<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type="text/css" media="screen" href="http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/themes/vip/newyorkobserver/stylesheets/rss.css"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Observer &#187; David Firestone</title>
	<atom:link href="http://observer.com/term/david-firestone/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://observer.com</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Sat, 25 May 2013 15:15:43 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language></language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.com/</generator>
<cloud domain='observer.com' port='80' path='/?rsscloud=notify' registerProcedure='' protocol='http-post' />
<image>
		<url>http://1.gravatar.com/blavatar/dac0f3722a48a53be75eb06c0c4f5119?s=96&#038;d=http%3A%2F%2Fs2.wp.com%2Fi%2Fbuttonw-com.png</url>
		<title>Observer &#187; David Firestone</title>
		<link>http://observer.com</link>
	</image>
	<atom:link rel="search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml" href="http://observer.com/osd.xml" title="Observer" />
	<atom:link rel='hub' href='http://observer.com/?pushpress=hub'/>
		<item>
				
		<title>Times&#8217; National Desk in &#8216;Head-Snapping&#8217; Revamp</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2010/03/itimesi-national-desk-in-headsnapping-revamp/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Mar 2010 00:30:01 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2010/03/itimesi-national-desk-in-headsnapping-revamp/</link>
			<dc:creator>John Koblin</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2010/03/itimesi-national-desk-in-headsnapping-revamp/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/11berke-190.jpg" />In recent weeks, <em>The New York Times</em>&rsquo; national desk has undergone quite a face-lift. There&rsquo;s a new editor, Rick Berke. There is a new deputy editor in Adam Bryant. And there will be a new Los Angeles bureau chief in Adam Nagourney.</p>
<p>Two editors will leave the department&mdash;Suzanne Daley, the outgoing editor, and Dean Murphy, the deputy editor&mdash;and, according to several sources, up to four additional editors will also leave the desk and are currently looking for other jobs at the paper (David Firestone, a deputy; Jack Kadden, another deputy; Joan Nassivera, assistant national editor; and Suzanne Spector, the Web editor).&nbsp;</p>
<p>By <em>The Times</em>&rsquo; standards, that&rsquo;s an upheaval.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Head-snapping,&rdquo; said one reporter.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Highly unusual,&rdquo; said another Times source.</p>
<p>It&rsquo;s standard practice for a new department head to assemble his own team. But the fact that Mr. Berke is on the verge of replacing roughly half the editors on the national desk less than a month after he was named editor&mdash;he hasn&rsquo;t even formally started the job yet&mdash;is notable for a newsroom that has had so little movement in recent years.</p>
<p>&ldquo;It is normal for someone taking over a major desk to build their own team. I did it myself, though at a much slower pace,&rdquo; said Ms. Daley, the outgoing national editor, who will be a European correspondent reporting from New York.</p>
<p>Generally it takes many months for a department head to put together that team. This time, it&rsquo;s been &ldquo;on a swifter timetable than usual,&rdquo; acknowledged Mr. Berke in an email.</p>
<p>Still a week away from filling the editor&rsquo;s desk, Mr. Berke has already been given greater latitude than most new department heads, due to his close relationship with Bill Keller and Jill Abramson, sources said. Mr. Berke was most recently <em>The Times</em>&rsquo; assistant managing editor. Among other jobs, he was the traffic cop for the front page.</p>
<p>He has been a favorite of the top bosses since he took over his job in 2005. &ldquo;Rick is trying to make a strong impression, but he&rsquo;s coming off the masthead and getting more help than most department heads would have had,&rdquo; said one senior editor. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s gotten the permission to do it quickly.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s moved quickly to assemble his team,&rdquo; said Mr. Keller in an email. &ldquo;From his masthead perch, he&rsquo;s had a chance to study the entire newsroom, so he didn&rsquo;t have to do a lot of additional reporting or auditioning to know who he wanted.&rdquo;</p>
<p>In mid-February, when Mr. Keller announced that Mr. Berke was taking over the national desk, it surprised many. <em>The Times </em>gossip mill kept churning out the name Dean Murphy, Ms. Daley&rsquo;s deputy, as her likely successor.</p>
<p>Mr. Keller had other plans. He conducted no formal search and gave the job to Mr. Berke.</p>
<p>In a memo announcing the change, Mr. Keller said that the &ldquo;amazing&rdquo; Rick Berke &ldquo;has done it all&mdash;except, before this, being the head of a major news department.&rdquo;<br />Though Mr. Berke&rsquo;s experience is deep&mdash;he worked in the Washington bureau for 19 years, rising from night editor to national political correspondent to Washington editor before joining the masthead in 2005&mdash;he has never run a department. And though it could appear like a demotion to step down from the masthead to work on the national desk, there are likely greater factors at play.</p>
<p><!--nextpage-->
<p>Indeed, it&rsquo;s widely believed that Mr. Berke&rsquo;s move to the national desk means he is being groomed for a bigger job. In less than four years, Mr. Keller will turn 65, the mandatory retirement age for executive editor. Ms. Abramson is among a very short list of candidates to replace Mr. Keller. Mr. Berke, who worked alongside Ms. Abramson in Washington for more than a year when she was the bureau chief, is among a very short list of candidates who could work alongside her again as managing editor.</p>
<p>&ldquo;He needs this experience to be Jill&rsquo;s number two,&rdquo; said one source.</p>
<p>With the national desk in his control now, Mr. Berke is essentially going back to school to get the degree he&rsquo;s never had.</p>
<p>And so far, here&rsquo;s what he&rsquo;s working with: Dean Murphy, Ms. Daley&rsquo;s deputy, who was passed over for the job, will take the deputy spot in the business section under Larry Ingrassia. David Firestone said that Mr. Berke asked him to stay on, but he was still undecided.</p>
<p>&ldquo;There are a lot of changes going to the national desk, and I haven&rsquo;t decided if I&rsquo;m going to stay,&rdquo; said Mr. Firestone. &ldquo;I was asked to stay, but I can&rsquo;t say at this point what&rsquo;s likely to happen next.&rdquo; (Sources said that Mr. Firestone may take a job on the editorial board.)</p>
<p>Mr. Berke told Jack Kadden, Suzanne Spector and Joan Nassivera, all editors on the national desk, that they would have to find new jobs at the paper, sources said. Mr. Berke, often described as one of the nice guys in the shark tank that is The Times, is allowing them the time to find new jobs before booting them from the desk, the sources added.</p>
<p>And in the next week, Mr. Berke is expected to make more announcements: formally naming Mr. Nagourney, a former colleague in Washington and a close friend, the Los Angeles bureau chief, giving him the plum assignment that he&rsquo;s been due for some time; naming Lisa Tozzi, a popular staffer on the Web, as one of his deputies; and bringing in Marcus Mabry, the enterprise editor for the business section, to be an editor.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The seeds are being planted quickly. &ldquo;There are no grand designs behind the move,&rdquo; said Mr. Berke in an email, discussing his new job. &ldquo;It grew out of some blue-sky discussions among top editors, and I&rsquo;m really excited about the challenge.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;We made Rick national editor because we were confident he&rsquo;d be a great national editor,&rdquo; said Mr. Keller. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s journalistically ambitious and his enthusiasm for great stories is infectious.&rdquo;</p>
<p><em>jkoblin@observer.com</em></p>
<p><a href="/2010/media/former-bookforum-editor-chris-lehmann-joins-yahoo-news"><strong>MORE: Former <em>Bookforum</em> editor Chris Lehmann joins Yahoo News &gt;</strong></a></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/11berke-190.jpg" />In recent weeks, <em>The New York Times</em>&rsquo; national desk has undergone quite a face-lift. There&rsquo;s a new editor, Rick Berke. There is a new deputy editor in Adam Bryant. And there will be a new Los Angeles bureau chief in Adam Nagourney.</p>
<p>Two editors will leave the department&mdash;Suzanne Daley, the outgoing editor, and Dean Murphy, the deputy editor&mdash;and, according to several sources, up to four additional editors will also leave the desk and are currently looking for other jobs at the paper (David Firestone, a deputy; Jack Kadden, another deputy; Joan Nassivera, assistant national editor; and Suzanne Spector, the Web editor).&nbsp;</p>
<p>By <em>The Times</em>&rsquo; standards, that&rsquo;s an upheaval.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Head-snapping,&rdquo; said one reporter.</p>
<p>&ldquo;Highly unusual,&rdquo; said another Times source.</p>
<p>It&rsquo;s standard practice for a new department head to assemble his own team. But the fact that Mr. Berke is on the verge of replacing roughly half the editors on the national desk less than a month after he was named editor&mdash;he hasn&rsquo;t even formally started the job yet&mdash;is notable for a newsroom that has had so little movement in recent years.</p>
<p>&ldquo;It is normal for someone taking over a major desk to build their own team. I did it myself, though at a much slower pace,&rdquo; said Ms. Daley, the outgoing national editor, who will be a European correspondent reporting from New York.</p>
<p>Generally it takes many months for a department head to put together that team. This time, it&rsquo;s been &ldquo;on a swifter timetable than usual,&rdquo; acknowledged Mr. Berke in an email.</p>
<p>Still a week away from filling the editor&rsquo;s desk, Mr. Berke has already been given greater latitude than most new department heads, due to his close relationship with Bill Keller and Jill Abramson, sources said. Mr. Berke was most recently <em>The Times</em>&rsquo; assistant managing editor. Among other jobs, he was the traffic cop for the front page.</p>
<p>He has been a favorite of the top bosses since he took over his job in 2005. &ldquo;Rick is trying to make a strong impression, but he&rsquo;s coming off the masthead and getting more help than most department heads would have had,&rdquo; said one senior editor. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s gotten the permission to do it quickly.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s moved quickly to assemble his team,&rdquo; said Mr. Keller in an email. &ldquo;From his masthead perch, he&rsquo;s had a chance to study the entire newsroom, so he didn&rsquo;t have to do a lot of additional reporting or auditioning to know who he wanted.&rdquo;</p>
<p>In mid-February, when Mr. Keller announced that Mr. Berke was taking over the national desk, it surprised many. <em>The Times </em>gossip mill kept churning out the name Dean Murphy, Ms. Daley&rsquo;s deputy, as her likely successor.</p>
<p>Mr. Keller had other plans. He conducted no formal search and gave the job to Mr. Berke.</p>
<p>In a memo announcing the change, Mr. Keller said that the &ldquo;amazing&rdquo; Rick Berke &ldquo;has done it all&mdash;except, before this, being the head of a major news department.&rdquo;<br />Though Mr. Berke&rsquo;s experience is deep&mdash;he worked in the Washington bureau for 19 years, rising from night editor to national political correspondent to Washington editor before joining the masthead in 2005&mdash;he has never run a department. And though it could appear like a demotion to step down from the masthead to work on the national desk, there are likely greater factors at play.</p>
