It's kinda weird...it's like the Daily Mail already had a headline planned, and basically ignored the content of the article itself. The basic message in the story itself doesn't really match the headline.
Same basic issue with any news story, the backgrounds of the sources. It's a lot of the reason MSNBC and Fox News can cover the same story 180 degrees off from each other.
Never have taken any journalism courses, so am unfamiliar with the standards they're expected to use when vetting sources. Like I mentioned above, I basically just responded to a request in a Facebook group. Mentioned my aviation books and my articles (aviation books are published by a well-established publisher, most articles can be found online with a Google search), and he already knew of my two online seminars on the EAA Homebuilt Week. Don't know the other folks quoted in the article. I did send the contact information for EAA's Director of Communications, but he doesn't seem to be quoted anywhere.
Ron Wanttaja