“Mr. Farrow may now be the most famous investigative reporter in America, a rare celebrity-journalist who followed the opposite path of most in the profession: He began as a boy-wonder talk show host and worked his way downward to the coal face of hard investigative reporting....he has delivered stories of stunning and lasting impact, especially his revelations about powerful men who preyed on young women in the worlds of Hollywood, television and politics, which won him a Pulitzer Prize....
...if you scratch at Mr. Farrow’s reporting in The New Yorker and in his 2019 best seller, “Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators,” you start to see some shakiness at its foundation. He delivers narratives that are irresistibly cinematic — with unmistakable heroes and villains — and often omits the complicating facts and inconvenient details that may make them less dramatic. At times, he does not always follow the typical journalistic imperatives of corroboration and rigorous disclosure, or he suggests conspiracies that are tantalizing but he cannot prove.“
Ben Smith in this NYT Piece gets squarely at an issue that has been discussed indirectly in several ways on this list over last few years. I strongly recommend reading in its entirety (a few fair use excerpt ps follow below).
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BRADLEE: “You haven't got it.(before they can reply) A librarian and a secretary say Hunt looked at a book. (shakes his head) Not good enough.“
In the end, the problem is not so much Farrow (young reporters eager to make a Mae for themselves have always been thus) it is the lack of a strong editorial hand, or maybe an environment in which the young reporter can just take his marbles and go shopping for a place that will let him publish with less than adequate support.
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Reason #9 why it is important to follow good journalistic practices: Sleazeballs like Matt Lauer will use lapses to try to rehabilitate themselves.
The main benefit from reading Laura’s piece (which I strongly warn against unless you are able to shower soon after; it’s like sitting under a drunk who just wants to vomit all over you) is that it underlines how good an actor Steve Carell is. That Apple TV show was problematic, but Carell really captures the clueless, desperate, defensive self-blindness manifested by Lauer here.
It should go without saying, but I will note here for the record, that Lauer was not fired because of reporting by Ronan Farrow. Lauer’s friends, and people who made a lot of money off him, fired him after talking directly to the woman who reported his misconduct, and conducting their own investigation, revealing a pattern of sexual misconduct.
Lauer uses the Smith piece in the NYT to imply his own mistake was simply having consensual sex with a work colleague, and all other reports of misconduct are just bad journalism. But other journalists reported a long history of sexual misconduct, including the NYT. Whether or not Lauer is guilty of the crime of rape that night in Sochi, and of every specific piece of bad behavior he has ever been accused of, is a more complicated question. But I think it is well established by now that he did a hell of a lot more than just have a consensual sexual affair with a co-worker.
Just one example: Lauer makes a meal here of whether his assistant ever took a woman to a nurse after an encounter in his office. He accuses Farrow of not fact checking this with his assistant, and claims if he had, the assistant would have said She never took anyone to a nurse. Whatever. This is like being accused of murdering someone in a supermarket and then stealing an apple, and spending all your time showing how you would never steal an apple. Here is what the NYT wrote soon after Lauer was fired:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/29/business/media/nbc-matt-lauer.html?referringSource=articleShare
“One complaint came from a former employee who said Mr. Lauer had summoned her to his office in 2001, locked the door and sexually assaulted her. She provided her account to The New York Times but declined to let her name be used.
She told The Times that she passed out and had to be taken to a nurse. She said that she felt helpless because she didn’t want to lose her job, and that she didn’t report the encounter at the time because she felt ashamed...
The woman said Mr. Lauer asked her to unbutton her blouse, which she did. She said the anchor then stepped out from behind his desk, pulled down her pants, bent her over a chair and had intercourse with her. At some point, she said, she passed out with her pants pulled halfway down. She woke up on the floor of his office, and Mr. Lauer had his assistant take her to a nurse.”
Okay, so maybe the person who carried the title “Assistant to Matt Lauer” is not the one who actually took her to the nurse. That detail changes nothing.
Lauer also enjoys showing that the claim that he had a button he could push to close and lock his door has been debunked. I review this here only because it illustrates his creepy, sophistic style of argument. He did have a button that closed his door, it appears it did lock the door from the outside, but did not lock the door from the inside, which some stories may have implied (see the full button story in:
That last is not completely irrelevant, but if the allegation is that the most powerful man in the building ordered a female subordinate to strip and have sex with him after pushing a button that automatically shut and locked his office door, the defense that “well, she could have left the room if she wanted to” is not exactly exculpatory.
Matt Lauer was a creepy, habitual sexual predator who deserved to be fired and the public humiliation that followed. That fact makes it more, not less, important that reporting about him, and alleged related episodes (like Farrow’s claim that Weinstein blackmailed NBC into shutting down Farrow’s story with a threat to out Lauer) be solid, rather than shoddy.
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