THE BOSS DON'T LIKE ROBBERY MAKE IT SWINDLE

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
4
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 16, 2010
Sequence Number: 
3
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Publication Date: 
July 1, 1982
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OPEN SOURCE
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I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 July-August 1982 he genial Scot at the Na- tional Press Club bar in November painted a pleas- ing picture of National Enquirer opulence in the Florida sunshine. Winter enhanced his plausibility. My visions of having to invade Hollywood funeral parlors, sift through mountains of celeb- rity garbage or track Senator Kennedy to see whether he broke the speed limit on the George Washington Parkway were dispelled: "Mythology," he said. And if there was a touch of the hustler in his broad Glasgow accent, it was be- lied by the half-moon reading glasses. Simon Barber, former Washington cor- respondent for the British newsweekly, professorial tweeds and Mont Blanc fountain pen. The Enquirer's recruiter found me at a vulnerable moment. My previous employer, a British newsweekly, had folded some months previously; the job hunt was going badly; I was broke. I could scarcely afford to go to the super- market, much less scorn the drivel on its checkout counters. Sympathy for Carol Burnett, whose suit against the Enquirer I once cheered, had become a luxury. He suggested I try my hand as arti- cles editor. It started at a $1,000 a week, carried the responsibility of creating and running a network of reporters, and might, in the e%ent of some really spec- tacular death or disaster, involve a little travel. Hopelessness, and the rakish idea of building a Smileyesque Circus dedi- uirer for ti..o ,x -i- cated to ferreting out the Untold, Amaz- ing and Bizarre, were ample stimuli. I bit, and three days later I was on a pre- paid flight to Florida. The Enquirer resides in Lantana, one of those countless ribs of real estate whose primary function is to separate Palm Beach from Fort Lauderdale anal 1-95 from the Intracoastal \tiaterw,ty. .A bland tract of telegraph poles, tired palm trees and prefabrication, it is remarkable on two counts: it has a large population of Finns and coruscating soullessness. In the midst of this refugee camp for the cold and old, wedged between a railway line and a crumbling sports fa- cility, the National Enquirer makes its one stab at irony and keeps a low hle. Once the visitor has given up trying to figure out the Minoan-style hulls horns that mark the entrance, he is pleasantly surprised h'. the landscaping. q Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 e would The grounds are thick with hibiscus ano other fragrant shrubs, each thoughtfully labelled with its botanical name. The building itself lives up to a more squalid expectation No bastion of multimillion- the Enquirer's higher echelons, "There doesn't seem to be anything behind his eyes." The effect is a mask of staring malevolence, which does little to endear. dollar publishing this. instead a sleepy He is educated. A top of his class single-story sprawl that might service- 1 graduate in engineering from MIT. ac- Like everything in Lantana, it exudes served in the CIA's psychological war- the grim quality of being instant. fare unit. Further glimpses of his life It was perhaps my misfortune to be beyond the Enquirer, which he pur- ushered into the presence of executive chased in 1952, are virtually nonexis- editor :Mike Hoy at lunchtime. The edi- tent. His father was the publisher of the torial offices were all but empty, and New York Italian-language paper 11 Pro- c()!t%rved, in an efficiently pastel way, a gre.sso. Some see murkiness in the fact ike an that since he moved the operation from sense of innocent cheerfulness, like' outsized kindergarten. Indeed, one of the New Jersey in 1971, Pope has never left newsroom cubicles was stacked with ex- south Florida. He says he hates to fly. otic toys. I began to suspect that the peo- There is an eeriness about him en- ple who worked here might be having hanced by gun-toting plainclothes secu- fun. rity men who haunt the premises, spot Hoy. thirtyish, Australian and checks on reporters' telephone conversa- modelled on the lines of a hygienic rock tions, and the uniformed Lantana pa- star, encouraged this view by offering trolman who escorts Pope to and from me a job, on a trial basis, within 15 his car. minutes of our meeting, and by explain- My first day should have taught me ing why the company would not, as had more, perhaps, than it did. My initial once been its practice, rent a car for me. mistake was to turn up in coat and tie. One of my more exuberant predecessors Higher authority wore shirtsleeves and had driven an Enquirer Hertz into the an increasingly familiar pair of pants, a Waterway. style, admonished Hoy, that I would do Then he said something rather well to emulate. I blundered again by strange. "I want you to know that we trying to strike up a conversation. Ap- really are looking for editors." Having parently one did not talk to