A wise person once said that you know you’re toast when the late-night comics start making fun of you.
Welcome to the world of wee-hour funny stuff, Brian Williams.
His story about “misremembering” a shoot-down in Iraq and now his reporting from Hurricane Katrina is taking on a life of its own. It’s turning into a monster that, if it’s left still kicking, is going to knock down the walls of credibility that formerly surrounded the NBC Nightly News anchorman.
http://www.theneworleansadvocate.com/news/11526453-148/nbc-news-anchor-brian-williams
This is not a pretty sight to watch.
It well might be that the Katrina story inflicts an even deeper wound in Williams’s reputation.
He reported during the storm in 2005 about seeing “dead bodies” floating in the French Quarter — despite the reported fact at the time that the Quarter suffered hardly any flooding. He told viewers about ingesting floodwater, causing dysentery. Others on the scene have doubted that as well.
What in the world is happening to this individual’s once-stellar journalism career? He’s always been thought of as one of the more thoughtful, everyman, honest newsmen in the business. Williams has exhibited none of the erratic behavior that Dan Rather did when he took over from Walter Cronkite at CBS. He’s been rock solid, steady — and at times self-effacing, such as when he makes appearances on late-night shows to talk about stories he’s covered and the foibles he’s endured.
The so-called misremembering being shot down in Iraq by itself stretches credulity.
Add to that now the reporting of deep flaws in his Hurricane Katrina coverage and you start drawing the picture of a broadcst journalist who’s found himself in some deep doo-doo.
This is not fun to watch.