
Caveat lector
28 September 2000
Our current howler (part II): Love that Story!
Synopsis: Sean Hannity wont stop misstating Love Story. Will he do and say anything to win?
Commentary by Alan Colmes, Sean Hannity, Nancy Skinner, Sheri
Jacobus
Hannity & Colmes, Fox News Channel, 9/19/00
It must have come as quite a surprise to viewers of Hannity
& Colmes.. Co-host Sean Hannity was involved in a familiar
choreaccusing Al Gore of embellishing. Hannity had cited Love
Story at the start of the segment. But Alan Colmes put an
actual quote on the screen! And then, by golly, he read
it:
COLMES: Again, I want to show you what the truth is and put
it in perspective. The New York Times, December 1997, quoted
the author of Love Story, Erich Segal, who said: "When
the author Erich Segal was asked about Gore's impression, he
stated that the preppy hockey-playing male lead, Oliver Barrett
IV, indeed was modeled after Gore and Gore's Harvard roommate,
actor Tommy Lee Jones." So the author said yes, Al Gore
was the role model.
In Melinda Henneberger's 12/14/97 story, Segal had explained,
in detail, that Gore and Jones had been the models for the male
lead in the weepy best-seller.
It must have come as news to H & C's viewers. Hannity
frequently claims that Segal contradicted Gore's remark on this
subject. Indeed, earlier in the Tuesday night program, Hannity
said it again. He was accurately contradicted by a guest, Chicago
talk host Nancy Skinner:
HANNITY: This is a big picture that we've got to look at.
Al Gore once told the American people, told the crowd, Love
Story was based on his life and Tipper's life. The author
of Love Story says it's not true.
SKINNER: No, that's not true, Sean
HANNITY: Absolutely, he's on recordlet me finish, let me
finish, and then you can respond. He says it's not true, and
I have quotes of him and I can bring them up later in the program.
We never did see those quotes. But Skinner soon returned to
Love Story. She corrected Hannity's statement:
SKINNER: Back to the Love Story thing you started with
HANNITY: Did he create the Internet, Nancy?
SKINNER: No, we're starting with Love Story, that was
your first mention. OK. Erich Segal said that indeed Al was the
model for the male model
HANNITY: That's not true
SKINNER: But that he never said Tipper was, and that all Al
Gore had ever said
HANNITY: Not true
But as Colmes' quote would later show, Skinner's statement
was perfectly accurate. Segal plainly told the New York Times
that Gore and Jones were the two models.
Hannity's misstatements are wonderfully ironic, because he
himself routinely commits the crime which he lays off on Gore.
He routinely misstates the facts of this trivial incidentand
in the process he calls Gore a liar. He also embellishes facts.
On Tuesday, for example, he said that Gore "told the crowd"
that the book was based on his life and that of his wife. But
in fact, Gore's one fleeting comment on this subject was made
in a late-night conversation with two reportersKaren Tumulty
of Time magazine, and Rick Berke of the New York Times.
There was no "crowd" presentHannity was improving the
story. So, more lavishly, was Fox contributor Sheri Jacobus, responding
to the Colmes comment quoted above:
JACOBUS: And Al Gore eagerly went out there and tried to let
everybody know he was more than a role model, that this was in
many ways based on him.
He did? Most charitably put, Jacobus is embellishing. Gore
made one brief remark on this topic, and one only. (Tumulty has
stressed to me how fleeting it was. "Two or three sentences
tops," she has said, "in a two-and-a-half hour conversation.")
Gore never "eagerly went out and tried to let everybody know"
anything about this pointless matter. Jacobus' claims are simply
made up. Over at the Fox News Channel, it looks like embellishment
is going around.
Why does Fox permit this nonsense? It's long past time that
we try to find out. On Hannity & Colmes, Gore is routinely
assailed as a liar on the basis of statementslike Hannity's this
nightthat simply don't square with the facts. Indeed, the basic
facts of the Love Story episode have been misstated in
the media again and again. Tuesday night, Skinner stated them
fairly clearly. When she did, Hannity changed the subject:
SKINNER: [A]ll that Al Gore had ever said
HANNITY: Not true
SKINNER: is that he had read in the Tennessean, a
newspaper, that, where Erich Segal had said that he and Tipper
were the model. You know what? The Tennessean newspaper did write
that. Erich Segal has confirmed that it was Al Gore, but not
necessarily Tipper. So there was a minor difference that got
blown into
HANNITY: I don't have a lot of time to refute every fact here.
But did he create the Internet?
Fox should be ashamed to see evasive work like that done on
its channel.
What are the facts about this endlessly-flogged groaner? The
facts are clear from the 12/14/97 New York Times piece, the one
which Colmes quoted. There had been an article in the Tennessean
quoting Segal (inaccurately, as it turns out). In the article,
Segal was quoted saying that Love Story was based on both
the Gores. It was to that article that Gore alluded in his remark
to Berke and Tumulty. What did Gore actually say to the scribes?
In the 12/14/97 New York Times piece, Henneberger quoted Tumulty:
HENNEBERGER: "[Gore] said Segal had told some reporters
in Tennessee that it was based on him and Tipper," Ms. Tumulty
said. "He said all I know is that's what he told reporters
in Tennessee."
Again, Tumulty has stressed to me, several times, that Gore's
remark was fleeting and lacking in import. Between them, Berke
and Tumulty wrote one sentence, total, about Gore's "attempt
to let everybody know he was more than a role model."
Hannity's conduct is remarkable. He routinely tells viewers
that Gore "has a problem with the truth," based on patently
false recitations like this one. Indeed, even Colmes' presentation
of the New York Times quote didn't stop Hannity from his bogus
presentations. The next night (Wednesday), he again told viewers
that Erich Segal had contradicted Gore on this matter. Evidence
doesn't seem to count much at Fox. Tell us again, so we can get
it straight: Do they "report" or "distort"
when we decide?
It's amazing to think that such utter trivia has driven a White
House campaign. But, without question, it plainly hasthis silly
incident has been cited, again and again, as a referendum on Gore's
lack of character. Why has the press corps put up with this nonsense?
It's a stain on the press corps' sad reputationand given the
importance laid off on this incident, it's an assault on our misused
democracy.
Note: On Thursday and Friday of last week, we asked Hannity,
by e-mail, to explain his comments. We asked him if he stands
by his statements to Skinner. We asked him to explain why he said
that Gore had "told the crowd." We asked him to provide
the quotes which he had promised to Skinner. We enjoyed several
conversations with an able assistant, but Hannity never responded.
At THE HOWLER, we're frankly concerned. We're worried that
Hannity may have a "character problem." We suspect he
will do or say anything to win. In fact, we're not sure that he
knows who he is. So Roger Ailes, sir, please tell us true: Why
do you put up with this nonsense?
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