Michael Wolff and Fire and Fury: Credible?

Prior to the release of Michael Wolff’s book ‘Fire and Fury’, I had never heard of the man.  Naturally with the book, I was curious as to who he is so I set out to look.

Watching Wolff speak, I see a flamboyantly styled man by his looks alone, yet in his recent interviews, I saw subdued. That’s a contradiction to me. I immediately question: subdued by purpose or by cause? Because he is not a subdued type.  I ponder:  Was he arrogant in the past and cut down?  Or does he need credibility so he is playing it cool?  Those are the questions running through my mind as I watch him speak in the video below.

If Wolff and I met in a lobby of a hotel and chatted, I wouldn’t put my guard down with him as I can with some people. There would be a watchful eye at all times. There is something about him that raises my eyebrows. I settle on his flamboyant style as what pings me.  His personality fits a profile of a person that loves to get attention, attract people’s interest and tell things with a flare.  Do you see it? It fits with what he is doing as well (behaviorally).

When I watch Wolff in the interview, I believe Wolff believes what he is telling us.  And he tells us directly–he witnessed lots of conflict, and through that conflict he made choices as to what the truth is. When he tells us everyone was lying, and that he had to discern the truth, he is truthful on that–but as an expert in human behavior and deception, at what level is he able to discern the truth accurately?  I question that.  Is he good at it or not?

So I have a flamboyant man who I am now relying on to determine what he thinks is truthful. That gives me pause. I would prefer someone who remains neutral and gives me both sides of the story and lets me decide. Do you agree?  Does he do that in his book? From the interview, he suggests he does not.

I have not read his book, so I cannot comment on the book. I can only comment on his statements.  And much of what I hear in the video above supports what I have seen so far myself from the reporting by people in the White House directly. It supports what I have seen from Trump, Bannon, Priebus, Conway, Spicer and others.   It’s no secret the White House is in chaos, that rational thinking doesn’t apply there (what rational WH would give recording access to anyone cart blanche)?

Which makes me ponder: Did they give him access?  Why would they? Ironically, I have not heard a denial on this front from the White House on the recording being illegal or not vetted or approved, so I am assuming they did or they would go after him since he is claiming he had tapes. Right?  Have you seen a story on this?  The absence of it will speak volumes. I will be watching.

So the overall messages from Wolff does not ping me as fundamentally false in this interview, but I would not trust things verbatim.

And oddly, in reading more about him, I see quotes that he writes in the introduction of his book  that accounts from the book “are in conflict with one another” and may be “badly untrue,” according to thehill.com.

That screeches me to a halt.

I am not comfortable with his words that things may be “badly untrue”.  If he is reporting what people said–what they said would never be untrue, even if the person told a lie.  They said it. That would be fact, right?  What they said, however, may not be fact but as a journalist, I am not responsible for their lies, so I would never write that statement unless I may not be truthful.  That statement is a caveat flip-card to say I told you so, isn’t it?

That smells to me of an excuse.

 That doesn’t work for me.

CNBC is reporting that Wolff said in his Today Show interview, “I certainly said what was ever necessary to get the story.”  I didn’t watch the interview, so I am trusting CNBC and if that’s true:  Ouch.

Further CNBC is showing how Wolff slipped up on facts already that reporters are exposing (see link above).

I don’t like that sloppiness.

So for me, while I know the White House is a chaotic mess and I am sure a lot of stuff being reported is based in the truth, take it with a kernel of “maybe, maybe not.” I don’t need Wolff to tell me things are way out of whack in the White House. They are insane.  I’ve seen enough with my own eyes to know that much is true. The rest I will take with caution and remember, this is the story by a man who profits.

4 replies
  1. Russ Conte
    Russ Conte says:

    What a mess of a story! Thank you very much for covering this. There are other examples in the author’s interview. For example, Wolf speculates that Trump might be watching him all day, but the only evidence he has is that the White House asked for his media schedule. That’s one HUGE leap from asking for a media schedule to concluding the President of the United States is watching him all day. Where is the evidence???

    When Colbert asks what it means that he settled on a version of events he (Wolf) believes to be true, Wolf thinks for a split second before answering. That’s an indicator – not necessarily bad, but why did he have to think about the answer?

    When Wolff says he had to “use my judgement”, there appears to be a microexpression of disgust – but in a way I’ve never noticed before – he flashes disgust twice in very rapid succession at about 2:23

    The line, “You should believe all of it” does not sit well with me. That strikes me as a “trust me” line, without showing the evidence.

    I see enough yellow flags with Mr. Wolff that I don’t trust him totally. It really feels to me like there’s an agenda coming from him, he is not neutral at all, and it really feels like he’s trying to sell me something – his version of the White House.

    I’m not completely buying his version of the White House, but the frustrating part is I’m sure some of this is true. More will come out with time, hopefully by writers who have higher standards in their writing and reporting.

    Thanks again for the blog post, it is greatly appreciated, as always! Keep up the excellent work!

  2. Pingy
    Pingy says:

    The day the book came out, I bought the Kindle version on Amazon and read it in three days. I think it’s important to read his book before passing judgment on his integrity, and watch several of his interviews (which explains those contradictionjs in the book). I got the same flamboyant impression on his dress that you did. At first I thought he was gay, but then I read he is married. It could be his wife dressed him up for the television interview. Most book-writers are pretty nerdy people, so if he overdressed, he may not have known better.

  3. clownfish
    clownfish says:

    He says what he provides is a story…not journalism. He sounds a tiny bit shaky to me. I don’t know. If everyone is just contradicting everybody and you’re just gonna tell a story, you should probably just take it as a story. Not an account to take verbatim. Strange stuff.

  4. clownfish
    clownfish says:

    Okay I got the vibe I think. I see someone who basically likes gossip. Who is smooth enough to be in the scene talking to people, but who isn’t charitably motivated exactly. Opportunistic undercurrent even if he likes people and can chum with them.
    Yeah I think the only thing I see is good at being a nosy type.

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