<p><!--nextpage-->
<p>Indeed, it&rsquo;s widely believed that Mr. Berke&rsquo;s move to the national desk means he is being groomed for a bigger job. In less than four years, Mr. Keller will turn 65, the mandatory retirement age for executive editor. Ms. Abramson is among a very short list of candidates to replace Mr. Keller. Mr. Berke, who worked alongside Ms. Abramson in Washington for more than a year when she was the bureau chief, is among a very short list of candidates who could work alongside her again as managing editor.</p>
<p>&ldquo;He needs this experience to be Jill&rsquo;s number two,&rdquo; said one source.</p>
<p>With the national desk in his control now, Mr. Berke is essentially going back to school to get the degree he&rsquo;s never had.</p>
<p>And so far, here&rsquo;s what he&rsquo;s working with: Dean Murphy, Ms. Daley&rsquo;s deputy, who was passed over for the job, will take the deputy spot in the business section under Larry Ingrassia. David Firestone said that Mr. Berke asked him to stay on, but he was still undecided.</p>
<p>&ldquo;There are a lot of changes going to the national desk, and I haven&rsquo;t decided if I&rsquo;m going to stay,&rdquo; said Mr. Firestone. &ldquo;I was asked to stay, but I can&rsquo;t say at this point what&rsquo;s likely to happen next.&rdquo; (Sources said that Mr. Firestone may take a job on the editorial board.)</p>
<p>Mr. Berke told Jack Kadden, Suzanne Spector and Joan Nassivera, all editors on the national desk, that they would have to find new jobs at the paper, sources said. Mr. Berke, often described as one of the nice guys in the shark tank that is The Times, is allowing them the time to find new jobs before booting them from the desk, the sources added.</p>
<p>And in the next week, Mr. Berke is expected to make more announcements: formally naming Mr. Nagourney, a former colleague in Washington and a close friend, the Los Angeles bureau chief, giving him the plum assignment that he&rsquo;s been due for some time; naming Lisa Tozzi, a popular staffer on the Web, as one of his deputies; and bringing in Marcus Mabry, the enterprise editor for the business section, to be an editor.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The seeds are being planted quickly. &ldquo;There are no grand designs behind the move,&rdquo; said Mr. Berke in an email, discussing his new job. &ldquo;It grew out of some blue-sky discussions among top editors, and I&rsquo;m really excited about the challenge.&rdquo;</p>
<p>&ldquo;We made Rick national editor because we were confident he&rsquo;d be a great national editor,&rdquo; said Mr. Keller. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s journalistically ambitious and his enthusiasm for great stories is infectious.&rdquo;</p>
<p><em>jkoblin@observer.com</em></p>
<p><a href="/2010/media/former-bookforum-editor-chris-lehmann-joins-yahoo-news"><strong>MORE: Former <em>Bookforum</em> editor Chris Lehmann joins Yahoo News &gt;</strong></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2010/03/itimesi-national-desk-in-headsnapping-revamp/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>

		<media:content url="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/11berke-190.jpg" medium="image" />
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Dan Barry&#8217;s New [em]Times[/em] Column: Covering the Lower 48!</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2006/11/dan-barrys-new-emtimesem-column-covering-the-lower-48/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Nov 2006 16:19:46 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2006/11/dan-barrys-new-emtimesem-column-covering-the-lower-48/</link>
			<dc:creator></dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2006/11/dan-barrys-new-emtimesem-column-covering-the-lower-48/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>First<a href="http://www.mediainfo.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003381821"> John Tierney</a>, and now this!  In early 2007, fellow <em>New York Times </em>columnist Dan Barry will be giving up his "About New York" metro column to join the paper's national desk. </p>
<p>In the yet-to-be-named column, Barry will be "taking his voice and his notebook beyond the Hudson to 47 other states," according to a press release. Alaska and Hawaii need not apply. </p>
<p>Full release is after the jump.<br />
<!--break--><br />
Date: Nov 14, 2006<br />
Subject: From Suzanne Daley and David Firestone: A New Column for Dan Barry</p>
<p>To the Staff:</p>
<p>In his memoir, Dan Barry describes his fear, when he first walked past the personalized landfills in the Times' newsroom in 1995, that he might not make it past his six-month probationary period. Somehow he squeaked by, and for the next 11 years, he distinguished himself and his newspaper on some of the most important assignments that Metro and National had to offer, from the wreckage of Flight 800 to the squalor of Room 9, from the salt wash of Staten Island to the fog of Ground Zero and the dark waters of Katrina. Since 2003, he has the been the steward of the "About New York" column, taking readers along a remarkable journey through the sounds and the smells, the sages and cranks, the pain and hidden beauty of the five boroughs. He has done so in the tradition of the paper's finest columnists, with an unmistakable voice of wry grace and rueful passion.</p>
<p>Now it is time to extend his abilities to a new frontier. Dan is about to inaugurate a new weekly column for the National Desk, taking his voice and his notebook beyond the Hudson to 47 other states. The column, still unnamed, will in essence be a national version of "About New York," and those who read of his journeys through the floodlands earlier this year know the power of that combination. Dan will burrow under news stories and unearth tales in wheat-field counties, cul-de-sacs and inner cities, and we hope he will soon become intimately familiar with the nation's air traffic system.</p>
<p>This is a new venture for Dan and for us, and in many ways it will be defined as it progresses. But we know of no one better to provide that definition, illuminating far corners of the country as he has done so well for our hometown. The column will begin in the new year.</p>
<p>Please join us in giving Dan your best wishes and story ideas.</p>
<p>Suzanne Daley<br />
David Firestone</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First<a href="http://www.mediainfo.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003381821"> John Tierney</a>, and now this!  In early 2007, fellow <em>New York Times </em>columnist Dan Barry will be giving up his "About New York" metro column to join the paper's national desk. </p>
<p>In the yet-to-be-named column, Barry will be "taking his voice and his notebook beyond the Hudson to 47 other states," according to a press release. Alaska and Hawaii need not apply. </p>
<p>Full release is after the jump.<br />
<!--break--><br />
Date: Nov 14, 2006<br />
Subject: From Suzanne Daley and David Firestone: A New Column for Dan Barry</p>
<p>To the Staff:</p>
<p>In his memoir, Dan Barry describes his fear, when he first walked past the personalized landfills in the Times' newsroom in 1995, that he might not make it past his six-month probationary period. Somehow he squeaked by, and for the next 11 years, he distinguished himself and his newspaper on some of the most important assignments that Metro and National had to offer, from the wreckage of Flight 800 to the squalor of Room 9, from the salt wash of Staten Island to the fog of Ground Zero and the dark waters of Katrina. Since 2003, he has the been the steward of the "About New York" column, taking readers along a remarkable journey through the sounds and the smells, the sages and cranks, the pain and hidden beauty of the five boroughs. He has done so in the tradition of the paper's finest columnists, with an unmistakable voice of wry grace and rueful passion.</p>
<p>Now it is time to extend his abilities to a new frontier. Dan is about to inaugurate a new weekly column for the National Desk, taking his voice and his notebook beyond the Hudson to 47 other states. The column, still unnamed, will in essence be a national version of "About New York," and those who read of his journeys through the floodlands earlier this year know the power of that combination. Dan will burrow under news stories and unearth tales in wheat-field counties, cul-de-sacs and inner cities, and we hope he will soon become intimately familiar with the nation's air traffic system.</p>
<p>This is a new venture for Dan and for us, and in many ways it will be defined as it progresses. But we know of no one better to provide that definition, illuminating far corners of the country as he has done so well for our hometown. The column will begin in the new year.</p>
<p>Please join us in giving Dan your best wishes and story ideas.</p>
<p>Suzanne Daley<br />
David Firestone</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/2006/11/dan-barrys-new-emtimesem-column-covering-the-lower-48/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>A Vast Exodus at Wenner&#8217;s Monthly Makes a Them Out of Us</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/1999/04/a-vast-exodus-at-wenners-monthly-makes-a-them-out-of-us/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Apr 1999 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/1999/04/a-vast-exodus-at-wenners-monthly-makes-a-them-out-of-us/</link>
			<dc:creator>Carl Swanson</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/1999/04/a-vast-exodus-at-wenners-monthly-makes-a-them-out-of-us/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>There's been another sudden exodus from Us magazine, casting doubt on the editorial stability of the monthly that really wants to be a weekly. Ever since editor Charles Leerhsen was hired from People last May, the magazine has been the scene of a seemingly never-ending game of musical chairs. Eight editors and writers left–some were fired, some quit–soon after Mr. Leerhsen's arrival. The new editor quickly hired replacements, including managing editor Anne Magruder, who he then fired in November, and Marion Hart, a senior associate editor, who quit in December after working at the magazine a month. Then in mid-March, longtime art director Richard Baker left to redesign Premiere . Mr. Baker had been working on the mock-up for the weekly version of Us , according to several sources at the magazine. Rina Migliaccio, Mr. Baker's former deputy who left to become art director at Sports Illustrated for Women , will return on April 5 to take his place.</p>
<p>But before it can go weekly and try to take on People , Us has a more pressing problem to deal with: There may not be enough editors left to keep it going as a monthly. Mr. Leerhsen fired eight-year veteran senior editor Carol Dittbrenner and three-month senior editor recruit Bonnie Vaughan in March. Rebecca Dameron, an associate editor who came over with Mr. Leerhsen from People , quit soon after, and Dany Levy, former editor of New York 's Gotham Style page who had been sitting in as a freelance editor, just got up and left on March 22. At the moment, the only remaining senior editor is Tom Conroy, who also does a good chunk of writing for every issue.</p>
<p> To fill the gaps, Mr. Leerhsen has hired two editors from Time Out New York : James Baker will be a senior editor and Lynne Palazzi will be a senior associate editor when they arrive April 5. With senior features editor Megan Lieberman in Bali for her honeymoon, at the moment "it's sort of a skeleton crew over there," said one departed editor.</p>
<p> According to a number of former Us editors and writers, Mr. Leerhsen demands a lot from his reporters and is a heavy-handed rewrite man. Although considered smart and funny, he has frustrated many writers who don't recognize their work when he's done editing it. Editors and writers who have worked with him at both Us and People said this heavy-handedness made for a charged atmosphere, at times, and that people would take their names off pieces after they'd gone through the Leerhsen mill. In the May issue, Spin contributor Maureen Callahan had a byline removed from a rewrite she did of a piece that then got another rewrite ordered by Mr. Leerhsen. "When I saw it, it wasn't mine anymore," she said.</p>