colleagues, been tracked down by a recruiter and be they only six feet away, except by flown in from Washington to be inter- internal telephone and with one's back viewed for such a slot, and having just turned. I needed coffee. "Put a top on been offered a month's trial at it, I it," someone hissed as I carried a cup to thought this scarcely needed saying. my desk. "The Boss don't like stains on That impermanence was an institution his carpet." To atone, I worked through at the Enquirer did not occur to me, nor, lunch, another miscalculation. "The as yet, did the connection between its Boss believes in lunch." Next day I ate, desperation for new blood and whatever grateful for a temporary escape, only to had possessed the predecessor to sink his be informed that I'd been seen leaving car. the office with the wrong people. My Every aspect of the Enquirer, from its management to what it prints, is gov- erned by a surgically precise apprecia- tion of human frailty. This is the great achievement of its owner and publisher, the splendidly named Generoso Pope, Jr., and evidently appreciated by six million supermarket purchasers a week. Pope's relationship with his employees approximates that between the God of the Old Testament and the Children of Israel minus forgiveness. His control is total and awe-inspiring, his ways myste- rious, his retribution swift. When he deals with a man, he likes, to use his own very secular phrase, to "have him by the balls," and usually succeeds. Un- der Hoy's guidance, it was hoped I would quickly learn to divine his will. Known simply as The Boss or GP, Pope dominates the waking thoughts, and more than a few sleeping ones as well, of all at the Enquirer. An autho- rized account, published in 1978 by the Miami Herald, describes Pope as "a tall man, built like a Bronx precinct cap- tain." Fifty-four years have softened that image somewhat, except for the face. companions were said to be under some form of cloud and best avoided. Besides, what was I doing having lunch? I won- dered whether Pope ever specified his desires before punishing those who transgressed them. The arena in which this curious drama was to be played out might have been a newsroom in any large daily be- fore the electronic age. Its open plan lay- out was symmetrical about a narrow avenue across which two rows of editors, about nine in all, numbers varied, were occasionally polite to one another. Be- hind them sat their secretaries, each bus- ily pretending to callers that her boss worked in a private office. Next, pinched into lines of narrow, benchlike desks were the 40 or so reporters, each owing allegiance and his job to a particular editor. Finally the writers, who are re- sponsible for the Enquirer's deathless prose and probably the happiest employ- ees. Deemed creative by The Boss, they were left in peace. At the end of the central aisle, rather too close to where I had been stationed, was a series of glass cubicles. Pope had a grander sanctum come when he wished to make his pres- ence felt. Assistants ensured that a pack of Kents and a lighter always awaited his arrival. As a deracinated Englishman, I should have had some cause to feel at home. A surprising proportion of my new colleagues hailed from Britain and parts of its old empire. A buzz of famil- iar accents could be heard insinuating charm down various telephones. Having had some success in this department my- self, I could imagine the interrogatees being thoroughly disarmed. To their cost. Pope's predilection for what one American writer has called British Em- pire journalists has little to do with the narcotic power of the speech patterns, however, but derives more from their tradition. American reporters tend to take a rather romantic view of their trade, see themselves as somehow in the public service. Their minds are bur- dened with scruple. Not so the British Empire Journalist. He can report, as in 1978 one imaginative correspondent for the London Daily Mail actually did, that President Carter was growing a beard to look more Lincolnesque, and receive a kudogram from his superiors. Rupert Murdoch ranks high in the Pope pan- theon, and as publisher of the Star, con- stitutes Pope's most serious opposition. My first impression was that my fellow editors all looked very ill: ex- change their typewriters for oars and they would have made perfect (though, on $60,000 a year and up, very expen- sive) extras for the sea battle in Ben Hur. Enquirer reporters had the furtive look of kicked and beaten Labrador Re- trievers. Foot soldiers, they were at least insulated from The Boss by their editors, whose paranoia-induced savagery was the price of relative security. The reason I had been brought in from outside to be articles editor was that no reporter wanted to risk his neck or his $45,000 a year more than was strictly necessary. Now and then one or two were forcibly promoted-given the option of leaving or climbing-which regularly amounted to the same thing: climbers who failed at editor could expect to be fired, and the chances of making it were no better than those of a World War I subaltern on the Western Front. One of the luckier ones was the young Englishman