Club Apologia is now on Twitter, featuring links to breaking news reports and commentary about apologia and image repair situations. The link is here. Just added today: Manti Teo's interview with Katie Couric!
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Hair Brained Schemes - Part I: Rod Blagojevich Responds to Arrest and Offers Seasons Greetings (December 19, 2008)
What did he say? A video clip of Blagojevich's first official post-arrest statement, delivered four years ago today, is above and the transcript can be found here.
How did he do? The governor appears to be in complete denial mode, both with the public and himself. His first sentence declares "I am not guilty of any criminal wrongdoing." He then reinforces his denial with a promise to fight the allegations. Okay, I may be understating this a bit. Blagojevich actually states: "I will fight this thing every step of the way. I will fight. I will fight. I will fight until I take my last breath." So while he scores points for tenacity, he gets downgraded for basically admitting that he'll be found guilty--otherwise, why anticipate fighting the charges until the reaper darkens his door?
Blagojevich then launches into a lot of attack the accuser strategy, calling out the "political lynch mob" and "political enemies" who rely on "30-second sound bites." Then, adding a dash of conspiracy rhetoric, he alludes ominously to "some powerful forces arrayed against me." Hmm, using conspiracy language when accused of conspiracy--very high concept, Blago.
The governor engages in some fairly effective bolstering strategy, thanking his wife and other supporters for sticking with him and promising to stay above the fray until his trial, throwing in a Rudyard Kipling quote for quirky good measure.
Where this relatively brief speech fails most, I believe, is in the expectations game. Blagojevich sets such a high bar for any future apologia efforts that it almost makes one more skeptical of his innocence from the outset. He states: "Now, I'm dying to answer these charges. I am dying to show you how innocent I am. And I want to assure everyone who's listening, that I intend to answer every allegation that comes my way." There's a little bit of the John Edwards EPTEE (Excessive Paternity Test Eagerness Effect) going on here. I just don't think innocent people love the process of proving their innocence quite this much. I do think that guilty people love saying things like this though.
Final call? Sinkhole. Blagojevich offers some effective lines here, but it's undermined by low-level contradiction (i.e., stating his intention not to attack while engaged in attack, proclaiming a suspicious-sounding level of innocence). But don't worry, Blago fans, the colorful governor will revisit Club Apologia. And to his credit, the governor still exuded admirable holiday spirit, ending the December 19th speech with a jaunty "Merry Christmas. Happy holidays" (bonus points for savvy navigation of "war on Christmas" tensions). And so, during this festive time of year, as you gather around the hearth with family and friends, remember poor Rod Blagojevich and how he carried the spirit of the season within his heart--even when his heart was under arrest. May that be truly said of us --and all of us!
How did he do? The governor appears to be in complete denial mode, both with the public and himself. His first sentence declares "I am not guilty of any criminal wrongdoing." He then reinforces his denial with a promise to fight the allegations. Okay, I may be understating this a bit. Blagojevich actually states: "I will fight this thing every step of the way. I will fight. I will fight. I will fight until I take my last breath." So while he scores points for tenacity, he gets downgraded for basically admitting that he'll be found guilty--otherwise, why anticipate fighting the charges until the reaper darkens his door?
Blagojevich then launches into a lot of attack the accuser strategy, calling out the "political lynch mob" and "political enemies" who rely on "30-second sound bites." Then, adding a dash of conspiracy rhetoric, he alludes ominously to "some powerful forces arrayed against me." Hmm, using conspiracy language when accused of conspiracy--very high concept, Blago.
The governor engages in some fairly effective bolstering strategy, thanking his wife and other supporters for sticking with him and promising to stay above the fray until his trial, throwing in a Rudyard Kipling quote for quirky good measure.
Where this relatively brief speech fails most, I believe, is in the expectations game. Blagojevich sets such a high bar for any future apologia efforts that it almost makes one more skeptical of his innocence from the outset. He states: "Now, I'm dying to answer these charges. I am dying to show you how innocent I am. And I want to assure everyone who's listening, that I intend to answer every allegation that comes my way." There's a little bit of the John Edwards EPTEE (Excessive Paternity Test Eagerness Effect) going on here. I just don't think innocent people love the process of proving their innocence quite this much. I do think that guilty people love saying things like this though.