<p> "Charlie has a very specific formula," said one Us writer. "Many times it felt like there was [Mr. Leerhsen's] way of doing things and many wrong ways of doing things," said another. Both writers said they'd removed their bylines from pieces in the past, but didn't want to be named.</p>
<p> Mr. Leerhsen's high standards wouldn't be as big a deal if newsstand sales were still climbing, as staff members said they had by  late 1998. (According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, newsstand sales for the final six months of 1998 were up 20 percent over the same period in 1997.) But according to several recently departed members of the editorial staff, the understanding in the office is that Us hasn't been doing as well in 1999. Those same sources said that Mr. Leerhsen's response, so far, has been to redesign the front of the book.</p>
<p> Regarding the recent slew of departures, Us spokesman Kim Light said, "There were open positions and they were filled by very strong people." Ms. Light also said that the depleted staff would not affect Us owner Jann Wenner's will to turn the magazine into a weekly. "That's the plan," she said. "There's nothing new to report on that … we're in the process of lining up a number of aspects," including, "timing, staffing, distribution and financing." Mr. Leerhsen was not available for comment.</p>
<p> David Firestone, a reporter in The New York Times ' Atlanta bureau, traveled to Sylacauga, Ala., to interview the parents of Billy Jack Gaither, who was apparently murdered for being a homosexual. When he got there, he found Mr. Gaither's parents in disbelief that their son was actually gay. In his March 6 article, Mr. Firestone detailed how Mr. Gaither's father shouted at the TV news, "If he was gay. If he was gay," when a report came on covering his son's murder. Mr. Firestone followed this scene with a description of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom. It was filled with "a large collection of Scarlett O'Hara dolls and other figurines from Gone With the Wind , for which he hunted at flea markets on weekends," as well as a picture of Clark Gable kissing Vivian Leigh over his fireplace and pink chiffon curtains. Mr. Gaither had also decorated the rest of the house.</p>
<p> The barely veiled subtext of Mr. Firestone's reporting was, essentially, how could anyone think Billy Jack Gaither wasn't gay? But at least one editor at The Times found the scene offensive. Writing in the "Greenies," Times -speak for the photocopied packets of articles that are annotated and distributed around the newsroom several times a week to either pick apart or praise staff work, this particular editor found the description of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom off-agenda–that is, not how gay people should be viewed by The Times . The editor, whose critique was made anonymously, as is the fashion with the "Greenies," noted that Mr. Firestone's peek in the bedroom, "perpetuates a manner of stereotyping and feminizing gay people, as if collecting dolls and worshipping Scarlett O'Hara were confirmation of someone's homosexuality. Homosexuals do not collect dolls as a matter of course, nor is a poster of Scarlett and Rhett kissing above someone's bed any indication of their homosexuality. (In fact, Gone With the Wind is not even in the canon of gay cult films like The Women or Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? ) … I thought we had long since abandoned a characterization of gay men that presents them as sissies."</p>
<p> Mr. Firestone wasn't too fazed by the reaction. "I had suspected that there would be people out there who wouldn't like it," and who would think it was a "gay stereotype," he told Off the Record. But he didn't recall any special concern from his editor regarding his characterization of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom. As to concerns that the depiction of Mr. Gaither might be unacceptably sissylike for the fully assimilated gays at the paper, Mr. Firestone stood firm.</p>
<p> "There is not a monolithic way to live as a gay person," he said. "This is how one gay person lived. And I thought it was important to say that. I certainly didn't put it in in any way to denigrate him." Still, he added, "It's just a Greenie. It's not the kind of thing that makes you angry."</p>
<p> Eric Etheridge has signed off from Sidewalk New York, the Microsoft Corporation's ultimately un-hegemonic on-line city guide he has headed for the past two and a half years. Mr. Etheridge spent many years in print journalism, working as a senior editor at 7 Days , Rolling Stone and The Observer before a short run as executive editor of George during its heady launch in 1995. However, he's not backtracking into so-called old media. Instead, he's going deeper into cyberspace, joining an outfit called Deja News Inc. as a vice president in charge of … well, whatever vice presidents do at on-line companies.</p>
<p> Deja News has been on a bit of a spree lately, trying to upgrade its media image. In December, the company hired former Spy publisher-turned-ESPN Internet Ventures president Tom Phillips as its president, and moved its headquarters from Austin, Tex., to Manhattan in anticipation of a change in direction for the site, which currently acts as a host for "on-line discussion forums." Mr. Etheridge, who started on March 29, would not comment on what he'll be doing or what the company was planning. A Deja News spokesman wouldn't comment, either, but said an official company announcement of the hire would be made during the week of April 5. Mr. Etheridge  wouldn't say whether all of this is leading to one of those get-rich-quick Internet initial public offerings. Jamie Pallot, a senior producer at Sidewalk who worked as Mr. Etheridge's deputy in putting together the New York site, will take over the executive producer post.</p>
<p> The Wall Street Journal seems particularly obsessed with Y2K hype. On March 29, the paper's Marketplace section alone featured an article entitled "Steering Clear of High-Tech Gear Didn't Free Broker of Y2K Woes" and an entire health care story under the rubric "The Y2K Problem" on page B1. But for all its careful parsing of the issue, The Journal 's reaction to impending Y2K doom and how it relates to its employees has been: Put a Band-Aid on it! To wit: On March 24, Dow Jones &amp; Company's Project Year 2000 task force staged a kind of Y2K fair in the 14th-floor employee cafeteria at the paper, handing out bottles of "Year 2000 Compliant Natural Spring Water," mouse pads, M&amp;Ms, little baggies with a candle and a "Project Year 2000" lighter inside, totebags and a tiny "Survival Kit" that contains two small adhesive bandages, antacid, aspirin and an antiseptic towelette. There was also an inflatable life raft filled with more bottles of water, which some disgruntled staff members took to be symbolic.</p>
<p> "We were going on the survival theme," explained Kimberly Quill, a member of the Project Year 2000 team, which is based in Chicopee, Mass. "We had some trinkets to get people in there. And then we force-feed them information." Mostly, she said, people wanted to know what they should do about their home computers. But with employees reeling over Dow Jones chairman Peter Kann's 25 percent pay increase–bringing his current salary to a grand total of $1.15 million while Mr. Kann has seen fit to eliminate the Journal editorial employees' retirement fund (with a promise of some reorganized fund to come)–well, as one put it, "What do we need these tchotchkes for?"</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There's been another sudden exodus from Us magazine, casting doubt on the editorial stability of the monthly that really wants to be a weekly. Ever since editor Charles Leerhsen was hired from People last May, the magazine has been the scene of a seemingly never-ending game of musical chairs. Eight editors and writers left–some were fired, some quit–soon after Mr. Leerhsen's arrival. The new editor quickly hired replacements, including managing editor Anne Magruder, who he then fired in November, and Marion Hart, a senior associate editor, who quit in December after working at the magazine a month. Then in mid-March, longtime art director Richard Baker left to redesign Premiere . Mr. Baker had been working on the mock-up for the weekly version of Us , according to several sources at the magazine. Rina Migliaccio, Mr. Baker's former deputy who left to become art director at Sports Illustrated for Women , will return on April 5 to take his place.</p>
<p>But before it can go weekly and try to take on People , Us has a more pressing problem to deal with: There may not be enough editors left to keep it going as a monthly. Mr. Leerhsen fired eight-year veteran senior editor Carol Dittbrenner and three-month senior editor recruit Bonnie Vaughan in March. Rebecca Dameron, an associate editor who came over with Mr. Leerhsen from People , quit soon after, and Dany Levy, former editor of New York 's Gotham Style page who had been sitting in as a freelance editor, just got up and left on March 22. At the moment, the only remaining senior editor is Tom Conroy, who also does a good chunk of writing for every issue.</p>
<p> To fill the gaps, Mr. Leerhsen has hired two editors from Time Out New York : James Baker will be a senior editor and Lynne Palazzi will be a senior associate editor when they arrive April 5. With senior features editor Megan Lieberman in Bali for her honeymoon, at the moment "it's sort of a skeleton crew over there," said one departed editor.</p>
<p> According to a number of former Us editors and writers, Mr. Leerhsen demands a lot from his reporters and is a heavy-handed rewrite man. Although considered smart and funny, he has frustrated many writers who don't recognize their work when he's done editing it. Editors and writers who have worked with him at both Us and People said this heavy-handedness made for a charged atmosphere, at times, and that people would take their names off pieces after they'd gone through the Leerhsen mill. In the May issue, Spin contributor Maureen Callahan had a byline removed from a rewrite she did of a piece that then got another rewrite ordered by Mr. Leerhsen. "When I saw it, it wasn't mine anymore," she said.</p>
<p> "Charlie has a very specific formula," said one Us writer. "Many times it felt like there was [Mr. Leerhsen's] way of doing things and many wrong ways of doing things," said another. Both writers said they'd removed their bylines from pieces in the past, but didn't want to be named.</p>
<p> Mr. Leerhsen's high standards wouldn't be as big a deal if newsstand sales were still climbing, as staff members said they had by  late 1998. (According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, newsstand sales for the final six months of 1998 were up 20 percent over the same period in 1997.) But according to several recently departed members of the editorial staff, the understanding in the office is that Us hasn't been doing as well in 1999. Those same sources said that Mr. Leerhsen's response, so far, has been to redesign the front of the book.</p>
<p> Regarding the recent slew of departures, Us spokesman Kim Light said, "There were open positions and they were filled by very strong people." Ms. Light also said that the depleted staff would not affect Us owner Jann Wenner's will to turn the magazine into a weekly. "That's the plan," she said. "There's nothing new to report on that … we're in the process of lining up a number of aspects," including, "timing, staffing, distribution and financing." Mr. Leerhsen was not available for comment.</p>
