politicizing the use of ivermectin, much in the same way that right-wing media relentlessly and dangerously promoted the drug hydroxychloroquine in the early months of the pandemic. Unfortunately, Sinclair’s reach provides such misinformation -- and false claims of conservative “censorship” -- with the opportunity to reach an audience of millions across the country.

Don't let right wing lies set the agenda. Donate now!

The Latest

  1. Roger Stone claims Trump announced pardon for Juan Orlando Hernández “three hours after” he sent Trump a letter from the former Honduran president

    Video & Audio 12/01/25 6:36 PM EST

  2. Nick Fuentes says his interview with Tucker Carlson was “so friendly,” and that he never felt Carlson was trying to stop him from being antisemitic

    Video & Audio 12/01/25 4:37 PM EST

  3. Podcaster Tim Dillon criticizes Trump Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy: “Hey, Sean. No one has any money.”

    Video & Audio 12/01/25 3:10 PM EST

  4. GOP candidate in Tennessee special election turns to Jeffrey Epstein's “comeback consultant” Steve Bannon

    Article 12/01/25 2:25 PM EST

  5. YouTuber Brett Cooper argues “remigration” is “necessary”

    Video & Audio 12/01/25 2:25 PM EST

Pagination

  • Current page 1
  • …
  • Next page ››

In This Article

  • Sinclair

    Sinclair-Broadcast-Group-MMFA-Tag.png
  • Coronavirus (COVID-19)

    Covid-19 / Coronavirus
  • Google

    Google-MMFA-Tag.png

Related

  1. Benny Johnson: “No one in MAGA has ever been violent ever”

    Video & Audio 11/26/25 11:10 AM EST

  2. Benny Johnson: “What are the major irritants of modern society? ... All of it boils down to 20 million criminal aliens who don't belong here.”

    Video & Audio 11/20/25 12:18 PM EST

  3. Benny Johnson: “Every single thing you hate about your life right now or American culture is caused by mass immigration and criminal immigration”

    Video & Audio 11/20/25 12:00 PM EST

Media Matters for America

Sign up for email updates
  • About
  • Contact
  • Corrections
  • Submissions
  • Jobs
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS

© 2025 Media Matters for America

RSS