sitting to my left. Promoted some months previously, he had begun his career on a small provin- cial paper outside London, and had been lured to Florida by wealth and warmth. In an earlier age, he might have set out to make his fortune in some tropical out- post of Empire. He seemed to be doing all that was required of him: his file drawer was full of good stories in prog- ress, yet there was an air of doom about him. Colleagues shied away, spoke of' him with, of all things in this emotional Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 house. compassion. It he was being executed, Enquirer-style. First they cut his salary, then re- moved his reporters, forcing him to rely on stringers, finally demanded a massive increase in output. This is the Pope always does it," he said one way eve- ning towards the end. "They dig you a grave and say climb out if you can. You never can. The grave just gets deeper." Several days later his desk was empty. In this case the editor was allowed to reincarnate himself as a reporter. A rare privilege. A reason would have been helpful, enquiries were about as fruitful as asking a priest to account plausibly for human suffering. The editor's de- frocking could be ascribed to no particu- lar commission or omission, it was just the way things worked around here. A sympathetic reporter noticed my puzzle- ment. "The Boss is a toy train freak," she explained. "I think he likes to see us as a vast toy train set. He throws switches, sets up obstructions, and races us off bridges just for the hell of seeing what happens." In terms of how they are put to- gether, there is essentially little differ- ence between the National Enquirer and, say, Time. To the structuralist, anyway. Leads are developed and assigned, re- porters and stringers turn in voluminous files, which are rigorously checked for accuracy, boiled down by writers into the house style, and finally, with luck, printed. There, however, the resem- blance ends. Appearances to the contrary, gung- ho fabulism is not the Enquirer's line of business. Nor indeed is journalism, in any of the accepted senses of the word. Bear in mind that the Enquirer is not designed primarily to inform, amuse, or even, really, to be read. It performs these functions, of course, but they are secondary. It exists to be consumed, much in the same way as premixed pea- nut butter and jelly. The idea is pretty simple. People enter the supermarket in a buying frame of mind, so let's give them one more brightly packaged object to shove into their shopping bags. The editorial content addresses it- self scientifically to the consuming mood, a condition frequently brought on by boredom, restlessness and unfocused dis- satisfaction. The u'nivcrsc depicted is a bright, uncomplicated, unambiguous place where things either are (in this category we may include metempsycho- sis, UFOs and psychic fork-bending) or are not (unhappy endings, celibate celeb- told that he is basically good, that the rich and famous are basically miserable, and that the quality of life is improving immeasurably: cancer, obesity and ar- thritis can be cured. In short the Enquirer is a kind of printed Valium, its editors little more than pharmacists, cutting each other's throats to combine and recombine a limited number of ingredients which Pope, the master chemist, has deter- mined will have the desired effect. It is a mechanical and, the financial aspect apart, unrewarding task. The process begins Each editor is expected to submit 30 or so to The Boss every Friday, of which perhaps half a dozen may be approved. On the rest he scribbles the ubiquitous initials NG (No Good). The ideas come from reporters and stringers (all of whom receive up to $300 if their offer- ing gets into print), other publications (there is always a race for the new Omni, Cosmopolitan and Self) and the imagination. Memorable specimens from the latter category include "The Junk Food Diet," "How Brooke Shields, Loni Anderson and Farrah Fawcett are Wrecking Your Marriage" and "Let's Get Accredited as a Salvation Army Fundraiser and Go Knocking on Celeb- rity Doors to See How Generous the Stars Are." A number of celebrity leads are preemptive. I myself proposed "Wedding Bells for Patti Reagan and Peter [Masada] Strauss." The Elizabeth Taylor-John Warner separation was in the works probably before they had even said their vows, and certainly for months before it occurred. At this very moment at least one editor is contemplating mar- riage between Robert Wagner, widower of Natalie Wood, and his television co- star Stephanie Powers. Often, of course, celebrities do dra- matic things that even the Enquirer can- not foresee, the deaths of Natalie Wood and William Holden for example. In these instances, leads are rushed through under the rubric of "Untold Story," the logic being that there will always be one. In the Wood case, which occurred a few weeks after I arrived, the editor involved went to extraordinary lengths to find something that the voluble Los Angeles coroner Thomas Noguchi had iot said. What he came up with was the sugges- tion, ascribed to 'f6p Doctors, that the actress, rather than drowning. had been