<p> David Firestone, a reporter in The New York Times ' Atlanta bureau, traveled to Sylacauga, Ala., to interview the parents of Billy Jack Gaither, who was apparently murdered for being a homosexual. When he got there, he found Mr. Gaither's parents in disbelief that their son was actually gay. In his March 6 article, Mr. Firestone detailed how Mr. Gaither's father shouted at the TV news, "If he was gay. If he was gay," when a report came on covering his son's murder. Mr. Firestone followed this scene with a description of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom. It was filled with "a large collection of Scarlett O'Hara dolls and other figurines from Gone With the Wind , for which he hunted at flea markets on weekends," as well as a picture of Clark Gable kissing Vivian Leigh over his fireplace and pink chiffon curtains. Mr. Gaither had also decorated the rest of the house.</p>
<p> The barely veiled subtext of Mr. Firestone's reporting was, essentially, how could anyone think Billy Jack Gaither wasn't gay? But at least one editor at The Times found the scene offensive. Writing in the "Greenies," Times -speak for the photocopied packets of articles that are annotated and distributed around the newsroom several times a week to either pick apart or praise staff work, this particular editor found the description of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom off-agenda–that is, not how gay people should be viewed by The Times . The editor, whose critique was made anonymously, as is the fashion with the "Greenies," noted that Mr. Firestone's peek in the bedroom, "perpetuates a manner of stereotyping and feminizing gay people, as if collecting dolls and worshipping Scarlett O'Hara were confirmation of someone's homosexuality. Homosexuals do not collect dolls as a matter of course, nor is a poster of Scarlett and Rhett kissing above someone's bed any indication of their homosexuality. (In fact, Gone With the Wind is not even in the canon of gay cult films like The Women or Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? ) … I thought we had long since abandoned a characterization of gay men that presents them as sissies."</p>
<p> Mr. Firestone wasn't too fazed by the reaction. "I had suspected that there would be people out there who wouldn't like it," and who would think it was a "gay stereotype," he told Off the Record. But he didn't recall any special concern from his editor regarding his characterization of Billy Jack Gaither's bedroom. As to concerns that the depiction of Mr. Gaither might be unacceptably sissylike for the fully assimilated gays at the paper, Mr. Firestone stood firm.</p>
<p> "There is not a monolithic way to live as a gay person," he said. "This is how one gay person lived. And I thought it was important to say that. I certainly didn't put it in in any way to denigrate him." Still, he added, "It's just a Greenie. It's not the kind of thing that makes you angry."</p>
<p> Eric Etheridge has signed off from Sidewalk New York, the Microsoft Corporation's ultimately un-hegemonic on-line city guide he has headed for the past two and a half years. Mr. Etheridge spent many years in print journalism, working as a senior editor at 7 Days , Rolling Stone and The Observer before a short run as executive editor of George during its heady launch in 1995. However, he's not backtracking into so-called old media. Instead, he's going deeper into cyberspace, joining an outfit called Deja News Inc. as a vice president in charge of … well, whatever vice presidents do at on-line companies.</p>
<p> Deja News has been on a bit of a spree lately, trying to upgrade its media image. In December, the company hired former Spy publisher-turned-ESPN Internet Ventures president Tom Phillips as its president, and moved its headquarters from Austin, Tex., to Manhattan in anticipation of a change in direction for the site, which currently acts as a host for "on-line discussion forums." Mr. Etheridge, who started on March 29, would not comment on what he'll be doing or what the company was planning. A Deja News spokesman wouldn't comment, either, but said an official company announcement of the hire would be made during the week of April 5. Mr. Etheridge  wouldn't say whether all of this is leading to one of those get-rich-quick Internet initial public offerings. Jamie Pallot, a senior producer at Sidewalk who worked as Mr. Etheridge's deputy in putting together the New York site, will take over the executive producer post.</p>
<p> The Wall Street Journal seems particularly obsessed with Y2K hype. On March 29, the paper's Marketplace section alone featured an article entitled "Steering Clear of High-Tech Gear Didn't Free Broker of Y2K Woes" and an entire health care story under the rubric "The Y2K Problem" on page B1. But for all its careful parsing of the issue, The Journal 's reaction to impending Y2K doom and how it relates to its employees has been: Put a Band-Aid on it! To wit: On March 24, Dow Jones &amp; Company's Project Year 2000 task force staged a kind of Y2K fair in the 14th-floor employee cafeteria at the paper, handing out bottles of "Year 2000 Compliant Natural Spring Water," mouse pads, M&amp;Ms, little baggies with a candle and a "Project Year 2000" lighter inside, totebags and a tiny "Survival Kit" that contains two small adhesive bandages, antacid, aspirin and an antiseptic towelette. There was also an inflatable life raft filled with more bottles of water, which some disgruntled staff members took to be symbolic.</p>
<p> "We were going on the survival theme," explained Kimberly Quill, a member of the Project Year 2000 team, which is based in Chicopee, Mass. "We had some trinkets to get people in there. And then we force-feed them information." Mostly, she said, people wanted to know what they should do about their home computers. But with employees reeling over Dow Jones chairman Peter Kann's 25 percent pay increase–bringing his current salary to a grand total of $1.15 million while Mr. Kann has seen fit to eliminate the Journal editorial employees' retirement fund (with a promise of some reorganized fund to come)–well, as one put it, "What do we need these tchotchkes for?"</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/1999/04/a-vast-exodus-at-wenners-monthly-makes-a-them-out-of-us/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>
	</item>
		<item>
				
		<title>Bill Clinton&#8217;s Big Spring Break</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/1999/03/bill-clintons-big-spring-break/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Mar 1999 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/1999/03/bill-clintons-big-spring-break/</link>
			<dc:creator>Jim Windolf</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/1999/03/bill-clintons-big-spring-break/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>New York Feminists Stand By Their Bill, Not By Broaddrick</p>
<p> Needless to say, Hillary Rodham Clinton was a hit.</p>
<p> Even before midday on Wednesday, March 3, when the incredible beatifying First Lady was due to dazzle the sisters who lunch at the Women's Leadership Forum, a component of the Democratic National Committee, she had earned her adulation. After all, the media were salivating. The money was flowing: Seating at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan had been sold out for weeks, to the tune of 900 women contributing more than half a million dollars in increments of $150 to $10,000. And best of all, Juanita Broaddrick was a definite no-show. Only days had passed since the Arkansas matron had darkly gifted Dateline NBC with her ragged memory, or conjuring, of then-Attorney General Bill Clinton visiting her, violating her and then advising her to ice her injuries, but already, it seemed, the Democratic coast was clear of her.</p>
<p> "Other reporters are only asking about the Senate," said Laura Ross, New York chair of the Women's Leadership Forum, when asked whether the Broaddrick episode, and the extreme circumspection with which the President, or rather his lawyer David Kendall, had met it, had served at all to dampen the luncheon, or any of the draft-Hillary buzz that pervaded its approach. "The buzz is whether she's running," said Ms. Ross. Queried as to how a fair-minded feminist, with natural inclinations toward both the innocence of the accused and the credibility of the accuser, should react to this disquieting development, State Democratic Party chairman Judith Hope said: "I don't think we should react at all. It's just too old and too stale and too questionable, and can never be proven or disproven."</p>
<p> Too true. But while the nation can never clarify the story, the story has already done its part to clarify the nation. According to a Fox News poll taken on Feb. 26, 54 percent of the American people believe the President to be guilty of  Ms. Broaddrick's explosive charge–the same 54 percent, perhaps, who desired to let the matter lie. Thus, even allowing for significant shortcomings in such numbers, it was clear that a very considerable proportion of the American people believe that the Chief Executive who signed the Violence Against Women Act committed a serious act of violence against a woman, but do not believe that anything much can, or should, be done about it. Somehow the image of a man famously married to, elected by, and solicitous of, powerful women had slowly transformed from that of a playboy to that of a predator, to nothing like fatal effect.</p>
<p> "There is a surreal quality to it," mused Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation , about life on the left–or any place, really, except deep in the heart of the right–as the country registered a veritably Novocain quality of numb in the freshly unmasked face of Jane Doe No. 5. "We have a President who is accused of being a rapist, and yet people go about their business."</p>
<p> And that, of course, includes feminist people, many of whom seem to be going about their business as if a Presidential rape charge were the flick of an ash. Who among New York feminists might be moved to speak out about this? Good question. Writers? Gloria Steinem, whose much-remarked Op-Ed last March in The New York Times , lauded, among other things, Mr. Clinton's way of taking No for an answer, had not a nanosecond to comment on the Broaddrick matter, not even through her assistant. Author Naomi Wolf declined to comment due to the connection of her husband David Shipley to the Clinton Administration.</p>
<p> Members of Congress? "If Ms. Broaddrick's story is true, I wish that she had come forward 21 years ago," Representative Louise Slaughter of Rochester, one of those who literally stormed the Senate on behalf of Anita Hill in 1991, stated via a three-sentence press release. "But since she did not … we can now do little more than wonder." Likewise, "The charges are very serious," Representative Nita Lowey of Westchester said through a spokesman. "But the White House has denied them. It is likely that we will never know the truth." As for Representative Carolyn Maloney of Manhattan, "It's hard to know what should happen now," she said, "since the accusation is based on something that allegedly happened so long ago." (Hey, anybody instinctively, deep down, believe the President? Just kidding.)</p>
<p> Leading female fund-raisers? "I really don't have a comment for you," said Friend of Bill Susan Patricoff, a host of the March 3 luncheon. "I wouldn't presume to speak on that. No comment." Ditto for Patricia Duff.</p>
<p> Of course, feminists are entitled to have, respectively, busy schedules, conflicts of interest, misgivings as to old and problematic charges taking wing at the tail end of a scandal-scarred year, and instincts against enraging the White House. But all that said, it seems only fair to ask: Isn't it weird that such a depth of caution should mingle with such a dearth of curiosity, among such a number of women about a charge of such gravity?</p>
<p> And weirder still that the only Democrats in Congress who have called, even faintly, for Mr. Clinton to answer the charges more fully seem to be men? (Senator Paul Wellstone, Democrat of Minnesota, on Fox News to Tony Snow: "How could anybody discount this And I think the President should speak to it.")</p>
