Three Recent Must-See Media Disasters

Readers regularly send in clips of media disasters. (Thank you!)

Some of them aren’t big enough to become stand-alone stories – but collectively, they make for one heck of a fun blog post. So here are three lesser-noticed recent must-see media disasters.

1. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie Yells At Constituent

Late last week, Gov. Christie appeared on a local PBS station. A constituent wanted to know:

“You don’t send your children to public schools – you send them to private schools. So I was wondering why you think it’s fair to be cutting school funding to public schools.”

 

Sounds like a fair question. But Mr. Christie didn’t agree:

First, the woman didn’t ask where Christie’s children go to school. The heart of her question was about conflict of interest, and it was a predictable question.

By saying “none of your business” after pointedly addressing her by name, he made his angry response the story – which is a shame, since his third point would have served as a perfect answer (”I, as Governor, am responsible for every child in this state.”).

 

2. Stop. Just Stop.

When the Australian Broadcasting Corporation sent a reporter to a town called Woodside to ask residents how they felt about a local detention center, they got an unexpected bit of aggressive message control.

Fast forward to 3:08, where the unusual fireworks begin.

The media spokesperson saying “stop” accomplished the opposite of what she intended, bringing more attention to the issue by reacting so dramatically. If you give reporters dramatic film, they’re going to use it. And as a result, readers across the world will now see her poor attempt at message control.

(Thanks to reader @Hootville for sending this clip – a good person to follow!)

 

3. Henry Kissinger Threatens to End an Interview

According to an article in The Wall Street Journal, former U.S. Secretary of State threatened to end an interview – with almost no provocation:

“’What I am reflecting about now is not that I don’t think I know an answer to your question,’” says a pensive Henry Kissinger, sitting in his spacious Park Avenue corner office adorned with signed photos of former presidents and foreign leaders. ‘It’s that I don’t know whether I choose to talk about it at this moment and in this forum. . . . And I don’t mind dropping the interview and I don’t mind you saying that I refused to go any further and pay the price for it.’

“What sort of hard-hitting question should elicit such evasiveness from the former secretary of state?… ‘What are the historic sources of Chinese vulnerability, and what are the current ones?’”

Like the other two spokespersons, his strange reaction only increases the audience’s suspicion about what triggered his disproportionate reaction.

As I’ve said on this blog many times, hostile responses usually end up shining a light on the areas you least want attention focused on – so take a breath and deny the reporter the easy footage by delivering a calm, uneventful reply.

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Related: The Five Worst Video Media Disasters of May 2011

Related: The Ten Worst Video Media Disasters of 2010