By Philip Klein on 11.5.07 @ 12:09AM
Getting Keith Olbermann to admit error was no easy task.
Apologies, it seems, do not come easy to Keith Olbermann.
Last Wednesday, while researching a column
about the growing hatred of Rudy Giuliani among liberals, I
reviewed a portion of Olbermann's show from the prior evening in
which he and Arianna Huffington discussed why Giuliani was a liar.
The jumping off point for their conversation was a comment Giuliani
reportedly made in which he said that leading Democrats want to
invite Osama bin Laden to the White House. The sensationalistic
remarks had been first reported by the Associated Press on Monday,
and caused a stir among anti-Giuliani bloggers. But when reviewing
Olbermann's show, which broadcast a video clip of Giuliani's
comments, I noticed that Giuliani didn't say Osama, but actually
said Assad. As in, Syrian President Bashar Assad. This
stripped the statement of any of its shock value, because Assad was
one of the leaders who Barack Obama has, in fact, said he would be willing to meet with in
Washington, with no preconditions, within the first year of his
presidency. After discovering the error, I did a blog
post reporting my findings, and assumed that all of the news
outlets that erroneously reported what Giuliani said would have to
issue corrections.
The reason I made that assumption is that I had spent more than
three years as a reporter with Reuters, and though it may be hard
for some to believe, I was required to issue an immediate
correction whenever I made an obvious factual error, no matter how
minor. It was always a considerable embarrassment to have my name
appear under a headline that began with the all-in-caps word
"CORRECTED," but I understood that part of being a journalist was
owning up to errors as soon as they were brought to my attention.
(Some examples from the archives here and here.)
The first few hours following my initial post on the error
reaffirmed my understanding of standard journalistic practice.
Andrew Sullivan, who had lambasted Giuliani based on the inaccurate
remarks, issued a correction. The AP also corrected its story. It seemed natural to me
that Olbermann would quickly have to follow suit. But the only
mention of Giuliani on Wednesday night's show was yet another
segment attacking him.
On Thursday, I called MSNBC's media relations office, and asked
whether they planned to correct the mistake. I was instructed by
the woman who answered the phone to send an email with the details
so she could pass them along. I followed up with a cordial email
explaining that on Tuesday's show, Olbermann said, "A year before
the election and Rudy Giuliani is already publicly contending the
Democrats are willing to invite Osama bin Laden to the White House
to negotiate. Sure they are, buster." I noted that in the video
clip that ran on Olbermann's show, Giuliani clearly said Assad --
and the official transcript of the show appearing on the MSNBC
website reflected this. I also pointed out that the AP had already
corrected its story, and wrote, "I have been following this story,
and am inquiring as to whether 'Countdown' plans to correct the
error." After not receiving a response, I spoke to the woman two
more times that afternoon, but was told only that she would pass my
message along to MSNBC spokeswoman Alana Russo.
After yet another Olbermann show passed by on Thursday night, I
called back on Friday and again was told that my message would be
passed along. Since I wasn't making any progress, I decided to
contact Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz about
the story. I specifically wondered whether the standards for
correcting errors on television were different from what I was
accustomed to from my years working at a wire service.
"Cable news hosts have great leeway to sound off about political
candidates, but they can't bend the facts in the process," Kurtz
wrote back to me that afternoon. "It looks to me that Olbermann
made a mistake in criticizing Giuliani for supposedly saying the
Democrats would invite Osama to the White House, when Rudy said
Assad. The best course would be for Keith to correct the
record."
I asked Kurtz whether he planned to follow up on the story. He
soon responded that he had just called MSNBC and, much to my
surprise, was informed that a correction would air Friday night --
obviously making his own comments dated.
I called MSNBC for the fifth time, and the previously elusive
spokeswoman Russo answered her own phone, apologized for not being
able to take my calls the previous day, and informed me that
Olbermann would issue a correction and apologize that night.
During his Friday show, Olbermann did apologize,
but only reaffirmed his utter lack of professionalism. Instead of
taking responsibility for the error, he pointed fingers at the AP.
"There are obviously mitigating circumstances regarding this
mistake," he said, because the AP didn't corrected its story until
47 hours after it hit the wires, or 21 hours after his Tuesday show
aired.
In reality, Olbermann didn't have to depend on the AP, because
he aired the actual video of Giuliani's remarks. In rebroadcasting
the remarks during his correction, Olberman said they showed "why
there was widespread confusion" about what Giuliani said. No,
actually, the video showed Giuliani said Assad, something that was
clear as a bell to your humble correspondent, as well as to whoever
transcribed Olbermann's show for MSNBC. It is also worth noting
that the AP correction still hit the wires nearly two and a half
hours before his Wednesday show, and by early Thursday I had
already informed MSNBC of the error, just in case he missed it. Yet
Olbermann still waited until well into his Friday broadcast to
issue a correction and apology to Giuliani. "To him, and to you, I
apologize," he said after his long-winded explanation.
The rest was run of the mill Olbermann. He expressed surprise at
a past Giuliani comment that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's "government of
Iran is considered to be the single biggest state sponsor of
terrorism in the world." This, even though the State Department in
its annual report on the subject released on April 30 wrote, "Iran remained the most active state sponsor of
terrorism." Olbermann also gave Giuliani all three positions in his
enlightening regular feature, "The Worst Person in the World." But
dissecting that would require another column, and I'd rather not
make correcting Keith a full-time job.
topics:
Barack Obama, Television, Iran