<p> "As in this entire scandal, we have witnessed the total breakdown of the feminist establishment," said Katie Roiphe, the 30-year-old author who is making quite a career out of kicking the stuffing out of the feminist establishment, such as it is. "The same people who were hysterical about Bob Packwood and hysterical about Anita Hill have completely changed their mind about this." This, of course, is the theme that many an anti-, non- and neo-feminist has been gleefully sounding since Monica Lewinsky was a gleam in MSNBC's eye: that, in its self-enslavement to the woman-scamming President and his (white-collar) woman-championing Administration, institutionalized feminism is doing nothing so much as finishing off its long, wheezing transition from political movement to partisan mouthpiece.</p>
<p> In part, that is a valid point, but one that is by now so obvious and so worn with repetition as to waste the words of those who make it. Yes, yes, feminists who once pilloried their Republican foes for being pigs are now excusing their Democratic friend, despite his increasingly appearing to be a far more troubling brand of brute. All this means is that, for now, the left seems to have abandoned the practice of recruiting women as poster-children in the personal waging of political wars, and the right seems to have taken it up. Big deal. It's only when one considers the feminist positions that are not hypocritical, but at least attempting rationality and proportion and sense, that one gets a glimpse of  what our President has done to our politics.</p>
<p> "My feeling always is, justice should be done, assuming it can take its course," said Ms . magazine founder Letty Cottin Pogrebin, who, having called last summer for the President's resignation on the opinion that the Lewinsky matter constituted sexual harassment, can hardly be counted a Clinton cultist. "In this case it can't, because of the statute of limitations, so I wish it would just go away; it just gives the right wing grist for its endless mill." Now, as right-wingers would retort–well, do keep retorting–neither Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas nor Senator Robert Packwood was ever accused of rape, and neither was spared a public crucifixion because theirs were not matters for the court. But the Thomas-Hill, he-said, she-said occurred in the context of a process in motion–his Supreme Court confirmation–which protest, fairly or unfairly, was being marshaled to derail. Fresh in his survival of the ultimate political death threat, Mr. Clinton can be no more derailed than levitated.</p>
<p> "Forget Teflon," said Ms. vanden Heuvel. "He's the iridium President. He's like someone from another planet."</p>
<p> And if that resilience is due, in part, to the complicity of his constituencies, it is also due to the clumsiness, vitriol and, post-impeachment, unshyness of his adversaries. And, as for so many other groups, this is actually a shame for women: The President is so fortunate in his political enemies that he need not do very much to keep his political friends. Remember how Mr. Clinton survived and thrived in the dark days of 1994? He made himself look good by making members of Congress look bad. By vilifying them rhetorically and pre-empting them thematically, he reamed them politically–and this without remarkable achievement on behalf of  women, or anybody else.</p>
<p> The President, too, managed to turn the tables on the media, whose proclivity for half-truths had the effect of dulling the blade of the whole truth about Bill Clinton as ultimately revealed. So, in the short term, the Republican-led Congress and the press may have tormented Mr. Clinton, but in the end they served him very well.</p>
<p> Then, too, there is the pesky matter of proof. Mr. Packwood may have been no more of a sexual predator than Mr. Clinton, but he was definitely more of a diarist. For feminists to take Ms. Broaddrick at her word would not just be shrill, it would be irresponsible (as irresponsible, some might think, as prematurely donning an "I Believe Anita Hill" button).</p>
<p> "I'm torn between the two poles of my total feminist commitment to any woman who's been sexually assaulted [and the feeling that] I may have gotten on a bandwagon to indict someone who may be innocent," said author Susan Faludi. "Short of stoning him, what is it that people want to do?"</p>
<p> Not much, it appears. Not much at all.</p>
<p> -Tish Durkin</p>
<p> Rift Inside The Times Puts Broaddrick's Cry of Rape Right Where the White House Wanted It–on Page A16</p>
<p> A-16.</p>
<p> The New York Times didn't know how to handle Juanita Broaddrick's inconvenient charge that Bill Clinton raped her 21 years ago. So the story of the allegation that ran in its Feb. 24 edition lurched all over the place. It was The Times  performing journalism by committee–and it was a botched operation.</p>
<p> A rape charge against a President would seem to be very big front-page news anywhere, even at The Times . But in the strange universe of 229 West 43rd Street, Ms. Broaddrick's corroborated charge against a congenital liar was only good for page A-16. Figure out that paradox and you will understand The Times .</p>
<p> Publication of the story came after weeks of internal meetings, formal and informal, and debates among editors. Ms. Broaddrick's rape charge caused sharp disagreement at The Times , sources at the paper said, and the sore feelings brought on by the story have not yet gone away.</p>
<p> The Times ran the story on the same day Dateline NBC finally went with its half-hour segment on Ms. Broaddrick's charge, and days after The Washington Post ran its take on the matter in a front-page story and The Wall Street Journal published Dorothy Rabinowitz's interview with Ms. Broaddrick in its editorial pages.</p>
<p> The story on page A-16 was cast partly as an explanation of why The Times had not investigated the matter earlier and partly as a defense of why The Times was going into the sordid mess at all. It did not include the word "rape." And it gave Times managing editor Bill Keller more words of direct quote (106; "Congress isn't going to impeach him again. And frankly, we've all got a bit of scandal fatigue") than it gave Ms. Broaddrick (61 words; "I was so totally surprised, totally shocked").</p>
<p> "There was a very difficult debate," said Times national editor Dean Baquet, who worked on the piece. "Over on the one hand, how do you handle a story that is really difficult to prove, and you could question whether, because of that, you shouldn't report it; but on the other hand, it involves a very serious allegation against the President of the United States, and you have to sort of weigh what to tell our readers and what not to tell our readers. I think in this case, what we did was, we decided we needed to try to explain it to our readers."</p>
<p> Dave Smith, another editor who worked on the story, said there was nothing too unusual about the newsroom discussions leading up to the publication of this one. "It was very low-key, Socratic," he said. "We had a couple of meetings with some very good dialogue, very open, and, like just about any other time you're dealing with a difficult situation, you try to come to some sort of synthesis. I've been through this a thousand times at The Times ."</p>
<p> In editorial meetings, at least one editor argued that The Times should remain silent on the issue, reasoning that Times readers would understand and appreciate The Times ' silence. Others argued that the story was right for page 1.</p>
<p> In the end, the Times team compromised, running its story deep inside the front section, on the bottom half of a page, with a flat headline and no photo or illustration; they might as well have slapped a "don't read this article" sticker on the page. To those who opposed the story, its placement on A-16 was a clear sign that the newspaper of record had real doubts about the story. To others, the placement was just fine, especially since the A-16 story was promoted under the heading "An Allegation Resurfaces," in the small table-of-contents box on page 1.</p>
<p> "You're basically saying this is in the top 10 stories of the day in The New York Times ," said Mr. Smith, the newspaper's media editor. "That's a signal that you hold it with some degree of gravity. I hardly think that was burying it."</p>
<p> The reporters who shared the byline were Felicity Barringer, a media writer, and David Firestone, a national correspondent based in Atlanta who interviewed Ms. Broaddrick.</p>
<p> Taking part in editorial meetings, along with Mr. Smith, Mr. Baquet and Mr. Keller, were Washington bureau chief Michael Oreskes and deputy Washington editor Jill Abramson, via speakerphone. Associate managing editor Martin Baron, the night editor in New York, also put in his two cents.</p>
<p> Times executive editor Joseph Lelyveld was on vacation while all of this was going down. A few people involved with putting the story together said he had little or no involvement. "He really went on vacation to get away," said one Times veteran. "He was getting away after a year of this stuff [covering Clinton scandals], and he delegated to Keller. He completely trusts Keller. They're very close."</p>
<p> When he returned from his vacation, Times sources said, Mr. Lelyveld had a nice suntan–and a low opinion of the big A-16 story that had run in his absence.</p>
<p> It is true that New York Times people are mild and conventional. They love the middle course. For every Jeff Gerth, who led the charge on Whitewater in the pre-Monica days, there are dozens upon dozens of Times men and Times women who are content to be mild-mannered ciphers.</p>
<p> And so, accordingly, the range of opinion in the discussions on the topic of Juanita Broaddrick and what to do with her rape allegation was not really all that wide. It went from those who argued that The Times should not publish her allegation in any form, to those who believed that The Times should run with her allegation– in the proper context .</p>
<p> There were no hawks who argued that the rape charge stood on its own as an unadorned front-page news story, Times editors said.</p>
<p> In fact, before the Times team of reporters and editors got to what Ms. Broaddrick had to say, they had already likened her allegation to "toxic waste."</p>
<p> In the second paragraph, even before providing any details of her account, the writers charted the beginnings of the Broaddrick story from its days as a "rumor" that "persisted in the shadowlands of the Internet"; and they went on to note that Ms. Broaddrick herself gave a "sworn denial" and "reversed herself last spring." Next, The Times implied that Ms. Broaddrick was a publicity seeker ("… during the impeachment process, she decided to make the assault charges public in an interview with NBC News") who was perhaps a little too eager for her media close-up ("… she chafed because the interview was not broadcast").</p>
<p> Bam, bam, bam. In just two quick opening paragraphs, The Times skillfully sketched Ms. Broaddrick as a publicity-seeking liar who was peddling a poisonous rumor.</p>
<p> Managing editor Bill Keller's most resonant quote in The Times ' A-16 article–"And frankly," he said, "we've all got a bit of scandal fatigue"–did not sit well with some of his colleagues. By suggesting that The Times ignored a story based on weariness with the topic is antithetical to what reporting is all about, after all. It's tantamount to a police reporter getting beat because of crime fatigue, or a City Hall reporter missing a story because of Rudy fatigue. (Mr. Keller was on a European vacation and did not return calls seeking comment.)</p>
<p> The "scandal fatigue" quote, while rankling some people at The Times , belies a bedrock assumption at the newspaper–that the scandals that have dogged the President should be over. A newspaper loaded with high-achieving princes and princesses of the Eastern establishment, rather than with the rogues who often land the memorable stories, The Times wants Bill Clinton to be something he is not.</p>
<p> The New York Times wants to pretend he's a regular meritocratic guy who won the highest office in the land not because he is possibly a criminal who has run roughshod over other people, but because he is in the Presidential-legend mold: charming, hard-working, a little unknowable–and, O.K, he's sexy. And if he must be corrupt, The Times worldview would prefer that he be corrupt in the way that politicians are traditionally corrupt–as a white-collar criminal. The Times refuses to consider that he might really be closer to the guys who are wearing orange jumpsuits in state penitentiaries than to a naughty Casanova.</p>
