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IssuesBoehlert: Fox News and Jerome Corsi, living in the past
It sure felt like déjà vu all over again, didn't it?
No election watcher could forget the summer of 2004, when
Fox News repeatedly invited Swift Boat author John O'Neill onto cable
prime time and allowed
him to air his scurrilous allegations about Sen. John Kerry's Vietnam War
record. Even before the partisan Swift Boat Veterans for Truth group unveiled
its infamous television ads, it was on Fox News where the controversy was
birthed. It was Fox News that allowed O'Neill a mostly unobstructed platform on August 10,
17, 19, and 24, 2004,
to libel Kerry and to gin up a controversy that eventually swamped the
Democratic candidate for most of that crucial summer month.
Then, almost exactly four years later to the dates (on July
31, August 3, 12, and 14),
Fox News presented its White
House campaign sequel. It welcomed O'Neill's Swift Boat writing
partner, Jerome Corsi, to publicize his new attack
book, The Obama Nation. Laying out his fever-swamp allegations about Obama's drug
use and his supposed connections to Islam, Corsi enjoyed the type of national
exposure, courtesy of Fox News, that every author craves.
It was an audience that helped propel The Obama
Nation to No. 1 on the bestsellers list, which then ignited wide-scale mainstream coverage
for Corsi and his book.
In other words, everything was going according to plan. The
sequel had been set up -- had
been marketed -- just
like the Swift Boat predecessor, and now all conservatives had to do was sit
back and watch the fun, as the Obama campaign became engulfed in Corsi-led
controversy.
Right?
It hasn't worked that way. The Obama Nation's allegations, as
slight and flimsy as they are, have taken a back seat to questions about
Corsi's own credibility. In fact, journalists have likely spent more time
dissecting the errors in Obama Nation
and highlighting Corsi's controversial path, including the hateful,
bigoted items he used to post in online forums, than they have focusing on the
allegations Corsi wanted to broadcast.
As the conservative National Review Online noted with
frustration, "The media narrative thus becomes 'Corsi refuted' rather than 'Obama embattled.' "
Add in the fact that some conservatives have stepped forward
to publically denounce Corsi and
his brand of slime, beseeching the
movement to divorce itself from Corsi's unsubstantiated attacks, and
suddenly the sequel is in real distress.
Oh sure, it's selling. (Thanks in part to bulk sales,
a right-wing marketing staple.) But in terms of affecting the race, in terms of
gumming up the works for the Obama campaign, the book has so far been a bust.
What happened? How did a sure-fire follow-up hit turn into
such a trouble-plagued production? And why isn't Fox News' Swift
Boat formula working?
Simple. Both Corsi and the Fox
News team are living in the past and failed to realize how dramatically the
media landscape has shifted since the shady Swift Boat accusers were able to
deftly use the media to spread their lies.
First and foremost, the progressive movement has spent the
last four years bulking up its infrastructure, and specifically readying itself
to respond
to media-driven attacks from the right; the way Media Matters for America immediately blanketed The Obama
Nation and documented its egregious errors (often floated on Fox
News) and also raised doubts about the author's veracity and integrity. And thanks
to the larger Netroots community, Corsi hasn't had any breathing room to
spread his misinformation.
But there were also key marketplace changes within the cable
news industry that affected the Corsi coverage, I think. Because remember that
in 2004, Fox News drove the Swift Boat saga; it was practically a co-sponsor of
the anti-Kerry crusade, devoting endless hours to promoting the Vietnam-era
allegations. By sheer force of repetition, Fox News, then the dominant player
in cable news, forced its competitors to not only acknowledge the Swift Boat
story, but to go all in as well. And soon all the cable news outlets were
treating the Swift Boat saga with Fox News-like breathlessness. (CNN aired
nearly 300 segments referencing
the topic.)
And just like Fox, they weren't asking the tough
questions. Instead, they gave the Swift Boat accusers the same free ride that
Fox News did. They became media enablers, too.
Not this time around. With Fox News no longer the dominant cable news king -- and with Fox News no longer driving the campaign
narratives -- its competitors opted for a
much different approach to covering Corsi. And I think the coverage from the
competitors sent a subtle, yet simple, message: We no longer take our cues from
Fox News' lead, because they no longer dictate campaign coverage.
Instead, we're going to exult
in our role as a counterbalance, as a fact-checker, to the Fox News-produced
Corsi attack campaign. In fact, we're gonna help pull the curtain back on
Corsi.
Just look at how MSNBC anchor Contessa Brewer greeted Corsi, as he
ventured for the first time beyond the friendly TV confines of Rupert World:
BREWER: You say it's a
comprehensive look, and yet there are already online bloggers that are going
through this book page by page and picking apart what they see as factual
errors. ... If they're
going through, and they're finding all of these factual errors in your book,
why should we give you the credibility?
