Two more examples indicating that cable news networks are hiring MBAs instead of English majors:
This caption to a graphic:
"A Bridge Under Troubled Waters" "Under?" What do they mean--The Lincoln Tunnel?
"The Republican and Democratic parties are one in the same." The accepted idiom is "one and the same."
As my English 12 teacher said several Presidential administrations ago: "If you insist on using clichés, at least get them right!"
And while I've got the podium so to speak, why oh why do so many people put apostrophes in simple plurals?
All that is needed is an "s" or "ies.":
The Simpsons
armories
symphonies
Use an apostrophe to indicate possession in nouns. "Joe's cap" "Lila's son." Apostrophes are found in plural possessive nouns: "The Simpsons' residence" "The armories' roofs"
Possessive pronouns --its, his, her, hers, your, yours, theirs--do not use apostrophes.
In pronouns, only contractions (pronoun plus a verb ) take apostrophes:
"Baby, it's cold outside." "You're joking, right?"