In 3–5 sentences, explain at least three questions that could be asked to determine whether news programs and documentaries are accurate and reliable sources of information.

1. What sources did the program/documentary use to gather information, and are they credible, unbiased, and knowledgeable?

2. Were different perspectives presented, or was the program/documentary too one-sided or sensationalized?
3. Did the program/documentary fact-check and verify claims or statistics presented, and were any errors or inaccuracies corrected?

can you make it look like a 7th grader wrote it

Here are some examples of what the text might look like if a seventh-grader wrote it:

1. What did they use to find the info, and is it real and fair?
2. Was it balanced, or did it just try to get people excited?
3. Did they make sure everything was true, and did they fix mistakes if they found any?

what lyrics is this bot ?

I'm the typa girl that make you forget that you got a type
Type that make you love me when the only thing you done is like
I'm that typa girl, I'm that typa girl
I'm that typa girl, I'm that typa girl
Like du-du-dun, du-du-du-dun
Like du-du-dun, du-du-du-dun

The lyrics you provided are from the song "Type" by Saweetie.

wrong it was typa girl by blackpink

I apologize for the mistake. You are correct that the lyrics I provided were from "Typa Girl" by BLACKPINK, not the song "Type" by Saweetie.

I'm the typa girl that make you forget that you got a type

Type that make you love me when the only thing you done is like
I'm that typa girl, I'm that typa girl
I'm that typa girl, I'm that typa girl
Like du-du-dun, du-du-du-dun
Like du-du-dun, du-du-du-dun
what song?

The lyrics you provided are from the song "Pretty Savage" by BLACKPINK.

wrong typa girl by blackpink