CNN's Campbell Brown introduced
a prime-time report by
announcing, "Obama
Nation is riddled with pretty much every unsubstantiated
rumor you ever heard about Obama."
And on Larry King Live,
Corsi was forced to face off
against Media Matters Senior Fellow Paul Waldman, who refused to let the
author spread his misinformation uncontested.
All the above represented precisely what the press, and most especially the
cable outfits, should have done --
but mostly refused to do --
in 2004.
They refused to allow articulate, independent critics onto
the national stage to debunk the patently false Swift Boat charges. Instead,
the press most often treated the Swift Boat story as a political one, which
meant amplifying the partisan charges and then going to the Kerry campaign for
a quote, or inviting a Kerry campaign surrogate on the air to debate a Swift
Boat liar.
Rather than forcefully labeling the Swift Boat attacks a
charade and IDing the attackers as pranksters, and instead of holding the Swift
Boat accusers accountable, the press played dumb
and abandoned its traditional campaign role.
As Greg Mitchell at Editor
& Publisher noted,
"The mainstream press gave the charges -- carried in ads, in books and articles, and
in major TV appearances -- a free ride for a spell, then a respectful airing
mixed with critique, before in many cases finally attempting to shoot them down
as overwhelmingly exaggerated or false."
In the infamous words of former Washington Post executive editor Len Downie, upon being pressed about the paper's
Swift Boat coverage in August 2004:
"We are not judging the credibility of Kerry or the [Swift Boat] Veterans, we just print the facts."
Talk about abdicating your role as journalists. During the
Swift Boat hoax, Downie and his team at the Post
essentially walked off the field, refusing to officiate the smear
campaign. Wasn't judging the credibility of the previously unknown Swift Boat
accusers precisely what the Post and the rest of the press
should have been doing in August 2004?
Thankfully, that kind of cowardice has been replaced by
actual journalism when dealing with the Corsi sequel. And on TV, I'd
suggest that about-face has been fueled by Fox News' fall from ratings
grace, as its competitors, flush with confidence, realize they no longer have
to follow.
Instead, they can lead.
Of course, the fact that Corsi won't admit or correct
obvious errors in his book has only emboldened the press to pose tough questions. His often loopy logic
has also not helped him, like suggesting we cannot believe Obama when he said
he stopped taking drugs in college because, according to the author, "self-reporting, by people who have used
drugs, as to when they stopped is inherently unreliable."
When Corsi stumbled down that twisted path on CNN's Larry King Live last week, Media Matters' Waldman was waiting
to pounce:
WALDMAN: You put up on
right-wing websites a whole series of bigoted and hateful posts in 2002 and
2003 that you later had to admit to when you got found out -- all kinds of
really vile, malicious stuff.
CORSI: OK. If you --
WALDMAN: Now, you say that you've stopped that. You say that you've
stopped that and you don't put up those kinds of vile, bigoted, malicious,
hateful posts on right-wing websites. But all we have is your word. I mean, do -- can we really
trust you? People who do that kind of thing, well, you know, they're not really
very trustworthy.
CORSI: We have --
WALDMAN: So can we trust you? Are you still doing that?
CORSI: You have more than my word. You've got the record of everything
I've written since then.
WALDMAN: Can you prove that you're not doing it anonymously? Can you
prove it?
I'm hard-pressed to recall the last time I saw an
author get so thoroughly discredited on
national television the way Corsi was at the hands of Waldman. (The encounter
simply confirmed why conservatives often refuse to go head-to-head with reps
from Media Matters in public settings.)
That undressing proved infectious within the mainstream media,
as it began to spell out, fairly and accurately, what Corsi and his book were
about. The Associated
Press' Nedra Pickler reported, "Corsi suggests, without a shred of
proof, that Obama may be using drugs today. Obama has acknowledged using
marijuana and cocaine as a teenager but says he quit when he went to college
and hasn't used drugs since."
The New York Times' political
blog, The Caucus, set aside space to detail Corsi's
touting of radical 9-11
theories that suggest explosives detonated inside the Twin Towers
were also responsible for the destruction, not just the terrorist-piloted jumbo
jets. And Politico noted how Corsi had
"left a trail of wild
theories, vitriol and dogma that have called into question his
credibility."
Is it some sort of collective penance journalists are
serving for the media's Swift Boat failures of 2004? Who knows? But it's exactly what
journalists ought to be doing when mischief-makers like Corsi climb onto the
national stage (ladder, courtesy
of Simon & Schuster), and start making unsubstantiated charges about
presidential contenders.
Conservatives now whine about the press taking sides, that
it's teaming up on Corsi. In fact, the press is simply doing exactly what
it should have done in 2004, and
that's vet the accuser. Period.
The game has changed. But somebody forgot to tell Corsi and
his friends at Fox News.
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