Support Assistant
I can help you set up automatic posting to Facebook! You’ll need a Facebook Page (not a personal profile) to connect with your WordPress.com site. Go to Jetpack → Social in your dashboard and click “Connect an account”, then choose Facebook and follow the prompts to connect your Page. Want me to walk you through what happens next?
Perfect! After you connect your Facebook Page, every new blog post you publish will automatically share to Facebook. But you can customize this for each post – when writing a post, click the green Jetpack icon at the top-right and you can toggle sharing on/off, choose which networks to share to, or add a custom message. Ready to try connecting your Facebook Page?
Got it! Let’s troubleshoot this. First, can you check if your Facebook connection is still active? Go to Jetpack → Social and see if your Facebook account shows as connected or if there’s a “Reconnect” button. Also, when you publish a post, do you see the sharing options in the Jetpack panel on the right side of the editor?
That’s frustrating! Let’s check the sharing settings for your posts. When you edit one of your recent posts, look for the Jetpack social sharing panel on the right side – does it show Facebook as enabled for that specific post? Also, are you publishing to a Facebook Page or trying to share to a personal Facebook profile? WordPress.com can only share to Pages, not personal profiles.
Let me help figure this out! Try disconnecting and reconnecting your Facebook Page – go to Jetpack → Social, click the three dots next to your Facebook connection, and select “Disconnect”. Then reconnect it fresh. Sometimes Facebook changes their permissions and a fresh connection fixes the issue. Want to try that and see if your next test post shares properly?
A gold medal landed yesterday. It should have lit up the sports world. Instead, it flickered in the margins.
Indian shooter Dhanush Srikanth claimed gold in the men’s 10 m air rifle at the Tokyo Deaflympics and broke a world record in the process. (The Times of India) Yet the global headlines barely moved.
In Japan, a local Japanese-language outlet ran a tech/inclusion piece on the Games and the host city’s accessibility strategy — accessible to those digging through Japanese livestreams, but easy for global sports desks to ignore.
And in Latin America, a Spanish-language website celebrated the arrival of the Games with local athletes boarding flights, yet still no major live result coverage.
The UK media ran a strong piece on the funding gap facing Deaflympians, reminding the world that while medals are won recognition is still waiting.
The athletes are winning. The stories are there. But the broadcast and mainstream media radar? Still silent.
The question stands: when record-breaking performances happen, will they get the spotlight they deserve — or will they remain hidden in niche feeds?
What you can do
Watch the action livestreamed on YouTube
Get the results and details on the official website
Mainstream media can get the accreditation they need