<p> In assembling the A-16 story, Ms. Barringer fielded dispatches from Mr. Firestone and other Times reporters. She was the first one to take a crack at placing the material on Ms. Broaddrick in the context of a larger media story; when her turn was up, Mr. Baquet and Mr. Smith went at it, followed by the copy editors.</p>
<p> "There are always a lot of ways to tell a story," Ms. Barringer said. "This one posed a set of dilemmas that were extremely knotty." Asked if the story treated Ms. Broaddrick badly, Ms. Barringer said, "I don't think it was loaded. I do think there's a kind of Talmudic quality to figuring out how things are placed and what weight they're given."</p>
<p> David Firestone interviewed Ms. Broaddrick on Feb. 22. He used to be the Times City Hall bureau chief. His writing always had style and some wit just under the surface. He once wrote a funny piece on Mayor Giuliani's habit of boasting about himself and New York City. Now Mr. Firestone mans the Atlanta bureau. On the phone, he sounded like some weary character out of a Graham Greene novel, stuck in some distant outpost. He said he flew from Atlanta to Tulsa, Okla., near Ms. Broaddrick's ranch in Van Buren, Ark., to get the story.</p>
<p> "I went to her home hoping to knock on her door," Mr. Firestone said, "but she lives on a big 40-acre ranch surrounded by an electric gate at the end of a long driveway. I called her the night before and she told me not to come, but I went, anyway, hoping that just going there would convince her to talk to me. When I got to her house, I called her on the cell phone and she said she still wouldn't talk to me and we made a few other attempts on the phone from Tulsa, and she finally agreed to talk on the phone."</p>
<p> The interview lasted "an hour or two," Mr. Firestone said, with a few quick follow-up calls. "It was just a classic piece of reporting," he said. "Write down exactly what she says in as much detail as possible, try and pin her down on exactly what happened leading up to it, what happened afterward, get the names of witnesses that she talked to, call the witnesses, write down what they say, and turn it in. You know, that's just what reporting is all about … This was a story that simply required a very straightforward retelling of her story."</p>
<p> The correspondent was asked if he knew The Times would take his reporting and shove it in the context of a large, interpretive media story.</p>
<p> "That was strictly the editors," Mr. Firestone said. "They basically took what I gave them, a long, 3,000-word memo, and they decided what they wanted to do with it. That's how The Times works. When you're in the field, it's a little hard to know exactly what they're thinking up there."</p>
<p> The Times team did an interesting little dance with Ms. Broaddrick throughout the A-16 article. First, they played up her desire to go public on NBC. Then they implied that her reluctance to come forward was problematic. After assuring the readers that her story (even if "toxic") was relevant because "it hardened opinion against the President among some of the dozen or so Representatives who were led to materials on the case" (note the unseemly connotation of "led to"), The Times began to engage in its favorite pastime: explaining the Internet. When not hyping Internet I.P.O.'s on Wall Street, The Times seems to find the Internet distasteful. Lumping it in with cable TV, The Times reported that Ms. Broaddrick's story followed a "shadowy, subterranean path"–an allusion, perhaps, to the cables buried under the ground that make cable and the Internet possible. Cable TV and the Internet often come off as literally dirty, in The Times ' view, while newspapers like The Times show up above ground, in the light. The writers of the A-16 story explained that "the national press is divided in ever-smaller slivers, with smaller outlets on the Internet and cable television sometimes overwhelming the slower and more sober judgments of mainstream news organizations."</p>
<p> In an interview with the Los Angeles Times on Feb. 25, Mr. Keller contributed to the impression given by the A-16 article that The Times was getting pushed into stories by the cyber-rabble: "There's a sense of being manipulated by this strange new dynamic that exists in the media," he said, "where stories that are in the process of being reported somewhere get picked up by a Web site and by cable TV talk shows, and eventually they pick up centrifugal force and knock the story into the mainstream. And you feel a loss of control."</p>
<p> That quote steamed his colleagues, according to Times sources.</p>
<p> "I don't buy that our coverage of this story and other stories gets dictated by people like Matt Drudge," said Mr. Baquet.</p>
<p> Washington bureau chief Michael Oreskes agreed. "I think it is vital that The New York Times and every other newspaper decide what its standards are and stick to them," he said, "regardless of what Matt Drudge or anyone else puts on the Internet.… We should never feel like we are being pushed into running something, or that our decisions are under the control of others' judgments."</p>
<p> Mr. Keller's quote ignored the fact that some Web sites–even Matt Drudge's Drudge Report (www.drudgereport.com)–do more than report on what others are reporting. A recent investigative report posted on a Web site called Capitol Hill Blue (www.capitolhillblue.com), for example, says that there are other women who claim that Mr. Clinton would not take No for an answer. The story purports to include accounts of at least four women who, in interviews with Capitol Hill Blue reporters, said Mr. Clinton had forced himself on them.</p>
<p> One Times editor, speaking not for attribution, said The Times was aware of the report posted on Capitol Hill Blue , but would not say whether or not The Times had decided to do its own reporting on the alleged incidents.</p>
<p> On Feb. 26, The Times followed Bill Clinton in Arizona, where he visited the Arizona Diamondback training camp. Here's how The Times began its story on a President who had been charged, credibly, with rape on NBC News two nights prior: "President Clinton may not have been gloating today, but he sure was celebrating." The article briefly mentioned a "few dozen protesters" and quoted Clinton supporter Carolyn Killian, identified as a 31-year-old homemaker. Concerning Ms. Broaddrick, Ms. Killian told The Times , "She must be a liar, too." Then reporter James Bennet quoted Debbie Van Sant, a 42-year-old pharmacist: "'After all of this fiasco,' she said, 'I have a lot of respect for the man for standing up for what he believes in. It shows character in a person.'"</p>
<p> The next day, a Saturday, Howell Raines' editorial page weighed in with a corrective: "… it would be nice to hear Mr. Clinton himself address the matter and provide his version of what transpired, if in fact the two did meet in a Little Rock hotel room in 1978." The Times editorial also noted "a set of allegations stretching across two decades that depict him as a serial masher or worse." (Did Mr. Raines get this from the Capitol Hill Blue Web site? He would not comment for this article.)</p>
<p> On Feb. 28, it was the Week in Review's turn. There was one of those "thoughtful" articles by Francis X. Clines, headlined "The End Was a Mirage. The Scandal Lives On." It came complete with a quote from official White House jester Al Franken, but the illustration said it all: It showed a wussy-looking guy in a bow tie and round-frame glasses, doing the dishes at the kitchen sink–this was The Times ' idea of an everyman, apparently–and the faces of the Clinton scandal women appeared in the steam and the bubbles; there, Ms. Broaddrick was depicted as an equal to Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky–another of Bill's daffy dames.</p>
<p> The Times got used to the Clinton-Lewinsky story, and disgorged it as part of the impeachment saga. It was able to write off the saga as distasteful, disruptive and occasionally comic, at worst. But Ms. Broaddrick threw a monkey wrench into the whole operation. When the story became less like something out of Molière and more like sunbelt Sophocles or Robert Penn Warren, it was hello, A-16.</p>
<p> Mr. Baquet, the national editor, was asked if, 25 or 30 years from now, people might think not of Ms. Lewinsky when they think of Bill Clinton, but of Juanita Broaddrick. "Some would say history might not even notice this," Mr. Baquet said. "Some would say it will be a footnote on page 427 on the age of Clinton, and there are some people who would say otherwise. But based on what we know, I don't see how that would be the case. Monica Lewinsky's case led to the impeachment of the President for only the second time in history. I can't imagine that in a case in which everybody doesn't know what happened, I can't imagine that you could say those were equal stories."</p>
<p> -Jim Windolf</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>New York Feminists Stand By Their Bill, Not By Broaddrick</p>
<p> Needless to say, Hillary Rodham Clinton was a hit.</p>
<p> Even before midday on Wednesday, March 3, when the incredible beatifying First Lady was due to dazzle the sisters who lunch at the Women's Leadership Forum, a component of the Democratic National Committee, she had earned her adulation. After all, the media were salivating. The money was flowing: Seating at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan had been sold out for weeks, to the tune of 900 women contributing more than half a million dollars in increments of $150 to $10,000. And best of all, Juanita Broaddrick was a definite no-show. Only days had passed since the Arkansas matron had darkly gifted Dateline NBC with her ragged memory, or conjuring, of then-Attorney General Bill Clinton visiting her, violating her and then advising her to ice her injuries, but already, it seemed, the Democratic coast was clear of her.</p>
<p> "Other reporters are only asking about the Senate," said Laura Ross, New York chair of the Women's Leadership Forum, when asked whether the Broaddrick episode, and the extreme circumspection with which the President, or rather his lawyer David Kendall, had met it, had served at all to dampen the luncheon, or any of the draft-Hillary buzz that pervaded its approach. "The buzz is whether she's running," said Ms. Ross. Queried as to how a fair-minded feminist, with natural inclinations toward both the innocence of the accused and the credibility of the accuser, should react to this disquieting development, State Democratic Party chairman Judith Hope said: "I don't think we should react at all. It's just too old and too stale and too questionable, and can never be proven or disproven."</p>
<p> Too true. But while the nation can never clarify the story, the story has already done its part to clarify the nation. According to a Fox News poll taken on Feb. 26, 54 percent of the American people believe the President to be guilty of  Ms. Broaddrick's explosive charge–the same 54 percent, perhaps, who desired to let the matter lie. Thus, even allowing for significant shortcomings in such numbers, it was clear that a very considerable proportion of the American people believe that the Chief Executive who signed the Violence Against Women Act committed a serious act of violence against a woman, but do not believe that anything much can, or should, be done about it. Somehow the image of a man famously married to, elected by, and solicitous of, powerful women had slowly transformed from that of a playboy to that of a predator, to nothing like fatal effect.</p>
<p> "There is a surreal quality to it," mused Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation , about life on the left–or any place, really, except deep in the heart of the right–as the country registered a veritably Novocain quality of numb in the freshly unmasked face of Jane Doe No. 5. "We have a President who is accused of being a rapist, and yet people go about their business."</p>
