THE prayers of those hoping that real television news
might take its cues from Jon Stewart were finally answered
on Feb. 9, 2005. A real newsman borrowed a technique from
fake news to deliver real news about fake news in prime
time.
Let me explain.
On "Countdown," a nightly news hour on MSNBC, the anchor,
Keith Olbermann, led off with a classic "Daily Show"-style
bit: a rapid-fire montage of sharply edited video bites
illustrating the apparent idiocy of those in Washington. In
this case, the eight clips stretched over a year in the
White House briefing room - from February 2004 to late last
month - and all featured a reporter named "Jeff." In most of
them, the White House press secretary, Scott McClellan, says
"Go ahead, Jeff," and "Jeff" responds with a softball
question intended not to elicit information but to boost
President Bush and smear his political opponents. In the
last clip, "Jeff" is quizzing the president himself, in his
first post-inaugural press conference of Jan. 26. Referring
to Harry Reid and Hillary Clinton, "Jeff" asks, "How are you
going to work with people who seem to have divorced
themselves from reality?"
If we did not live in a time when the news culture itself
is divorced from reality, the story might end there: "Jeff,"
you'd assume, was a lapdog reporter from a legitimate, if
right-wing, news organization like Fox, and you'd get some
predictable yuks from watching a compressed video anthology
of his kissing up to power. But as Mr. Olbermann explained,
"Jeff Gannon," the star of the montage, was a newsman no
more real than a "Senior White House Correspondent" like
Stephen Colbert on "The Daily Show" and he worked for a news
organization no more real than The Onion. Yet the video
broadcast by Mr. Olbermann was not fake. "Jeff" was in the
real White House, and he did have those exchanges with the
real Mr. McClellan and the real Mr. Bush.
"Jeff Gannon's" real name is James D. Guckert. His
employer was a Web site called Talon News, staffed mostly by
volunteer Republican activists. Media Matters for America,
the liberal press monitor that has done the most exhaustive
research into the case, discovered that Talon's "news" often
consists of recycled Republican National Committee and White
House press releases, and its content frequently overlaps
with another partisan site, GOPUSA, with which it shares its
owner, a Texas delegate to the 2000 Republican convention.
Nonetheless, for nearly two years the White House press
office had credentialed Mr. Guckert, even though, as Dana
Milbank of The Washington Post explained on Mr. Olbermann's
show, he "was representing a phony media company that
doesn't really have any such thing as circulation or
readership."
How this happened is a mystery that has yet to be solved.
"Jeff" has now quit Talon News not because he and it have
been exposed as fakes but because of other embarrassing
blogosphere revelations linking him to sites like
hotmilitarystud.com and to an apparently promising career as
an X-rated $200-per-hour "escort." If Mr. Guckert, the
author of Talon News exclusives like "Kerry Could Become
First Gay President," is yet another link in the boundless
network of homophobic Republican closet cases, that's not
without interest. But it shouldn't distract from the real
question - that is, the real news - of how this fake newsman
might be connected to a White House propaganda machine that
grows curiouser by the day. Though Mr. McClellan told Editor
& Publisher magazine that he didn't know until recently that
Mr. Guckert was using an alias, Bruce Bartlett, a White
House veteran of the Reagan-Bush I era, wrote on the
nonpartisan journalism Web site Romenesko, that "if Gannon
was using an alias, the White House staff had to be involved
in maintaining his cover." (Otherwise, it would be a rather
amazing post-9/11 security breach.)
By my count, "Jeff Gannon" is now at least the sixth
"journalist" (four of whom have been unmasked so far this
year) to have been a propagandist on the payroll of either
the Bush administration or a barely arms-length ally like
Talon News while simultaneously appearing in print or
broadcast forums that purport to be real news. Of these six,
two have been syndicated newspaper columnists paid by the
Department of Health and Human Services to promote the
administration's "marriage" initiatives. The other four have
played real newsmen on TV. Before Mr. Guckert and Armstrong
Williams, the talking head paid $240,000 by the Department
of Education, there were Karen Ryan and Alberto Garcia. Let
us not forget these pioneers - the Woodward and Bernstein of
fake news. They starred in bogus reports ("In Washington,
I'm Karen Ryan reporting," went the script) pretending to
"sort through the details" of the administration's Medicare
prescription-drug plan in 2004. Such "reports," some of
which found their way into news packages distributed to
local stations by CNN, appeared in more than 50 news
broadcasts around the country and have now been deemed
illegal "covert propaganda" by the Government Accountability
Office.
