MSNBC personalities slammed on social media for sharing 2019 photo of crowded Miami Beach to shame ‘COVIDiots’

Multiple MSNBC personalities shared a photo of crowds in Miami Beach breaking coronavirus guidelines but were subsequently slammed by social media commenters who quickly pointed out the photograph was from 2019.

“That literally looks like a microscopic image of a petrie dish,” MSNBC host Joy Reid captioned a tweet with a photo of a crowded beach.

MSNBC analyst Fernand Amandi also shared the photo and said, “Today’s center of the #COVIDIOTS universe is Miami Beach, Florida.”

“This is why schools won’t open again this fall,” MSNBC contributor Jason Johnson tweeted.

Commenters soon pointed out that the photo they circulated was from a 2019 Sun Sentinel article reporting on unruly spring breakers.

SWAT TEAMS AND PEPPER SPRAY BALLS DEPLOYED IN MIAMI BEACH TO ENFORCE CURFEW STEMMING FROM COVID CONCERNS

“A professor and MSNBC analyst with 95,000 followers shared a photo from a beach in 2019. He’s racked up over 10,000 shares in the process. Nothing will happen to this account for knowingly spreading disinformation,” political commentator Stephen Miller tweeted in response to Amandi.

“Schools won’t open this fall because of misleading tweets of photos from 2019? Bad news if true,” political pundit Ramesh Ponnuru asked Johnson, pointing out the error.

Johnson did not acknowledge the misleading photo, only saying: “You aren’t prepared for this conversation. Please stop now. I don’t want to make time for you today.”

Amandi eventually addressed the misleading photo in a follow-up tweet but said it shouldn’t distract from the thousands of spring breakers who are partying in the city this week.

“It has come to my attention that the picture in the original tweet isn’t from this week, but that does not change the fact that Miami Beach has been overrun by thousands of maskless Spring Breakers who are not abiding by the CDC pandemic guidelines as these recent photos confirm,” he tweeted.

The tweets come as SWAT teams and a military-style vehicle were seen on the streets of Miami Beach this weekend, when local police worked to enforce an 8 p.m. curfew on spring breakers stemming from virus concerns.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

“Pepper balls used on Spring Break partygoers along South Beach after new curfew passes with little cooperation,” one social media user posted of what unfolded in the city on Saturday evening.

MSNBC did not immediately return the Washington Examiner’s request for comment.

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