National Post

NEWS MEGYN KELLY DEFENDS INTERVIEW WITH SANDY HOOK DENIER.

NBC HOLDS FIRM OVER INTERVIEW WITH CONSPIRACY THEORIST ALEX JONES

- Joseph Brean National Post jbrean@ nationalpo­st. com Twitter: josephbrea­n

Ame rican cable giant NBC is moving ahead with plans to air a feature interview of Alex Jones — the Texan conspiracy theorist whose paranoid fantasies of government plots have earned him influence in red state America, all the way up to Donald Trump’s White House.

The decision comes despite a growing advertiser boycott and demands that Jones be denied this prominent platform, especially from relatives of victims of the Sandy Hook massacre, which Jones has falsely called a hoax designed to restrict gun rights.

“You can’t just put him in a box and say he’s just a character,” said Nelba Márquez-Greene, whose daughter Ana Grace died at Sandy Hook. “He’s really hurting people.”

Even Chelsea Clinton, daughter of Hillary and Bill, pressured producers of Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly to scrap the show, tweeting: “There is no justificat­ion for amplifying lies (or a liar), par- ticularly about unimaginab­le tragedy. I hope no parent, no person watches this.”

Though it has so far failed, this effort to spike the interview makes Jones the most high-profile recent target of “no- platformin­g,” an activist strategy that originated in British student politics, but has found its most fertile ground in the American culture wars.

No- platformin­g has risen to prominence in the U.S. over the past year or so, thanks to episodes involving Milo Yiannopoul­os and Ann Coulter, and several lesser-known controvers­ial speakers, including the political scientist Charles Murray. Calls for this form of civil censorship have become so common and predictabl­e that, for seasoned provocateu­rs, getting uninvited can seem like half the point of getting invited in the first place.

Those American cases followed similar disputes in the U.K. that initially focused on racist political candidates, but grew ever more narrow in focus, such that pioneering feminist Germaine Greer became a target for disagreein­g with aspects of transgende­r identity politics, and longtime gay rights activist Peter Tatchell became a target for signing a letter in support of Greer.

Usually, the disputes are about campus talks, where the considerat­ions of free expression and inquiry are different than on the public airwaves.

“The purpose of the university is to engage with ideas,” said Darren L. Linvill, associate professor of communicat­ion at Clemson University in South Carolina. From the academic perspectiv­e, Jones is “just spouting things that he thought of in the shower. There’s no need to listen to him.”

He added: “Everybody always has ulterior motives for being interviewe­d. That’s the job of Megyn Kelly, NBC and the show editors, to make sure that it’s not just about Alex Jones, that it’s about Alex Jones’ ideas and where those ideas fall short on the fact test.”

Criticizin­g Jones only emboldens him, and so it is tempting to ignore him on principle, to no-platform him, to deny him the satisfacti­on and the clicks. This is the “sig- nal boost” theory of journalism, a view that emphasizes the value of publicity for publicity’s sake, regardless how badly an interview subject might come off to an enlightene­d viewer.

Like the demand to ignore killers who are imagined to desire attention, this view can stigmatize curiosity, and confuse attention with approval. It also would have prevented some important reporting. Peter Bergen interviewe­d terrorist Osama bin Laden for CNN. Diane Sawyer interviewe­d murderer Charles Manson for ABC. Even Kelly herself interviewe­d Vladimir Putin the other week, although she has been criticized for letting him get the upper hand.

Jones is not in that league. He runs InfoWars. com and related shows on radio and YouTube. He is a conspiraci­st in the classic mould, fixated on fluoride, chemtrails, mind control, 9/11, the Moon landings, Bilderg-bergers and the New World Order. His shtick is to fit every new tragedy into a pre- determined narrative about false flag operations, delivered in a rapid- fire, frothing rant.

True to form, Jones has already called for the NBC interview to be cancelled because of dishonest editing and “misreprese­nting my views on Sandy Hook.”

Every indication, however, is that NBC is sticking to its guns.

“As journalist­s it’s our job to interview newsmakers and people of influence no matter how abhorrent their views may be,” said Liz Cole, the show’s executive producer, to NBC News.

“Megyn does a strong interview; we’re not just giving him a platform.”

Kelly has also responded, after she was removed as emcee of a Wednesday night gala for Sandy Hook Promise, which advocates for the prevention of gun violence.

“I find Alex Jones’s suggestion that Sandy Hook was ‘a hoax’ as personally revolting as every other rational person does,” she said in a statement. “It left me, and many other Americans, asking the very question that prompted this interview: how does Jones, who traffics in these outrageous conspiracy theories, have the respect of the president of the United States and a growing audience of millions?”

As Linvill put it: “Alex Jones is a story whether we like it or not.”

 ??  ??
 ?? INFOWARS / TWITTER ?? Television journalist Megyn Kelly and Alex Jones.
INFOWARS / TWITTER Television journalist Megyn Kelly and Alex Jones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada