In case you've forgotten (and I truly wish I could), James O'Keefe is that odious little Breitbart protégé with a penchant for setting up people, organizations and the general public with false narratives staged in advance. His latest borders on an effort to sexually harass and possibly assault a CNN reporter, of all things.
Abbie Boudreau is an attractive, young CNN reporter who had an assignment: To report on the young conservative 'movement'. I have an issue with their framing and focus, but that's a topic for another post.
James O'Keefe hatched a plan to "punk" Boudreau with props like strawberries, dildoes Viagra and stamina pills. Here's a one-paragraph description of the "plan":
Instead, I've decided to have a little fun. Instead of giving her a serious interview, I'm going to punk CNN. Abbie has been trying to seduce me to use me, in order to spin a lie about me. So, I'm going to seduce her, on camera, to use her for a video. This bubble-headed-bleach-blonde who comes on at five will get a taste of her own medicine, she'll get seduced on camera and you'll get to see the awkwardness and the aftermath.
My first thought after reading this plan was that James O'Keefe has some strange reading material. I shudder to think what his video consumption is. But deeper than that -- far deeper -- is his cynical, ugly attitude about women. This is a guy who strikes me as someone who doesn't have the first clue about what women are really about, and certainly has no respect for them. In the 80's he would have been the lounge lizard hitting on every woman in the room while harboring fantasies about taking three of them home at once. He's someone who has no problem lying to anyone and everyone who challenges him.
He's the date rapist type you're glad you never encountered when you were single.
As our own Erin, QueenofSpain points out, this is not in any way, shape or form, investigative journalism:
O'Keefe calls himself a journalist. He thinks THIS Is what 'investigative' journalism is like. That's what kills me. Investigative journalism isn't a 'set-up' though, it's research. His research is sexual harassment and idiocy.
Erin has more than a little credibility in this area, given that she's a recipient of the Golden Mic award for investigative journalism. In an email she pointed out that she won that Golden Mic through research and hard work, not baiting and sexual harassment. Her bra size didn't have a single thing to do with it.
As incredibly stupid as his idiotic plan was, it should also offend any woman who has ever had to overcome her looks to be taken seriously in her chosen profession.
From Abbie's heartbreakingly familiar statement:
As a woman in the news industry you have to be tough. I have always had to work harder than my male counterparts to be taken seriously and to be treated with respect. As a woman in the news industry you have to ignore all of the silly talk from your managers about the clothes you should wear on-air or what color your hair should be. I have had my share of conversations like that, and to be honest, it stings. I'm left wondering, "When will my work stand on its own? Why does this always have to be part of the conversation?
PunditMom (Joanne) had this comment:
When I was a young thing in TV news in the late 70s and early 80s (think Anchorman, except I wasn't as attractive as Christina Applegate!), the exact same things were going on. I had a chance to meet a well-known woman network TV journo who told me then -- you just have to suck it up and ignore it. How many generations have we officially had since 1978? As long as men run things, this will never change -- and even then it won't change, but if women run things, we can fire their asses!
This conversation has gone on and on and on. It never changes. There will always be someone who attacks the way people look or conversely, exploits the way they look. One of O'Keefe's champions, Dana Loesch, just spent an inordinate amount of time on Twitter attacking women she has political differences with on the basis of how they look! This boggles my mind. As a member of the human race, I believe there are some lines you just don't need to cross. I can disagree with all my mind, heart and soul with someone politically and still not care about looks. Is Rachel Maddow less effective because she doesn't fit the "traditional woman" TV mold? I think not. As Adam says:
But Loesch doesn't just get her story wrong, she reveals herself as supporting exactly what most of the feminist movement (both liberal and conservative) has been working to combat for a long time: she appears to think that womens' looks should be used against them in political discourse, and she repeatedly attacks other women based on their looks while implying that this says something about their moral worth. As I've documented, Loesch has a history of this: she previously said that women at Emily's List had "hair lips" and were jealous of Palin, and she suggested that those criticizing her were like "chicks who pad their bras."
Is this a conservative thing, this cynicism about how looks define the person or their politics? There should be some issues that define us as humans, not conservatives or liberals. My grandmother and my mother dealt with the same kinds of criticism as Boudreau in their work lives. I spent the first 10 years of my career learning how to dodge drunk salesmen at company open bar parties, while fighting off rumor after rumor after rumor about who I was screwing at any given time. My daughter will be in the workforce in another 10 years. Will we still be having this conversation then?
Via the #journchat tag on Twitter, I found this great post by Jessica Malnik. The title alone is worth its weight in gold: Stop "Barbie-tizing" The Newsroom!
Barbies, like “journalism barbie,” promote stereotypes and essentially make a mockery about women’s career choices. Subconsciously, it is invoking in little girls that women are supposed to be “well-dressed sex symbols” in the newsroom. Think about it. Journalism barbie is presumably a TV anchor, who is super-skinny and wearing tons of makeup and what can only be described as a shiny pink velvet suit.
TV anchors, well at least good anchors, are some of the hardest working journalists out there. As someone who has worked in TV news, I can attest that a lot of hard work goes into a TV newscast.
Because yes, there really *is* a Journalism Barbie. Holy God, what have we been fighting for all these years?
James O'Keefe is detestable. His plan was cynical, sexist, and abusive, and exposed by a woman who worked for him, who was offended beyond her political beliefs. She was offended as a member of the human race. She knew it wasn't right, and she tipped off Boudreau. For her courage, she lost her job, while O'Keefe keeps his. What a message that sends.
Grow up. Grow up, conservatives. Quit putting frat boys with idiotic seduction sting plans up as legitimate reporters while marginalizing real reporters with real talent and a real desire to do investigative journalism.
And yes, quit defining women on the basis of their bra size, their hair color and their looks. Blondes are not bimbos. Liberals are not all flat-chested (I'm looking at YOU, Dana Loesch). The only thing that matters here is what's between their ears. Are we ever going to get to a point where women are respected for what they DO, rather than how they LOOK?
I was also an investigative journalist back in the day! The sad thing was that I got a lot of good stories on my political beat because the men one day told me they thought they could talk about all sorts of complicated things in front of me and I wouldn't understand because I was a girl. *sigh*
Posted by: Joanne Bamberger aka PunditMom | September 29, 2010 at 11:15 AM
Malignant narcissism. Requires full frontal mental health intervention but rarely can be successfully treated. There happen to be a lot of people like that in politics and political blogging.
http://www.suite101.com/content/malignant-narcissism-a29906
Truly actually sick people.
Posted by: Jill Miller Zimon | September 29, 2010 at 11:17 AM
What's both creepy and hilarious about this whole scenario is that O'Keefe seems to think he has the ability to seduce an accomplished reporter, a beautiful woman, and that she'll fall for it (or him).
So not only does he think very little of her, he thinks entirely too much of himself.
Ew. Just Ew.
Posted by: Lisse | September 29, 2010 at 11:37 AM
James O'Keefe's idea of "entrapment" is a rape-y scenario? What a twisted, messed up kid.
Posted by: Cynematic | September 29, 2010 at 05:02 PM
Malignant narcissism defines it perfectly. Exactly right.
Posted by: Karoli | September 30, 2010 at 12:14 AM