asphyxiated by a potent mixture of drugs and alcohol. This on the basis of a well-stocked medicine cabinet and the alleged absence of froth on the victim'; lips. What I heard of the interview . went as follows: "Doctor, if after mn- suming such and such a quantity of al- cohol, a person were to take drugs x intl y, what would be the result:'" Even the most grizzled veter,,n o ,m- not second guess Pope's taste with any certainty. His notions of what constitutes a contemporary star are quixotic, but seem to derive from movies of the '50s and '60s (hence Sophia Loren, Princess Grace and, by association, her daughter Caroline) and the top ten Nielson-rated shows he happens to watch (not 60 Min- utes). Dudley Moore, of 10 and Arthur fame, fails to register on the grounds that he is, and I quote, "Not big enough." The currently lionized Tom Selleck (Magnum, P1), did not have the right stuff either, until Pope was per- suaded to poll his favorite gauges of gut reaction, the secretaries. There are, however, some totally predictable NG's, chief among them blacks, except when they practice voo- doo, or are child comic Gary Coleman. I presented Hoy with a heart-warming story of a young New Orleans man who had survived a grain elevator explosion and 80 percent burns to become a multi- millionaire (a surefire hit under the Rags to Riches category). He immedi- ately asked me what color he was. Black. Kill it. Gays, on the other hand, may be beaten up at will. An outraged account of San Francisco's demographics was headlined "Sick! Sick! Sick!" The Enquirer, a self-styled Equal Opportu- nity Employer, has no minority employ- ees. Once an approved lead has pleased Story Control, a computer programmed to weed out duplicates, it is ready to he reported, and the ethical mayhem be- gins. If celebrities are the potatoes of tab- loid journalism, miraculous medicine is the meat. Unfortunately, the medical fraternity likes to be circumspect about describing its advances, and talks of per- centages, hopes, possibilities, rarely of anything so definite as a cure. This is too gray for the Enquirer which does not recognize the subjunctive mood: a thin, either is or it isn't. The trick, therefore. is to get the medical man, who in his right mind would never even talk to the Enquirer, to say things that would cost him his shingle if he tried to say them in the New England Journal of kleclicine, and on tape. This is known in the trade as Burning Docs. Technically, the reporter's path is strewn with regulations. Not only trust his interviews be taped, but he has signed a waiver binding him to identify himself as working for the Enquirer and as using a recorder, thus excusing his employers when, as he must, he sidles past the law. if his editor wants him to get a doctor to say something. he is un- der considerably more pressure to pro- WASHINGTON JOURNALISM REVIEW Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0 Isid- d;ice than to be .,,, ~r erea sounaci ev+ac..< U'... a ,.. _? ctor fu sat to carry out an order is treated Amendment. with military firmness. Much of the information on who is because the latter has the unfortunate w There are many ways to ease on- bedding whom, whose career is on the habit, of being accurate. the-record indiscretion from an inter skids and who is currently being detoxi- he reigning exponent of what may yiewee, the most popular being the old fied from what, emanates from the thriv- be called the "Hey-Martha-Will-You- 20 Questions ploy. The subject is ing gossip industry as a wholel I do not Get-A-Look-At-This" school is Enquirer stroked into a state of trust and then hit pretend to know how this works. Obvi- superstringer Henry Gris, a former UPI with a series of convoluted queries, to ously, however, the Enquirer hats to delve correspondent. His latest find is one which he will answer, if the reporter is deeper to satisfy what the commercials "Dr. Victor Azhazha," eminent Soviet adroit enough. merely yes or no. These call its readers' "Enquiring Minds." scientist. Dr. Azhazha claimed, and little words can be made to speak vol- What makes the reporter's mission there is an artist's conception complete umes. Critical readers may have won- particularly tough is that he is often coy- with silhouetted Kremlin to back it up, dered how it is that supposedly sophisti- ering not a set of circumstances his edi- that a mysterious shining cloud had cated professionals, when quoted in the tor knows or believes to exist, but one drifted over Moscow one night causing Enquirer, :tl%. ays manage to clutter their i that the editor wishes to have happen. A great consternation. A friend of mine, stationed in Moscow for a well-known British daily, cormnented, "I didn't see' this cloud, which was perhaps careless. It might have started World War III." A cardinal rule of the information trade is that the more bald and uncon- vincing a story, the greater the machin- ery needed to lend it verisimilitude. The Enquirer is inordinately proud of its Re- remarks with an effusion of amazings, incredibles and fantastics. This method is openly encouraged by Pope. In a memo distributed to all newcomers he commands bluntly: "Ask leading