The money that paid for both the Ryan-Garcia news
packages and the Armstrong Williams contract was siphoned
through the same huge public relations firm, Ketchum
Communications, which itself filtered the funds through
subcontractors. A new report by Congressional Democrats
finds that Ketchum has received $97 million of the
administration's total $250 million P.R. kitty, of which the
Williams and Ryan-Garcia scams would account for only a
fraction. We have yet to learn precisely where the rest of
it ended up.
Even now, we know that the fake news generated by the six
known shills is only a small piece of the administration's
overall propaganda effort. President Bush wasn't entirely
joking when he called the notoriously meek March 6, 2003,
White House press conference on the eve of the Iraq invasion
"scripted" while it was still going on. (And "Jeff Gannon"
apparently wasn't even at that one). Everything is scripted.
The pre-fab "Ask President Bush" town hall-style meetings
held during last year's campaign (typical question: "Mr.
President, as a child, how can I help you get votes?") were
carefully designed for television so that, as Kenneth R.
Bazinet wrote last summer in New York's Daily News,
"unsuspecting viewers" tuning in their local news might get
the false impression they were "watching a completely open
forum." A Pentagon Office of Strategic Influence, intended
to provide propagandistic news items, some of them possibly
false, to foreign news media was shut down in 2002 when it
became an embarrassing political liability. But much more
quietly, another Pentagon propaganda arm, the Pentagon
Channel, has recently been added as a free channel for
American viewers of the Dish Network. Can a Social Security
Channel be far behind?
It is a brilliant strategy. When the Bush administration
isn't using taxpayers' money to buy its own fake news, it
does everything it can to shut out and pillory real
reporters who might tell Americans what is happening in what
is, at least in theory, their own government. Paul Farhi of
The Washington Post discovered that even at an inaugural
ball he was assigned "minders" - attractive women who
wouldn't give him their full names - to let the revelers
know that Big Brother was watching should they be tempted to
say anything remotely off message.
The inability of real journalists to penetrate this White
House is not all the White House's fault. The errors of real
news organizations have played perfectly into the
administration's insidious efforts to blur the boundaries
between the fake and the real and thereby demolish the whole
notion that there could possibly be an objective and
accurate free press. Conservatives, who supposedly deplore
post-modernism, are now welcoming in a brave new world in
which it's a given that there can be no empirical reality in
news, only the reality you want to hear (or they want you to
hear). The frequent fecklessness of the Beltway gang does
little to penetrate this Washington smokescreen. For a case
in point, you needed only switch to CNN on the day after Mr.
Olbermann did his fake-news-style story on the fake reporter
in the White House press corps.
"Jeff Gannon" had decided to give an exclusive TV
interview to a sober practitioner of by-the-book real news,
Wolf Blitzer. Given this journalistic opportunity, the
anchor asked questions almost as soft as those "Jeff"
himself had asked in the White House. Mr. Blitzer didn't
question Mr. Guckert's outrageous assertion that he adopted
a fake name because "Jeff Gannon is easier to pronounce and
easier to remember." (Is "Jeff" easier to pronounce than his
real first name, Jim?). Mr. Blitzer never questioned Gannon/Guckert's
assertion that Talon News "is a separate, independent news
division" of GOPUSA. Only in a brief follow-up interview a
day later did he ask Gannon/Guckert to explain why he was
questioned by the F.B.I. in the case that may send
legitimate reporters to jail: Mr. Guckert has at times
implied that he either saw or possessed a classified memo
identifying Valerie Plame as a C.I.A. operative. Might that
memo have come from the same officials who looked after
"Jeff Gannon's" press credentials? Did Mr. Guckert have any
connection with CNN's own Robert Novak, whose publication of
Ms. Plame's name started this investigation in the first
place? The anchor didn't go there.
The "real" news from CNN was no news at all, but it's not
as if any of its competitors did much better. The "Jeff
Gannon" story got less attention than another media frenzy -
that set off by the veteran news executive Eason Jordan, who
resigned from CNN after speaking recklessly at a panel
discussion at Davos, where he apparently implied, at least
in passing, that American troops deliberately targeted
reporters. Is the banishment of a real newsman for behaving
foolishly at a bloviation conference in Switzerland a more
pressing story than that of a fake newsman gaining years of
access to the White House (and network TV cameras) under
mysterious circumstances? With real news this timid, the
appointment of Jon Stewart to take over Dan Rather's chair
at CBS News could be just the jolt television journalism
needs. As Mr. Olbermann demonstrated when he borrowed a
sharp "Daily Show" tool to puncture the "Jeff Gannon" case,
the only road back to reality may be to fight fake with
fake.