Final call? Sinkhole. Blagojevich offers some effective lines here, but it's undermined by low-level contradiction (i.e., stating his intention not to attack while engaged in attack, proclaiming a suspicious-sounding level of innocence). But don't worry, Blago fans, the colorful governor will revisit Club Apologia. And to his credit, the governor still exuded admirable holiday spirit, ending the December 19th speech with a jaunty "Merry Christmas. Happy holidays" (bonus points for savvy navigation of "war on Christmas" tensions). And so, during this festive time of year, as you gather around the hearth with family and friends, remember poor Rod Blagojevich and how he carried the spirit of the season within his heart--even when his heart was under arrest. May that be truly said of us --and all of us!
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Lie of the Tiger: Tiger Woods Announces "Indefinite Break" From Golf After Infidelity (December 11, 2009)
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Third Person Possessive: Herman Cain Responds to Sexual Harassment Charges (November 8, 2011)
What was the deal? During the fall of 2011, businessman
Herman Cain was one of numerous candidates seeking the Republican nomination
for President. On October 30, a report
surfaced that two women who worked for Cain at the National Restaurant
Association had complained about Cain's sexually suggestive behavior and had received payments upon leaving the organization. Cain denied both the harassment allegations and the settlement payments, although he later acknowledged that
the organization had reached an “agreement” in which some of the women received
money. On November 2, a third woman
accused Cain of harassment. Five days
later, a fourth woman reported allegations against the
businessman, and became the first to reveal her name and offer specific details of alleged harassment. Cain continued to
deny all allegations, but pressure mounted on Cain
to discuss the situation in more detail.
Cain scheduled a press conference for November 8, seeking to address the charges “head on.” At the time the
scandal broke, Cain was tied with Mitt Romney as front-runners in the
Republican presidential primary. With his
candidacy in peril and his reputation in question, Cain chose to deliver an
apologia.
What did he say? A video of Cain's briefing, delivered one year ago today, can be found here, and a transcript is included here.
How did he do? Well, Cain didn't lack in confidence. He began his opening statement congratulating himself for his candor: "I choose to address these accusations directly...because that's the person Herman Cain is." Are we still doing the third-person reference thing? Probably just a slip of the tongue. Anyway, after that bit of bolstering strategy, Cain lays on the denial: "I have never acted inappropriately with anyone, period....I don't even know who this woman is....The charges and accusations I absolutely reject. They simply didn't happen. They simply did not happen." Well then, that should take care of it, right? The speech should end right there.
Not surprisingly, it doesn't. It seems Cain still has a lot ofexplaining complaining to do about the media, which had "stalked" his family and encouraged his "anonymous accusers" and his one, um, onymous accuser, a "troubled woman" brought forth by "the Democratic machine." That's a lot of attack the accuser strategy for one speech. But, wait, there's another shadowy group which Cain exposes to the harsh light of day: "Some people don't want to see Herman Cain (okay, I guess it wasn't a slip of the tongue) get the Republican nomination...to keep a businessman out of the White House...their motivation is to stop Herman Cain (oy)." The candidate comes off sounding a bit scattershot and paranoid here, which undermines the earlier candid denials and directness which had been, at least since the first paragraph of his statement, a Herman Cain hallmark.
The question-and-answer part of the briefing tries to dig into the details of the accusations made by the woman who went public, or as Cain sensitively describes her, "the one that was, you know, put their face on TV." He spends a lot of time offering tricky differentiation strategies to explain away his behavior and the payment the woman received after leaving Cain's organization. First, the payout constituted an employment "agreement" not a "legal settlement." Second, the offensive behavior involved an innocent gesture rather than sexual harassment. Cain spins the following yarn of office drama: "I was standing next to [her], and I gestured, standing near her, like this, 'You're the same height as my wife,' because my wife comes up to my chin. That was the one I remember." Okay, well, that's not exactly Mad Men and sounds pretty harmless. And he doesn't remember anything else, so why would anyone think there's more to the story? Maybe because only three paragraphs earlier, Cain boasts, "I'm pretty good at remembering people." I think Herman Cain knows that Herman Cain is not demonstrating the Herman Cain directness for which Herman Cain is known.
Final Call? Sinkhole. Cain's emphatic denials bought him a bit of time, but his press conference left too many unanswered questions. Those lingering doubts grew when, three weeks later, another woman, Ginger White, admitted to a 13-year affair with Cain. His poll numbers dropped into single digits and, on December 3, 2011, Cain suspended his campaign, and Mitt Romney eventually emerged as the GOP nominee. However, Cain has far from disappeared from the public arena, hosting a popular radio show, touring the lecture circuit, and working as a FOX News commentator. In fact, only yesterday, Cain called for a new, more conservative, third party in American politics. It seems unlikely, however, that Cain, with his scandal history, will ever emerge as the nominee of that--or any--political party.
What did he say? A video of Cain's briefing, delivered one year ago today, can be found here, and a transcript is included here.
