By Wlady Pleszczynski on 4.30.02 @ 1:26AM
Lately the pickings have been slim. At Slate they're bound to get slimmer.
Summer is still a ways away, though you wouldn't know it from
the lazy and hazy thinking you can come across these days. In the
latest New Republic, a letter to the editor from a chaired
professor at Columbia University criticizes the magazine for
"practicing the kind of 'If there's smoke, there's fire' journalism
previously associated with David Brock and The American
Spectator.'" In a similar vein, the staunchly Democratic
American Prospect's online publication declared
last week that it is "incumbent upon" conservatives who claim Brock
is now a liar to admit "that they were wrong to accept Brock's
reporting about Bill Clinton, Anita Hill, etc." On Monday the same
site expressed that thought in unadulterated form, noting
that it's been "pitching a fit about conservatives who attack David
Brock for lying without also rejecting his previous fact free
reporting on various Clinton scandals for The American
Spectator."
Anyone who could characterize that previous reporting as being
"fact free" obviously hasn't read a word of it. The young men and
women who run the American Prospect Online were perhaps
still in high school when that reporting appeared. But that's no
excuse for not doing one's homework today. If only the writer of
those passages had taken the time, she'd see that all of Brock's
Spectator reports were richly detailed, built on a factual
base that remains unchallenged. If those stories were attacked at
the time, it was because of their implications. Simon and Schuster
would not have paid Brock a million dollars if his facts weren't
iron clad.
The current flap has given rise to one great misunderstanding:
That because Brock, for political reasons best known to himself and
Sidney Blumenthal, now rejects the fruits of his earlier labors,
those labors are today of no value. As anyone who'll trouble
himself to check the record will quickly notice, there's a clear
dividing point in Brock's writing. So long as he wasn't a part of
his story -- i.e., so long as he played the professional reporter
coolly laying out the factual evidence -- his work remained
impressive. By 1997, after suffering what he felt was personal and
professional humiliation when his Hillary biography failed to catch
fire, the subject of his work increasingly became himself. The more
he talked about himself, the more obviously tendentious and hollow
his writing became.
His books offer a lasting record: the first two were heavily
footnote, annotated, and indexed, as well as fact-checked and
vetted with scrupulous care; the current one contains not a single
footnote; it has no index; and it is almost entirely based on
Brock's shaky (or alleged) recall. There no evidence it was even
fact-checked. The first mention of me alone (p. 85), contains three
errors of fact.
And you know what? Brock couldn't care less. Whenever he's been
caught out, he's fallen back on Clintonian evasion and brazen spin,
because he knows that in the circles he now travels in accuracy and
a modicum of honesty are the last things anyone expects. Brock
today is interesting only because he once was interesting.
The American Prospect Online's comments were in
reaction to the most recent mini-tempest involving Brock: his
appearance last Thursday on "Crossfire," where he gave the false
impression (certainly reinforced by co-host James Carville) that
Fox News was afraid to have him on to discuss his book. To
observers like Andrew Sullivan, the Media Research Center, and
National Review Online, the evidence again suggested that
Brock was lying, since one of his first appearances after his
current book came out was on a Fox afternoon program. The
American Prospect Online initially also thought he had
lied, but then pulled back when sonar listening devices once owned
by Oliver Stone apparently detected a qualifying reference by Brock
to Fox "prime time" amid some "Crossfire" crosstalk. In other
words, Brock had an out. Such are the great issues of our day.
How fortunate that they are not limited to conservative-liberal
rivalries. Yesterday it was reported that the great two-man race to
succeed Michael Kinsley as editor of Slate.com had ended,
and that the winner was Jacob Weisberg. The stock market promptly
rose to pre-post-bubble heights, and the fellow Weisberg had
defeated, Jack Shafer, learned he was slated to be transferred to
the web magazine's Tajikistan bureau.
Now if there had been no JFK and we could rest confident that
life is fair, there would have been no Weisberg-Shafer contest. But
this was one of those deals where the fix was in from the start.
Weisberg is a good conventional corporate liberal, but with about
as much sparkle and unpredictability as a year-old open can of
Coke. Shafer, by contrast, as I'm sure anyone who has ever worked
with him will tell you, is brilliant, original, independent, and
probably more than a little impossible at times -- but the results,
the results! Left to his own devices he'd shake up the gray-flannel
suited journalistic world. Microsoft-owned Slate obviously
couldn't dare make an interesting choice.
And so we were left with such valedictory comments to
yesterday's New
York Times as this one from Kinsley, who said of Weisberg that
"Many of the more successful editorial ideas on Slate are his -- he
came up with the Today's Papers feature, for instance -- and he
thinks very Webby. He has a gift for this." That's it? Kinsley's
successor's major claim to fame is that he suggested their webzine
run a daily review of the morning papers? How very webby of him.
Weisberg's own remarks weren't any better. Noting Slate's
"strong orientation toward politics, policy and economics, and some
very good arts and cultural comment," he added that he'd "like to
increase the quantity of cultural comment with more music, perhaps
a TV column and more life-style stuff." Life-style stuff? Shafer
would beat the stuffing out of a lazy comment like that. But high
time someone recognized the crying need for another TV column.
Never can have enough meaning in our lives.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Economics, Business, Books