questions." Lest it be carried too far, reporters are then reminded, "Quotes should not only be appropriate but believable. A Japanese carpenter should not sound like Ernest Heming- way, or vice versa." Add to this Pope's rather confining taste in vocabulary, and the results can be bizarre. Reporter Byron Lutz had worked hard to produce "The Biggest Swindle in U.S. History," a tale of a computer rip-off within the federal gov- ernment. He had even persuaded a jus- tice Department official to agree that it was indeed "the biggest swindle," a questionable assertion by itself. Enter the Evaluator, a character whose task it is to condense finished files into single paragraphs for the benefit of Pope and the writers. Evaluator: "This won't get through, Lutz. We don't use swindle." Lutz: "But that's what the guy at the justice Department called it, it's on the tape." Eval.: "It's got to be robbery." Lutz: "But there's a diffe'rence.' Editor (intervening): "He's right. Let's look it up in the dictionary." Eval.: "Hey, I don't care. The Boss don't like swindle make it robbery." Editor (snapping to what looked suspiciously like attention): "Get on it, Lutz, get your guy to say robbery. Now... At least doctors and officials can be made to speak. Celebrities are less oblig- ww ith their reputations. To reveal the drama of their lives the re- must resort to an alto~~ether }11her order of (.toile. In compensation, new TV series has emerged, perhaps, search Department. A copy of a glowing h at ap- and The Boss wants an exciting story account in Editor & Publisher t about its participants. Or an editor may peared in 1978 is compulsory reading conclude that there has been too striking for all arrivals. an absence of Farrah Fawcett. A recon- E&P tells us that Research is staffed ciliation with Lee Majors is needed to by probing professionals, headed by fill the gap. Thanks to a large array of Ruth Annan, a 16-year veteran of Time. "insiders," "friends" and "intimate Her team includes "two medical special- sources," many of whom are in the ists, two lawyers, a linguist who speaks Enquirer's pay, such things can be ar- four languages, a geographer, three with ranged. master's degrees in library science, one In some cases, a great deal of old- with a master's degree in educational fashioned shoe-leather reporting does go psychology, and an author." on, though it has been known to get out And yet it regularly lets through of hand. The coffin photographs of Elvis palpable inanities. The concept of a Presley are not an isolated phenomenon. "4,000-year-old Stone Age statuette" One reporter told me that while-tracking does not bother it, for example, but this the hometown life of a currently popular is a quibble. Most of what escapes the television actress, he stumbled onto the tireless fact-checkers is on a grander fact that that she had had an abortion. scale, even in cases where the facts can Such was the pressure he was under, he actually be checked. lined up a neighborhood hoodlum to Researchers are cunningly paid less steal the records. Getting mixed signals than reporters whose work they scruti- from his editor, he thought better of it. nize, and thus approach their task with Celebrity romance stories are fre- the enthusiasm of inquisitors. That the quently the work of reporters whose Enquirer is published at all is not their main activity is to hang around fashion- fault. able watering holes. Maitre d's and I have no doubt that Research pur- waiters are also retained. Thus, the sues Truth with genuine vigor, but it is Enquirer often has a pair of eyes in place hampered by one major defect: literal- when an interesting couple appear in mindedness. If the tapes and copy jibe, public for the first time, or have a vio- and sources when contacted agree to lent quarrel. what has been reported, the story must, Hollywood sex, in the Enquirer, is a however reluctantly, be granted the im- formulaic affair. The starting assump- primatur of accuracy. tion is that any physical contact repre- One disadvantage of Annan and her sents romance. At the lower end of the staff is that they clog up an already scale, hand holding is described by "in- hopelessly slow system-lead time is siders," who do not have to be told the usually three or four weeks-with hag- Enquirer style, as "they looked like a gling that, given the nature of the beast, pair of teenagers in love." Any kiss less is utterly unnecessary. On the upside, demure than a peck is evidence that the however, their mere existence enables relationship has turned "hot and heavy." reporters to tell a suspicious world that, Equally earnest is the Enquirer's at- yes. really. the Enquirer does strive after titude towards the paranormal. Cranks fact. As editor Paul Levy told E&P, are not tolerated, and anyone claiming to "Today iny reporter can say with justi- have been reborn, sighted UFOs or corn- fable pride that he works for the most umcated with the beyond is subjected accurate paper in the country.- ? m hr i Iequired to otjer less in the way of pro~+t fit: r are public property. and p It 1,v \t (It sI 11W-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/16: CIA-RDP90-00845R000200760003-0