How did he do? Well, Cain didn't lack in confidence. He began his opening statement congratulating himself for his candor: "I choose to address these accusations directly...because that's the person Herman Cain is." Are we still doing the third-person reference thing? Probably just a slip of the tongue. Anyway, after that bit of bolstering strategy, Cain lays on the denial: "I have never acted inappropriately with anyone, period....I don't even know who this woman is....The charges and accusations I absolutely reject. They simply didn't happen. They simply did not happen." Well then, that should take care of it, right? The speech should end right there.
Not surprisingly, it doesn't. It seems Cain still has a lot of
The question-and-answer part of the briefing tries to dig into the details of the accusations made by the woman who went public, or as Cain sensitively describes her, "the one that was, you know, put their face on TV." He spends a lot of time offering tricky differentiation strategies to explain away his behavior and the payment the woman received after leaving Cain's organization. First, the payout constituted an employment "agreement" not a "legal settlement." Second, the offensive behavior involved an innocent gesture rather than sexual harassment. Cain spins the following yarn of office drama: "I was standing next to [her], and I gestured, standing near her, like this, 'You're the same height as my wife,' because my wife comes up to my chin. That was the one I remember." Okay, well, that's not exactly Mad Men and sounds pretty harmless. And he doesn't remember anything else, so why would anyone think there's more to the story? Maybe because only three paragraphs earlier, Cain boasts, "I'm pretty good at remembering people." I think Herman Cain knows that Herman Cain is not demonstrating the Herman Cain directness for which Herman Cain is known.
Final Call? Sinkhole. Cain's emphatic denials bought him a bit of time, but his press conference left too many unanswered questions. Those lingering doubts grew when, three weeks later, another woman, Ginger White, admitted to a 13-year affair with Cain. His poll numbers dropped into single digits and, on December 3, 2011, Cain suspended his campaign, and Mitt Romney eventually emerged as the GOP nominee. However, Cain has far from disappeared from the public arena, hosting a popular radio show, touring the lecture circuit, and working as a FOX News commentator. In fact, only yesterday, Cain called for a new, more conservative, third party in American politics. It seems unlikely, however, that Cain, with his scandal history, will ever emerge as the nominee of that--or any--political party.
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Checkers Anyone? The 60th Anniversary of Richard Nixon's Iconic Speech (September 23, 1952)
What was the deal? U.S. Senator Richard Nixon was nominated for vice-president in 1952, as General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s running mate. The two Republicans ran against Democratic candidates Adlai Stevenson and John Sparkman. Nixon had earned a reputation as a strong anti-Communist crusader, which he believed was an asset to him during the campaign. Nixon also criticized Stevenson and the Democrats for being unethical, corrupt, and out of touch with the average American citizen.
In the middle of the autumn campaign a newspaper reported allegations that Senator Nixon was hiding an $18,000 secret political fund, paid for by millionaire supporters. After criticizing the Democrats for corruption and a cozy relationship with wealthy donors, these accusations made Nixon appear, at best, hypocritical and, at worst, corrupt himself. Many urged Nixon to quit the campaign.
What did he say? A full transcript and audio of Nixon's speech, delivered 60 years ago tonight, can be found here and the first part of the speech video can be found at the top of this post and Part 2, including the famous passage about Checkers, is here.
How did he do? Knowing that his bosses seemed to want him to fail, the Senator from California brought the house, as they say in football. At least a dozen different self-defense strategies are employed and most were pretty effective with 1952 Americans. The speech has a three part structure with each part performing an important rhetorical function. First, Nixon addresses the merits of the scandal--the fund. In a straightforward and clearly supported series of denials, he claims innocence on three key points: (1) The fund was not secret; (2) The fund was not for Nixon's personal use; and (3) Nixon paid no political favors to fund contributors. For many citizens, these issues constituted the heart of the matter and Nixon's lack of equivocation in his denials early in the address probably eased viewers' minds and made them receptive to the rest of his argument. This section also serves as an extended use of differentiation strategy, as Nixon sets forth the conditions under which such a fund would be "morally wrong" and then indicates that his behavior falls far short of each condition. Nixon ends this first section by quoting from a Price Waterhouse independent audit and legal opinion that confirms Nixon's innocence. The latter was rendered by the law firm of Gibson, Dunn, & Crutcher, which is still going strong as can be seen here, although Crutcher apparently is no longer needed.
