THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Thursday, February 5, 2015

THREE MARTINI LUNCH: FEBRUARY 5, 2015

National Review's Jim Geraghty and Radio America's Greg Corombos discuss current events. Today's topics: Jordan's King Abdullah vows to personally drop bombs on ISIS, Brian Williams gets caught lying about getting shot at in Iraq, and Oregon's Democrat governor, John Kitzhaver, faces corruption charges.



Brian Williams 2013: I thought I was going to die when my chopper was fired on
The lie seems more brazen with each telling so let's make sure to flag all of them. Here's a nifty catch by Chuck Ross at the Daily Caller from an interview Williams gave to Alec Baldwin two years ago in which he claimed he "briefly" thought he might die when his chopper suffered an attack that never actually happened — but, see, that's the risk you run when you're a serious newsman, he goes on to say. That bit comes at 54:30, but I recommend listening at 53:00 to hear him grumble about the "haters" online who like to call him a phony populist. How dare they question the common-man bona fides of a multimillionaire who made up a story about nearly dying from enemy fire to steal a little glory from American troops.
To answer Ed's question, though, yes, of course Williams's career will survive. This matrix from Sean Davis will serve you well now and in the future:
Davis thinks Williams will take a temporary leave of absence until this blows over, which should be, oh, by the close of weekday business tomorrow. If this were a Fox News newsman who'd been telling phony war stories, we'd be in the "crucifixion" square of Davis's table; as it is, we're in the "wrong lie/right team" square, which means we're already well on our way to "doesn't exist."
Big caveat, though: What if other stories he's been telling about his adventures as a James Bond/Walter Cronkite hybrid start getting challenged? SooperMexican has a clip of him claiming that he stayed in a hotel "overrun with gangs" when he was in New Orleans covering Hurricane Katrina 10 years ago; supposedly, an unnamed policeman rescued him from some sort of attack in a stairwell. Did that happen? Did Williams, as he once claimed, actually see a body floating by from his hotel window?
NBC can tolerate this guy taking a dump once on their pretensions to honesty and integrity in news coverage. Two, three, or four dumps is probably a few too many for comfort, though. That's when they have to flush...
Also read:

When Brian Williams and NBC Nightly News covered Hillary's "Tuzla Dash"

Variety's buried lede: "Senior" NBC News execs "counseled" Williams to stop telling helicopter story

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