The zoom shot on the newspaper headline "FIRST ALL-TALKING PIC STARTS" (under the subhead '"ONLY A FAD," SAY EXPERTS') shows the text, 'Warner Brothers are starting the first all-talking picture with Al Jolson in the "Jazz Singer." The production being put on in an elaborate scale is said by some of those in the know to be only a passing fad.' This statement is incorrect as The Jazz Singer (1927) was the first feature-length part-talkie film. As shown just after the newspaper fades out, Lights of New York (1928) is the first all talking picture.
An aerial view purporting to show a single bomb falling onto railroad cars shows the bomb striking one car, bouncing off and then several cars fly into the air fully intact rather than being blown apart.