The second part of the speech is a remarkable recounting of the Senator's financial status, which he, somewhat breathlessly, reminds viewers was "unprecedented in the history of American politics." He launches into "a complete financial history, everything I've earned, everything I've spent, everything I own." "Complete" is an understatement as Nixon literally begins with "I was born in 1913" and continues on...and on...and on...working the family grocery store, marriage, military service, and a listing of assets and debts that includes an Oldsmobile car and specific dollar amounts, right down to the 4 percent interest he pays on a loan from his parents. But his accounting saves the best for last. After concluding that what he has "isn't very much," Nixon adds that his wife Pat (who actually is sitting about 10 feet away from Nixon during the entire speech, as is seen in the video) "doesn't have a mink coat. But she does have a respectable Republican cloth coat, and I always tell her she'd look good in anything." This line reveals both (1) how much the GOP brand has changed in the last six decades, and (2) that "Tricky Dick" had some "Slick Willie" in him at this early stage in his career. This entire section operates as one giant bolstering strategy, as Nixon connects himself to the positive appeal of the common and humble self-made man. This works both as a contrast to Stevenson and Sparkman and offers further evidence that he had not feathered his own nest (Nixon's phrase) with millionaire slush fund cash.

There is a third part to this speech, but at this point Nixon, having established his populist, puppy-loving cred, pivots to campaign attack mode, linking his Democratic rivals to the spread of corruption and Communism in Washington. It's a heaping helping of attack the accuser strategy served with a side of transcendence strategy as Nixon makes his puny little slush fund troubles pale in comparison to government-wide political graft and worldwide Soviet domination. By the time the speaker generously refuses to cash a $10 check mailed in by a 19 year old soldier's wife, Nixon is running up the score and showboating his oratorical genius. If you watch the video, it's interesting to note how during this part of the speech Nixon is no longer seated behind the desk but is standing out front, his delivery more dynamic and passionate, marking the shift from personal humility to political hatchet man.
Final Call? Cakewalk. Nixon left it to the RNC to decide whether he should remain on the ticket with Ike but also urged viewers to let the party chiefs know how they felt (jurisdiction strategy). Letters and postcards supporting Nixon flooded the RNC and the Senator was soon elected vice president. This speech worked because Nixon abandoned all ego and left nothing to chance--a lesson lost on many public figures. Despite the rather quaint (by today's standards) amount of money at the center of the scandal and the silliness of family pet references, the "Checkers" speech had enormous ramifications for our country. First, it saved Richard Nixon's political career, without which the U.S. would have been spared the national trauma of Watergate. Okay, maybe there's a bit of "butterfly effect" in that linkage but I think it's reasonable. Second, as communication scholars Stephen E. Lucas and Martin J. Medhurst rightly point out in their excellent book Words of a Century: The Top 100 American Speeches, 1900-1999: "At a time when Americans were beginning to fall in love with television, [the Checkers speech] also demonstrated the potential power of the new medium for political communication, a development fraught with implications for the future of American public discourse and civic life."
Friday, August 17, 2012
The Map Room Speech: President Bill Clinton Finally Admits Monica Lewinsky Affair (August 17, 1998)
I'll dispense with the usual format and just link to an analysis posted on the old blog marking the tenth anniversary of this infamous speech, delivered 14 years ago today. The post can be found here.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
How Low Can He Go? John Edwards Admits Infidelity in ABC Interview with Bob Woodruff (August 8, 2008)
What was the deal? John Edwards rose to political prominence as the vice-presidential nominee alongside John Kerry in 2004 and ran for the top spot himself four years later before dropping out of the Democratic primary in early 2008. Edwards had been viewed as a strong presidential candidate based on his commitment to fighting poverty and benefited from an outpouring of public support during his wife Elizabeth's battles with breast cancer. However, tabloid rumors circulated that Edwards had an affair with Rielle Hunter, a documentary filmmaker hired to work for his campaign. The rumors included allegations that Edwards fathered Hunter's child and secretly provided Hunter with financial support. In August, 2008, Edwards finally admitted his infidelity. The admission stunned the public and media for several reasons: (1) Edwards had long presented himself as an upstanding family man and champion of the impoverished, (2) the timing of the affair suggested that it occurred while his wife, a tireless and effective campaigner for Edwards, battled cancer, and (3) committing adultery while running for president seemed like a very reckless act. Soon after his public admission, Edwards accepted an invitation from ABC for an interview with Nightline's Bob Woodruff on August 8, 2008. Knowing that his reputation and credibility had been, to put it mildly, severely damaged, Edwards chose to answer questions about his behavior in an attempt to improve his public image and salvage his political career.
What did he say? Transcript excerpts and video of the Woodruff-Edwards interview, conducted four years ago today, can be found here.
