Beth seemed relieved. She wanted to know all about Cuba. I told her they even got me to sing, and Beth made some rude remarks. I guess I couldn’t blame her because she’d heard me sing before.
We talked for about an hour. I finally had to remind her that phone calls from Cuba weren’t cheap. I figured she was worth it.
My next call was to home. Dad answered, and after he confirmed I was okay, he handed the phone to Mom. I knew I needed to be the one to tell her about Beth. If Mrs. A did, there’d be hell to pay. That discussion took nearly forty-five minutes. There was no way I could leave anything out, so I didn’t try. We were talking, after all, about Beth. She seemed happy that I’d confessed my love for my friend.
So much for the interrogation. We next had the requisite ‘update’ conversation about the ambush interview I’d been subjected to at the hands of a couple of women with an agenda. The upshot of it seemed to be all good.
We’d had a report from Frank, my public relations guru. He said that most of the media seemed surprisingly grateful for the focused information we’d given them. They also appreciated that we’d provided the background videos they could use to fact-check the story. Of course, they’d never admit it, but more than one contact at the more prominent outlets had commented favorably on the professionalism we’d brought to the table.
They even understood our need to send them a ‘cease and desist’ letter from our lawyers. Most times, they’d ignore those letters. But the amount and quality of the information we’d given them made that impossible. When you added in our filing suit against a couple of outlier news outlets on the next business day, they couldn’t ignore the issue of their own potential liability.
Whew! It looked like one of our goals, keeping the media on our side, seemed to be achievable.
There were two more pieces of good news. The first was that
Both outlets then tried to claim they didn’t get it in time. Frank, speaking through Ms. Dixon in a press conference, pointed out our package had been sent to them while they were on the phone with Frank. And our email tracking software showed the message had been opened two hours before they first aired the story.
The second outlet had done its own selective editing. In response to one question, I’d said something about the interviewer’s agenda, and in the next sentence, had answered the question. This particular outlet had kept in the bit about the interviewer’s agenda but left out the actual answer in its reporting. Then, about an hour later, one of their pundits engaged in a lengthy on-air diatribe about how I’d never answered the question and implied I was hiding something.
This was where having my own website helped. That outlet was immediately bombarded by calls and online comments. Viewers pointed out that I
That didn’t stop the lawsuits, though. Ms. Dixon felt we could recover our costs of responding to the whole incident if we got the right settlement from the two outlets.
I sure hoped she was right. I’d been trying hard not to think about what this was costing me. Frank’s scandal escalator could choke a horse, not to mention Ms. Dixon’s team’s hourly rates.
The only downside to it all was that my relations with the feminist organizations, which had been nonexistent before, were now firmly on the ‘existent but bad’ side. After an initial outcry, they were now saying very little. But they couldn’t be happy we’d exposed two of their own to criticism and ridicule, even though the two richly deserved it.
I asked my parents to talk with Frank about brainstorming ways I might be able to rehab relationships with those organizations. I didn’t hold out much hope for our being able to accomplish anything, though.
When I was done with Mom and Dad, I made quick calls to Brook, Zoe, Pam, and Tracy. My conversation with Halle took a little longer because she was about to start her press tour for our movie,