Trump links Tylenol with autism risk — ABC viewers say worship was cut during Charlie Kirk’s service
President Donald Trump is set to tie the use of Tylenol (acetaminophen) during early pregnancy to a higher risk of autism in children. He’ll warn pregnant women to avoid it unless treating high fevers.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is leading the effort. The move has ignited major debate — some say it’s overdue, others warn the science doesn’t yet support firm conclusions.
Yesterday was Charlie Kirk’s memorial service, where reports of up to 70,000 people — with tens of thousands in overflow — packed State Farm Stadium in Arizona, and millions more watched online as Charlie Kirk’s public memorial service unfolded. Possibly the most viewed service of any civilian.
However, viewers watching on some networks like ABC’s main broadcast say they heard commentary like Super Bowl pregame talk but did not see the worship/music portion while it was playing. (They switched off and found full worship service streaming live elsewhere, like YouTube.)
The worship portion did happen live in the stadium and is being shown in full on alternative platforms (YouTube, etc.).
This split in what’s being shown seems to be raising a lot of concern about what networks choose to broadcast, especially with religious content in politically charged settings.
Why This Matters:
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With Trump’s announcement, we might see changes in standard health guidance for pregnant people, and lawsuits or pushback from medical/scientific communities.
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With the service, many people are worried about media bias: what’s shown or edited out matters to public perception, especially when faith/music/worship is part of the message.
EricFGilbert #EricGilbert #Autism #Tylenol #Pregnancy #Health #CharlieKirk #Worship #MediaBias #Faith #ABC #Justice #YouTubeStreams #BreakingNews