How did he do? Because this is going to be pretty unpleasant, let's at least recognize a few things Edwards tried to do well. First, he quickly engages in mortification, taking responsibility for his "mistake" and seeking forgiveness from his wife and God, although offering an explicit apology would help. Also, although he doesn't deny the Hunter affair, Edwards does deny other troubling allegations, including the fathering of Hunter's child and the payment of "hush money" to keep Hunter quiet--behavior that would suggest a deeper level of recklessness and deception. The Democrat reinforces his denial through use of attack the accuser strategy by making three references to "tabloid" journalism as the source of the supposedly false charges.
The thing about the denial strategy, however, is that its effectiveness is guaranteed only to the extent that one is not lying through their teeth. Eventually, Edwards would admit paternity of Hunter's child and, frankly, even at the time of the Woodruff interview, I'm not sure a lot of people bought his denials. For example, the way in which the former Veep nominee expresses his willingness to take a paternity test seems...oh, I don't know, a bit too eager ("I would welcome participating in a paternity test, would be happy to participate in one....Happy to take a paternity test and would love to see it happen....I can only do one side of the test, but I'm happy to participate in one."). A person in Edwards's uncomfortable position, even if he thinks he's not the daddy and is willing to take a DNA test, probably wouldn't "love" to take one.
To his credit, Woodruff asked Edwards point blank the question most wanted to hear: How could he cheat on his cancer-stricken wife? Edwards gives two answers and they're both awful. First, he uses a differentiation strategy by making the despicable distinction between cancer adultery and remission adultery. I'm sorry, but there's just no other way to put that. He states: "First of all, it happened during a period after she was in remission from cancer." I really don't need to delve into how troubling that statement is, so let's move on to his second explanation. Edwards then launches into a surreal soliloquy about growing up a "small town boy in North Carolina" who "came from nothing" and "got some acclaim as a lawyer." He goes on: "People were telling me, oh, he's such a great person, such a great lawyer, such a talent, he's going to--no telling what he'll do." Okay, for fans of the original The Office (UK) television series, Edwards is totally doing David Brent at this point, which is probably not a great choice for a real-life, high stakes rhetorical strategy. Remember the question asked how he could cheat on his seriously ill spouse. This cocky musing seems woefully misguided. Anyway, Edwards basically gives a "too much, too fast" spin on his life, leading to "a self-focus, an egotism, a narcissism that leads you to believe you can do whatever you want." This bolstering strategy, in which Edwards tries to positively associate himself with his past success and with small town values, essentially argues that he did a bad thing because, well, he's become a really bad person. Yeah, it's pretty weak.
As was often the case in his political rhetoric, Edwards comes across as too slick and lawyerly here. On several occasions, he reframes Woodruff's questions to make them less incriminating as can be seen in the exchange about whether Edwards's associate Fred Baron paid hush money to Hunter: Woodruff: "Do you think it's possible he was trying to protect you?" Edwards: "Do I think he was trying to help me?" Or when discussing whether he informed Elizabeth about visiting Hunter in L.A.: Woodruff: "That was a secret?" Edwards: "You mean did I tell her before I went?" And so on. The ex-veep nominee seems more concerned with being careful than contrite.
Final Call? Bloodbath. Under the circumstances, Edwards needed an extraordinary performance to have even a chance of improving his public standing. His interview responses were extraordinary but for the wrong reasons, relying on a lethal combination of silly psychobabble, self-absorption, and straight-out lying. He may have beat the rap this past May when a federal jury could not convict him of using campaign contributions to keep Hunter's silence. However, it's impossible to envision a scenario in which he could revive his political career and his public reputation remains in tatters. Finally, Edwards has to live the rest of his life in a world that knows he vehemently denied his own infant daughter on national television when trying to explain why he cheated on his cancer-stricken wife while running for our nation's highest office. It doesn't get much worse. So let's give the last word on all of this to the now-departed Elizabeth Edwards, who wrote a memoir in 2009 called, fittingly enough, Resilience.
As was often the case in his political rhetoric, Edwards comes across as too slick and lawyerly here. On several occasions, he reframes Woodruff's questions to make them less incriminating as can be seen in the exchange about whether Edwards's associate Fred Baron paid hush money to Hunter: Woodruff: "Do you think it's possible he was trying to protect you?" Edwards: "Do I think he was trying to help me?" Or when discussing whether he informed Elizabeth about visiting Hunter in L.A.: Woodruff: "That was a secret?" Edwards: "You mean did I tell her before I went?" And so on. The ex-veep nominee seems more concerned with being careful than contrite.

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