Posted on 09/13/2004 1:28:57 AM PDT by ambrose
Newsweek accused of breaking deal
By Hillel Italie, Associated Press
September 13, 2004
NEW YORK - The publisher of Kitty Kelley's controversial new biography of the Bush family has accused Newsweek of allegedly violating a pre-publication agreement and said the magazine owes "substantial damages."
"We demand public acknowledgment and additional remedies," Stephen Rubin, president and publisher of the Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group, said Thursday. Rubin declined to say how much money Doubleday is seeking and whether the publisher will sue.
Newsweek spokeswoman Rosanna Maietta said Thursday that the magazine had no comment.
Kelley's The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty comes out Tuesday.
A letter sent this week to Newsweek editor Mark Whitaker cited a signed confidentiality agreement from August in which the magazine promised not to disclose details of the book before publication. Newsweek was to receive an early copy.
According to the letter, Newsweek violated the terms when correspondent Howard Fineman appeared on Don Imus' radio show Tuesday and "disparaged" the book, saying the magazine would not publish excerpts, because of questions about Kelley's reporting. The letter also noted a Washington Post report that Newsweek had decided not to run an advance story on The Family, citing similar concerns. The magazine had allegedly promised such an article.
Kelley's book has already reached the top 10 on Amazon.com and Barnes&Noble.com amid reports, and denials, of cocaine use by President Bush. The initial printing of 600,000 has been increased twice, to 722,500.
Kelley, 62, is known for writing gossipy best sellers on Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra and Nancy Reagan. Reports emerged earlier this week that Kelley's new book includes an allegation that George W. Bush used cocaine at Camp David while his father was president.
Sharon Bush, former wife of the current president's brother, Neil Bush, was cited by Kelley as her source. Sharon Bush denies ever making such an allegation.
Newsweek should be accused of having at least some survival instincts by backing away from Kitty Kelley.
This is the Weekly World News, writ large.
Regards, Ivan
What an amazing coincidence however that this trash-Bush book just so happens to come out AFTER the soft-money CFR ban in the few days before the elections, hmmm?
When you deal with morons you got to expect this kind of crap. Tough luck for Newsweek.
Advertising by martyrdom
I could care less about Newsweek, but it seems the adage "Lay down with dogs, you get fleas" is being proven correct.
Or maybe a new one for this episode, "Make a deal with kitty, and you're laying in litter."
HA! When "Newsweak", the comic book of serious journalism magazines won't carry your story...oh boy!
How many rules of Journalistic Ethics does Newsweek violate every week?http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1214455/posts
"When you have nothing bad to say about someone, make something up!"
I could care less about Newsweek, but it seems the adage "Lay down with dogs, you get fleas" is being proven correct.
Zactly. Newsweak apparently entered the deal w/ eyes wide shut, so they can just pay up as far as I'm concerned.
Surely the First Amendment doesn't protect lying prostitutes who are only lying so they can sell books and/or movie tickets. Does it?
Yes, the Supreme Court has made it next to impossible for public figures to sue for libel. In the Sixty Minutes case, you would essentially have to prove that Dan Rather knew that the memos were forged---not that he should have known they were and closed his mind to the possibility for political reasons.
How DARE you tell people what a flimsy, baseless piece of trash it is? People need to read that for themselves or we'll never sell any copies.
Were there any stats on how well this book was selling?
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