Jack White Performs the White Stripes' 'Cannon' With Daughter Scarlett11%

By Charisma Madarang9%

7/14/2026, 1:06:06 AM

BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 192 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 28.1% and a BS Rank of 11% (13,647 of 15,282 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 89.30% of the article peer group.

Jack White made it a family affair during his performance at the Brooklyn Paramount over the weekend. The musician brought out his daughter Scarlett to play bass during his crushing delivery of the White Stripes’ 1999 track “Cannon.”

White, who has a no-set list rule for his live shows, spoke with Rolling Stone in 2018 about how he decides what to play on the fly. Speaking about his May show at the Austin360 Amphitheater that year, White called “Cannon” a “MacGuffin – it’s like a placeholder for me to take a breath and let the crowd have a groove for a second and then break into a different song.” He added, “That night, it’s one of those things I played for 40 seconds and then we went into ‘Broken Boy Soldiers,’ the Raconteurs song.

White, who celebrated his 51st birthday last week, is on tour in support of his eighth solo album, Frozen Charlotte. Rolling Stone praised his new LP, declaring White’s latest project “very much a rage for these times, 13 songs of perpetual disorder, challenged connections, and idealism under siege.”

Confirmation Bias
0%
Anchoring Bias
0%
Availability Heuristic
0%
Representativeness Heuristic
0%
Hindsight Bias
0%
Overconfidence Bias
0%
Framing Effect
0%
Loss Aversion
0%
Status Quo Bias
0%
Sunk Cost Effect
0%
Optimism Bias
0%
Pessimism Bias
0%
Negativity Bias
0%
Self-Serving Bias
0%
Fundamental Attribution Error
0%
Actor-Observer Bias
0%
In-Group Bias
0%
Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
0%
Halo Effect
0%
Horn Effect
0%
Dunning-Kruger Effect
0%
Recency Bias
0%
Primacy Effect
0%
Blind-Spot Bias
0%
Ad Hominem
0%
Straw Man
0%
Appeal to Authority
0%
False Dilemma
0%
Slippery Slope
0%
Circular Reasoning
0%
Hasty Generalization
0%
Red Herring
0%
Bandwagon
0%
Appeal to Emotion
0%
Begging the Question
0%
Post Hoc (False Cause)
0%
Tu Quoque
0%
Burden of Proof
0%
Appeal to Nature
0%
Composition/Division
0%
Anecdotal
0%
No True Scotsman
0%
Ambiguity (Equivocation)
0%
Gambler’s Fallacy
0%
Middle Ground
0%
Personal Incredulity
0%
Special Pleading
0%
Genetic Fallacy
0%
Unattributed Quote
0%
Quote-first Misdirection
0%
Biased Writer Voice
0%
Indoctrination
0%
Politically Left Leaning Bias
0%
Politically Right Leaning Bias
0%
Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
0%

192 words analyzed.

Speakers

2speakers51%attributed speech95writer words
Selected voice

Jack White

0%flagged-word coverage
69 attributed words71% of attributed speech0% writer coverage

No manipulation-pattern hits were found in this speaker's attributed words or the writer's voice.

Attribution is sentence-level. Pattern percentages are calculated only from words assigned to that voice.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.