Wolf Blitzer's in
the news again. CNN's colorful attack-dog journalist
was involved in another on-air confrontation, this time with
Sicko filmmaker Michael Moore.
Wait a minute.
That Wolf Blitzer?
The only thing
colorful about the methodical, old-school reporter is his
first name. Yet with Moore, Vice President Dick Cheney, and
the veep's wife, Lynne Cheney, that makes three
memorable skirmishes during Blitzer interviews in nine
months.
It's less a
reflection on the 59-year-old CNN host than on the growing
occupational hazard for people like him: the interview
subject who's ready to pick a fight.
Moore was
seething before Blitzer even asked anything on the July 9
appearance. CNN had preceded the interview with a taped
report by physician Sanjay Gupta alleging Moore had
fudged some facts in Sicko. Moore
disagreed--and felt sandbagged.
The combative
Moore launched into a diatribe that not only defended his
movie and questioned Gupta's reporting but attacked CNN for
failing to report aggressively at the Iraq war's
outset. Blitzer defended Gupta, ignored Moore's
commentary about the war, and tried with limited success
to steer the conversation back to the health care system.
Nothing personal.
Both men even flashed some humor when, toward the end,
Moore made a reference to Al Gore being right about the war,
''unlike CNN. Did I mention that?''
''You did,''
Blitzer deadpanned.
Blitzer said
later he was surprised by Moore's combativeness, since he
didn't feel Gupta's report was that critical. While still
angry about the report, Moore did the ''gentlemanly
thing'' and apologized, he said.
''I feel bad that
Wolf had to bear the brunt of what I and a lot of
others feel about the mainstream media,'' Moore told the
Associated Press.
But he shouldn't
feel bad about the reaction. Video of the exchange was
quickly distributed on the Internet, enhancing Moore's
reputation among like-minded people. Within a week,
more than half a million people had viewed it on
YouTube alone.
Comes in handy
for someone promoting a movie.
Liberals have
learned what conservatives have long known--that there
are benefits to being seen as ''standing up'' to the
''hostile'' press. Former president Clinton's testy
exchange with Chris Wallace on the Fox News Channel
last September was particularly instructive. Fans of
Democratic presidential candidates are delighted about their
refusal to appear in a debate sponsored by Fox.
''I'm much more
sensitive to it because I suspect that politicians and
people who have political agendas are going to use these
forums increasingly not just to answer questions on
substantive issues but to try to score some points and
rally their bases,'' Blitzer said.
It's something
Blitzer and his staff are increasingly aware of as they
prepare for interviews.
During his CNN
appearance, Moore was media savvy enough to allude to
Blitzer's January 24 live interview with Dick Cheney, in
which the vice president was visibly angry to have
been asked about conservative critics of his lesbian
daughter.
''Why did it take
you so long to take on Vice President Cheney?'' Moore
asked. ''It took you to 2007 before you made the man mad at
you. Four years! Where were you?''
In asking Cheney
about his daughter Mary's baby with her same-sex
partner, Blitzer read a statement from the conservative
group Focus on the Family, which said that ''just
because it's possible to conceive a child outside of
the relationship of a married mother and father doesn't
mean it's best for the child.''
''You want to
respond to that?'' Blitzer asked.
No, he didn't. He
called Blitzer ''out of line with that question.'' His
glare didn't soften even when Blitzer congratulated him for
having another grandchild.
It cemented
Blitzer's pariah status in the Cheney household. The vice
president's wife had attacked Blitzer on the air a few
months earlier over CNN's Broken Government
series.
Blitzer believed
then, and believes now, that there was nothing wrong
with what he asked the vice president. Mary Cheney hadn't
hidden her lesbianism. Blitzer was asking about a
criticism made by another public figure.
''I'm not there
to fight these guys,'' Blitzer said. ''I'm not there to
get into an argument with them. I see them as my guest. I
want to be polite and respectful, but I want to make
sure they don't get a free pass.''
Blitzer grew up
in journalism with Ted Koppel as a model, rereading
several times a chapter about interview techniques in a book
written by the former Nightline anchor.
He sees himself
as a surrogate for the public, with a responsibility to
ask newsmakers about things that their critics are saying
about them. If a question is ducked, he'll ask again.
If it's ducked again, he'll point that out and move
on.
For the most
part, interview subjects understand his job, he said.
Yet it may seem
hostile to an interview subject--or be made to seem
hostile--simply because public figures now understand
there are so many more opportunities to bypass the
Wolf Blitzers of the world.
They could appear
on television or radio formats judged ideologically
sympathetic, ranging from Rush Limbaugh's show to Air
America. They could choose hosts -- CNN's Larry
King immediately comes to mind -- who primarily
lob softballs and let their subjects talk. Or they could use
the Internet and cut out the middleman entirely.
''I'm not just
there to say 'Why are you so brilliant?''' Blitzer said.
''I'm there to ask serious questions--awkward
questions at times--that partisans won't feel
comfortable with. That's the way I was trained all
these years, and that's the way I am.'' (David Bauder, AP)