NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn't happen this week

FILE - In this April 26, 2019 file photo, former Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden rides in a car after appearing on ABC's "The View" in New York. On Friday, May 29, 2020, The Associated Press reported on a video circulating online appearing to show the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate on “The View” avoiding a question about inappropriate touching. The video, taken from Biden’s April 26, 2019, appearance on the daytime talk show was edited to make it appear he failed to give a direct answer to the question about inappropriate touching and stumbled through the response. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez)

FILE - In this Sept. 20, 2019 file photo, a state police officer stands outside a damaged entrance to the Woodfield Mall after a man drove an SUV into a Sears store in the Chicago suburb of Schaumburg, Ill. On Friday, May 29, 2020, The Associated Press reported on stories circulating online incorrectly asserting that protesters looted the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn., on Wednesday night, with a video showing someone driving a car through North America’s largest shopping complex. No incidents occurred Wednesday or Thursday at the Mall of America, spokeswoman Sarah Grap confirmed to The Associated Press. The video was taken in September 2019 at the Woodfield Mall in Schaumburg, Ill. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune via AP)

FILE - This undated electron microscope image made available by the U.S. National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, yellow, emerging from the surface of cells, pink, cultured in the lab. Also known as 2019-nCoV, the virus causes COVID-19. The sample was isolated from a patient in the U.S. On Friday, May 29, 2020, The Associated Press reported on stories circulating online incorrectly asserting that coronavirus has an HIV protein that proves it was genetically modified. Experts say the coronavirus has no HIV sequences in it’s genetic makeup. Since the early days of the coronavirus outbreak, social media posts have tried to cast doubt on its origins. (NIAID-RML via AP)