Red sequence of discussion:
CNN published the article the day before you created this thread.
i provided the link to the "Protesters slam" article on 20-Nov-2018.
You remarked that the article is from that same day, and in response I stated I didn't know when the article was first published. I stated that because at the time, as with now (see screenshot below), I didn't see an "originally published" date noted at the start of the article, but I did see an update date.
Frankly, given my professional background in both auditing and consulting, I thought it odd that a reputable news organization would provide no means for readers to discern when an article was first published. Accordingly, I reached out to CNN to find out "what was up" with that...why had they opted to deny readers a piece of potentially germane temporal information.
Turns out that CNN does not deny that piece of information to its readers. CNN retains and exposes articles' original publication dates via its URL taxonomy model; thus one must look at the page's web address to learn when an article was first published. Doing so for the page in question, one sees this (I added the * to prevent DP from condensing the web address): w*ww.cnn.com/
2018/11/19/americas/tijuana-migrants-protest/index.html.
Note:
Insofar as you noted you were watching television, and there's no video content with that article, I cannot attest to or infer the nature and extent to which Tijuana's happenings have, by CNN US (television as opposed to online), been covered. I can see that the article's primary author filed her report for something called "CNN
en Español": "CNN
en Español's
Jaqueline Hurtado reported from Tijuana." Though I haven't checked to confirm so, I'd wager
video content CNN produces for CNN en Español, such as Ms. Hurtado's story, does not air on the domestic US version of CNN.
In
post 27, I shared my thoughts about why the Tijuana protests may not have yet obtained the notice of CNN's editorialists and US-based reporters.
As for the Tijuana thing, I don't know why any US domestic news program would give much airtime to a domestic-Mexico matter, or Canadian one, for that matter. The exception being something truly momentous...and a hundred or so folks carrying on somewhere in Tijuana -- Were they even in the center of the city? -- isn't at all momentous.