<p> And that, of course, includes feminist people, many of whom seem to be going about their business as if a Presidential rape charge were the flick of an ash. Who among New York feminists might be moved to speak out about this? Good question. Writers? Gloria Steinem, whose much-remarked Op-Ed last March in The New York Times , lauded, among other things, Mr. Clinton's way of taking No for an answer, had not a nanosecond to comment on the Broaddrick matter, not even through her assistant. Author Naomi Wolf declined to comment due to the connection of her husband David Shipley to the Clinton Administration.</p>
<p> Members of Congress? "If Ms. Broaddrick's story is true, I wish that she had come forward 21 years ago," Representative Louise Slaughter of Rochester, one of those who literally stormed the Senate on behalf of Anita Hill in 1991, stated via a three-sentence press release. "But since she did not … we can now do little more than wonder." Likewise, "The charges are very serious," Representative Nita Lowey of Westchester said through a spokesman. "But the White House has denied them. It is likely that we will never know the truth." As for Representative Carolyn Maloney of Manhattan, "It's hard to know what should happen now," she said, "since the accusation is based on something that allegedly happened so long ago." (Hey, anybody instinctively, deep down, believe the President? Just kidding.)</p>
<p> Leading female fund-raisers? "I really don't have a comment for you," said Friend of Bill Susan Patricoff, a host of the March 3 luncheon. "I wouldn't presume to speak on that. No comment." Ditto for Patricia Duff.</p>
<p> Of course, feminists are entitled to have, respectively, busy schedules, conflicts of interest, misgivings as to old and problematic charges taking wing at the tail end of a scandal-scarred year, and instincts against enraging the White House. But all that said, it seems only fair to ask: Isn't it weird that such a depth of caution should mingle with such a dearth of curiosity, among such a number of women about a charge of such gravity?</p>
<p> And weirder still that the only Democrats in Congress who have called, even faintly, for Mr. Clinton to answer the charges more fully seem to be men? (Senator Paul Wellstone, Democrat of Minnesota, on Fox News to Tony Snow: "How could anybody discount this And I think the President should speak to it.")</p>
<p> "As in this entire scandal, we have witnessed the total breakdown of the feminist establishment," said Katie Roiphe, the 30-year-old author who is making quite a career out of kicking the stuffing out of the feminist establishment, such as it is. "The same people who were hysterical about Bob Packwood and hysterical about Anita Hill have completely changed their mind about this." This, of course, is the theme that many an anti-, non- and neo-feminist has been gleefully sounding since Monica Lewinsky was a gleam in MSNBC's eye: that, in its self-enslavement to the woman-scamming President and his (white-collar) woman-championing Administration, institutionalized feminism is doing nothing so much as finishing off its long, wheezing transition from political movement to partisan mouthpiece.</p>
<p> In part, that is a valid point, but one that is by now so obvious and so worn with repetition as to waste the words of those who make it. Yes, yes, feminists who once pilloried their Republican foes for being pigs are now excusing their Democratic friend, despite his increasingly appearing to be a far more troubling brand of brute. All this means is that, for now, the left seems to have abandoned the practice of recruiting women as poster-children in the personal waging of political wars, and the right seems to have taken it up. Big deal. It's only when one considers the feminist positions that are not hypocritical, but at least attempting rationality and proportion and sense, that one gets a glimpse of  what our President has done to our politics.</p>
<p> "My feeling always is, justice should be done, assuming it can take its course," said Ms . magazine founder Letty Cottin Pogrebin, who, having called last summer for the President's resignation on the opinion that the Lewinsky matter constituted sexual harassment, can hardly be counted a Clinton cultist. "In this case it can't, because of the statute of limitations, so I wish it would just go away; it just gives the right wing grist for its endless mill." Now, as right-wingers would retort–well, do keep retorting–neither Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas nor Senator Robert Packwood was ever accused of rape, and neither was spared a public crucifixion because theirs were not matters for the court. But the Thomas-Hill, he-said, she-said occurred in the context of a process in motion–his Supreme Court confirmation–which protest, fairly or unfairly, was being marshaled to derail. Fresh in his survival of the ultimate political death threat, Mr. Clinton can be no more derailed than levitated.</p>
<p> "Forget Teflon," said Ms. vanden Heuvel. "He's the iridium President. He's like someone from another planet."</p>
<p> And if that resilience is due, in part, to the complicity of his constituencies, it is also due to the clumsiness, vitriol and, post-impeachment, unshyness of his adversaries. And, as for so many other groups, this is actually a shame for women: The President is so fortunate in his political enemies that he need not do very much to keep his political friends. Remember how Mr. Clinton survived and thrived in the dark days of 1994? He made himself look good by making members of Congress look bad. By vilifying them rhetorically and pre-empting them thematically, he reamed them politically–and this without remarkable achievement on behalf of  women, or anybody else.</p>
<p> The President, too, managed to turn the tables on the media, whose proclivity for half-truths had the effect of dulling the blade of the whole truth about Bill Clinton as ultimately revealed. So, in the short term, the Republican-led Congress and the press may have tormented Mr. Clinton, but in the end they served him very well.</p>
<p> Then, too, there is the pesky matter of proof. Mr. Packwood may have been no more of a sexual predator than Mr. Clinton, but he was definitely more of a diarist. For feminists to take Ms. Broaddrick at her word would not just be shrill, it would be irresponsible (as irresponsible, some might think, as prematurely donning an "I Believe Anita Hill" button).</p>
<p> "I'm torn between the two poles of my total feminist commitment to any woman who's been sexually assaulted [and the feeling that] I may have gotten on a bandwagon to indict someone who may be innocent," said author Susan Faludi. "Short of stoning him, what is it that people want to do?"</p>
<p> Not much, it appears. Not much at all.</p>
<p> -Tish Durkin</p>
<p> Rift Inside The Times Puts Broaddrick's Cry of Rape Right Where the White House Wanted It–on Page A16</p>
<p> A-16.</p>
<p> The New York Times didn't know how to handle Juanita Broaddrick's inconvenient charge that Bill Clinton raped her 21 years ago. So the story of the allegation that ran in its Feb. 24 edition lurched all over the place. It was The Times  performing journalism by committee–and it was a botched operation.</p>
<p> A rape charge against a President would seem to be very big front-page news anywhere, even at The Times . But in the strange universe of 229 West 43rd Street, Ms. Broaddrick's corroborated charge against a congenital liar was only good for page A-16. Figure out that paradox and you will understand The Times .</p>
<p> Publication of the story came after weeks of internal meetings, formal and informal, and debates among editors. Ms. Broaddrick's rape charge caused sharp disagreement at The Times , sources at the paper said, and the sore feelings brought on by the story have not yet gone away.</p>
<p> The Times ran the story on the same day Dateline NBC finally went with its half-hour segment on Ms. Broaddrick's charge, and days after The Washington Post ran its take on the matter in a front-page story and The Wall Street Journal published Dorothy Rabinowitz's interview with Ms. Broaddrick in its editorial pages.</p>
<p> The story on page A-16 was cast partly as an explanation of why The Times had not investigated the matter earlier and partly as a defense of why The Times was going into the sordid mess at all. It did not include the word "rape." And it gave Times managing editor Bill Keller more words of direct quote (106; "Congress isn't going to impeach him again. And frankly, we've all got a bit of scandal fatigue") than it gave Ms. Broaddrick (61 words; "I was so totally surprised, totally shocked").</p>
<p> "There was a very difficult debate," said Times national editor Dean Baquet, who worked on the piece. "Over on the one hand, how do you handle a story that is really difficult to prove, and you could question whether, because of that, you shouldn't report it; but on the other hand, it involves a very serious allegation against the President of the United States, and you have to sort of weigh what to tell our readers and what not to tell our readers. I think in this case, what we did was, we decided we needed to try to explain it to our readers."</p>
<p> Dave Smith, another editor who worked on the story, said there was nothing too unusual about the newsroom discussions leading up to the publication of this one. "It was very low-key, Socratic," he said. "We had a couple of meetings with some very good dialogue, very open, and, like just about any other time you're dealing with a difficult situation, you try to come to some sort of synthesis. I've been through this a thousand times at The Times ."</p>
<p> In editorial meetings, at least one editor argued that The Times should remain silent on the issue, reasoning that Times readers would understand and appreciate The Times ' silence. Others argued that the story was right for page 1.</p>
<p> In the end, the Times team compromised, running its story deep inside the front section, on the bottom half of a page, with a flat headline and no photo or illustration; they might as well have slapped a "don't read this article" sticker on the page. To those who opposed the story, its placement on A-16 was a clear sign that the newspaper of record had real doubts about the story. To others, the placement was just fine, especially since the A-16 story was promoted under the heading "An Allegation Resurfaces," in the small table-of-contents box on page 1.</p>
<p> "You're basically saying this is in the top 10 stories of the day in The New York Times ," said Mr. Smith, the newspaper's media editor. "That's a signal that you hold it with some degree of gravity. I hardly think that was burying it."</p>
<p> The reporters who shared the byline were Felicity Barringer, a media writer, and David Firestone, a national correspondent based in Atlanta who interviewed Ms. Broaddrick.</p>
<p> Taking part in editorial meetings, along with Mr. Smith, Mr. Baquet and Mr. Keller, were Washington bureau chief Michael Oreskes and deputy Washington editor Jill Abramson, via speakerphone. Associate managing editor Martin Baron, the night editor in New York, also put in his two cents.</p>
<p> Times executive editor Joseph Lelyveld was on vacation while all of this was going down. A few people involved with putting the story together said he had little or no involvement. "He really went on vacation to get away," said one Times veteran. "He was getting away after a year of this stuff [covering Clinton scandals], and he delegated to Keller. He completely trusts Keller. They're very close."</p>
<p> When he returned from his vacation, Times sources said, Mr. Lelyveld had a nice suntan–and a low opinion of the big A-16 story that had run in his absence.</p>
<p> It is true that New York Times people are mild and conventional. They love the middle course. For every Jeff Gerth, who led the charge on Whitewater in the pre-Monica days, there are dozens upon dozens of Times men and Times women who are content to be mild-mannered ciphers.</p>
