I have a dog in the fight in Ukraine. My wife's sister adopted three orphaned girls from Kyiv in the early nineties. Two of them still call me Unka Mike. Let's just say the third has been a disappointment. The oldest still has family in Kyiv. She went back to visit a few years ago, before the SHTF, and brought me back some Ural parts. She's held in high esteem by me.
Other than the AP and NPR, other US News sources have their noses so far up The Cheeto's backside that it isn't funny. The misinformation can be traced back to Ronnie Ray Guns revoking the Fairness Doctrine, which limited bias in the news. Basically, for every editorial a newspaper or TV news presented, there had to be a rebuttal also presented. It helped get both sides of the story. The revocation allowed pus buckets like Fox News, Newsmax, OAN, and talk shows like Rush Limbaugh, Info Wars, and Joe Rogan on the right; and MSNBC, VOX, Democracy Now on the right.
For the folks in very rural areas, Murdoch's Fox News, aka Faux News, is all that's available to them, so they swallow it hook, line, and sinker. Fox has a **** ton of lawsuits against it for telling lies about rigged voting machines in the 2020 election. They had to admit they lied and shelled out 787 million dollars to the company that built the machines. They still haven't reported it. If you point that out to Fox followers, they call you a liar and may take a swing.
As far as the BBC on this side of the pond, I've actually had to go to them for local reporting. While sitting in a Florida airport, I learned about a tornado devastating a small town west of where I lived. US sources had NADA. The BBC was on the ground in what was left of Fairfield, Illinois.