<p> And so, accordingly, the range of opinion in the discussions on the topic of Juanita Broaddrick and what to do with her rape allegation was not really all that wide. It went from those who argued that The Times should not publish her allegation in any form, to those who believed that The Times should run with her allegation– in the proper context .</p>
<p> There were no hawks who argued that the rape charge stood on its own as an unadorned front-page news story, Times editors said.</p>
<p> In fact, before the Times team of reporters and editors got to what Ms. Broaddrick had to say, they had already likened her allegation to "toxic waste."</p>
<p> In the second paragraph, even before providing any details of her account, the writers charted the beginnings of the Broaddrick story from its days as a "rumor" that "persisted in the shadowlands of the Internet"; and they went on to note that Ms. Broaddrick herself gave a "sworn denial" and "reversed herself last spring." Next, The Times implied that Ms. Broaddrick was a publicity seeker ("… during the impeachment process, she decided to make the assault charges public in an interview with NBC News") who was perhaps a little too eager for her media close-up ("… she chafed because the interview was not broadcast").</p>
<p> Bam, bam, bam. In just two quick opening paragraphs, The Times skillfully sketched Ms. Broaddrick as a publicity-seeking liar who was peddling a poisonous rumor.</p>
<p> Managing editor Bill Keller's most resonant quote in The Times ' A-16 article–"And frankly," he said, "we've all got a bit of scandal fatigue"–did not sit well with some of his colleagues. By suggesting that The Times ignored a story based on weariness with the topic is antithetical to what reporting is all about, after all. It's tantamount to a police reporter getting beat because of crime fatigue, or a City Hall reporter missing a story because of Rudy fatigue. (Mr. Keller was on a European vacation and did not return calls seeking comment.)</p>
<p> The "scandal fatigue" quote, while rankling some people at The Times , belies a bedrock assumption at the newspaper–that the scandals that have dogged the President should be over. A newspaper loaded with high-achieving princes and princesses of the Eastern establishment, rather than with the rogues who often land the memorable stories, The Times wants Bill Clinton to be something he is not.</p>
<p> The New York Times wants to pretend he's a regular meritocratic guy who won the highest office in the land not because he is possibly a criminal who has run roughshod over other people, but because he is in the Presidential-legend mold: charming, hard-working, a little unknowable–and, O.K, he's sexy. And if he must be corrupt, The Times worldview would prefer that he be corrupt in the way that politicians are traditionally corrupt–as a white-collar criminal. The Times refuses to consider that he might really be closer to the guys who are wearing orange jumpsuits in state penitentiaries than to a naughty Casanova.</p>
<p> In assembling the A-16 story, Ms. Barringer fielded dispatches from Mr. Firestone and other Times reporters. She was the first one to take a crack at placing the material on Ms. Broaddrick in the context of a larger media story; when her turn was up, Mr. Baquet and Mr. Smith went at it, followed by the copy editors.</p>
<p> "There are always a lot of ways to tell a story," Ms. Barringer said. "This one posed a set of dilemmas that were extremely knotty." Asked if the story treated Ms. Broaddrick badly, Ms. Barringer said, "I don't think it was loaded. I do think there's a kind of Talmudic quality to figuring out how things are placed and what weight they're given."</p>
<p> David Firestone interviewed Ms. Broaddrick on Feb. 22. He used to be the Times City Hall bureau chief. His writing always had style and some wit just under the surface. He once wrote a funny piece on Mayor Giuliani's habit of boasting about himself and New York City. Now Mr. Firestone mans the Atlanta bureau. On the phone, he sounded like some weary character out of a Graham Greene novel, stuck in some distant outpost. He said he flew from Atlanta to Tulsa, Okla., near Ms. Broaddrick's ranch in Van Buren, Ark., to get the story.</p>
<p> "I went to her home hoping to knock on her door," Mr. Firestone said, "but she lives on a big 40-acre ranch surrounded by an electric gate at the end of a long driveway. I called her the night before and she told me not to come, but I went, anyway, hoping that just going there would convince her to talk to me. When I got to her house, I called her on the cell phone and she said she still wouldn't talk to me and we made a few other attempts on the phone from Tulsa, and she finally agreed to talk on the phone."</p>
<p> The interview lasted "an hour or two," Mr. Firestone said, with a few quick follow-up calls. "It was just a classic piece of reporting," he said. "Write down exactly what she says in as much detail as possible, try and pin her down on exactly what happened leading up to it, what happened afterward, get the names of witnesses that she talked to, call the witnesses, write down what they say, and turn it in. You know, that's just what reporting is all about … This was a story that simply required a very straightforward retelling of her story."</p>
<p> The correspondent was asked if he knew The Times would take his reporting and shove it in the context of a large, interpretive media story.</p>
<p> "That was strictly the editors," Mr. Firestone said. "They basically took what I gave them, a long, 3,000-word memo, and they decided what they wanted to do with it. That's how The Times works. When you're in the field, it's a little hard to know exactly what they're thinking up there."</p>
<p> The Times team did an interesting little dance with Ms. Broaddrick throughout the A-16 article. First, they played up her desire to go public on NBC. Then they implied that her reluctance to come forward was problematic. After assuring the readers that her story (even if "toxic") was relevant because "it hardened opinion against the President among some of the dozen or so Representatives who were led to materials on the case" (note the unseemly connotation of "led to"), The Times began to engage in its favorite pastime: explaining the Internet. When not hyping Internet I.P.O.'s on Wall Street, The Times seems to find the Internet distasteful. Lumping it in with cable TV, The Times reported that Ms. Broaddrick's story followed a "shadowy, subterranean path"–an allusion, perhaps, to the cables buried under the ground that make cable and the Internet possible. Cable TV and the Internet often come off as literally dirty, in The Times ' view, while newspapers like The Times show up above ground, in the light. The writers of the A-16 story explained that "the national press is divided in ever-smaller slivers, with smaller outlets on the Internet and cable television sometimes overwhelming the slower and more sober judgments of mainstream news organizations."</p>
<p> In an interview with the Los Angeles Times on Feb. 25, Mr. Keller contributed to the impression given by the A-16 article that The Times was getting pushed into stories by the cyber-rabble: "There's a sense of being manipulated by this strange new dynamic that exists in the media," he said, "where stories that are in the process of being reported somewhere get picked up by a Web site and by cable TV talk shows, and eventually they pick up centrifugal force and knock the story into the mainstream. And you feel a loss of control."</p>
<p> That quote steamed his colleagues, according to Times sources.</p>
<p> "I don't buy that our coverage of this story and other stories gets dictated by people like Matt Drudge," said Mr. Baquet.</p>
<p> Washington bureau chief Michael Oreskes agreed. "I think it is vital that The New York Times and every other newspaper decide what its standards are and stick to them," he said, "regardless of what Matt Drudge or anyone else puts on the Internet.… We should never feel like we are being pushed into running something, or that our decisions are under the control of others' judgments."</p>
<p> Mr. Keller's quote ignored the fact that some Web sites–even Matt Drudge's Drudge Report (www.drudgereport.com)–do more than report on what others are reporting. A recent investigative report posted on a Web site called Capitol Hill Blue (www.capitolhillblue.com), for example, says that there are other women who claim that Mr. Clinton would not take No for an answer. The story purports to include accounts of at least four women who, in interviews with Capitol Hill Blue reporters, said Mr. Clinton had forced himself on them.</p>
<p> One Times editor, speaking not for attribution, said The Times was aware of the report posted on Capitol Hill Blue , but would not say whether or not The Times had decided to do its own reporting on the alleged incidents.</p>
<p> On Feb. 26, The Times followed Bill Clinton in Arizona, where he visited the Arizona Diamondback training camp. Here's how The Times began its story on a President who had been charged, credibly, with rape on NBC News two nights prior: "President Clinton may not have been gloating today, but he sure was celebrating." The article briefly mentioned a "few dozen protesters" and quoted Clinton supporter Carolyn Killian, identified as a 31-year-old homemaker. Concerning Ms. Broaddrick, Ms. Killian told The Times , "She must be a liar, too." Then reporter James Bennet quoted Debbie Van Sant, a 42-year-old pharmacist: "'After all of this fiasco,' she said, 'I have a lot of respect for the man for standing up for what he believes in. It shows character in a person.'"</p>
<p> The next day, a Saturday, Howell Raines' editorial page weighed in with a corrective: "… it would be nice to hear Mr. Clinton himself address the matter and provide his version of what transpired, if in fact the two did meet in a Little Rock hotel room in 1978." The Times editorial also noted "a set of allegations stretching across two decades that depict him as a serial masher or worse." (Did Mr. Raines get this from the Capitol Hill Blue Web site? He would not comment for this article.)</p>
<p> On Feb. 28, it was the Week in Review's turn. There was one of those "thoughtful" articles by Francis X. Clines, headlined "The End Was a Mirage. The Scandal Lives On." It came complete with a quote from official White House jester Al Franken, but the illustration said it all: It showed a wussy-looking guy in a bow tie and round-frame glasses, doing the dishes at the kitchen sink–this was The Times ' idea of an everyman, apparently–and the faces of the Clinton scandal women appeared in the steam and the bubbles; there, Ms. Broaddrick was depicted as an equal to Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky–another of Bill's daffy dames.</p>
<p> The Times got used to the Clinton-Lewinsky story, and disgorged it as part of the impeachment saga. It was able to write off the saga as distasteful, disruptive and occasionally comic, at worst. But Ms. Broaddrick threw a monkey wrench into the whole operation. When the story became less like something out of Molière and more like sunbelt Sophocles or Robert Penn Warren, it was hello, A-16.</p>
<p> Mr. Baquet, the national editor, was asked if, 25 or 30 years from now, people might think not of Ms. Lewinsky when they think of Bill Clinton, but of Juanita Broaddrick. "Some would say history might not even notice this," Mr. Baquet said. "Some would say it will be a footnote on page 427 on the age of Clinton, and there are some people who would say otherwise. But based on what we know, I don't see how that would be the case. Monica Lewinsky's case led to the impeachment of the President for only the second time in history. I can't imagine that in a case in which everybody doesn't know what happened, I can't imagine that you could say those were equal stories."</p>
<p> -Jim Windolf</p>
]]></content:encoded>
		<wfw:commentRss>http://observer.com/1999/03/bill-clintons-big-spring-break/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
	
		<media:content url="http://2.gravatar.com/avatar/becf95fa833b8aeb13f7720732bd6dc6?s=96&#38;d=identicon&#38;r=G" medium="image">
			<media:title type="html">jhanasobserver</media:title>
		</media:content>
	</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
