Yesterday Brian Williams announced that he was removing himself temporarily as anchor of the NBC nightly news broadcast, as NBC revealed that it was conducting an independent investigation, which certainly sounds like eyewash to me (and others.) The ethics issue, however, has expanded rapidly to the point where Williams’ fate—and at this point, I think he’s doomed—is almost incidental to the larger broadcast and news media ethics issues involved.
Maureen Dowd and others have revealed that NBC executives had been well aware that Williams was, to put it kindly in Dowd’s terms, “inflating his resume” and yet declined to stop it. In other words…
…they were aware he was lying to the public, which means that
…they were aware that he lies in public, which meant that
…their face, voice, anchor and head of their news division was a liar, indeed perhaps even a pathological liar, meaning that
…Williams was unquestionably untrustworthy, and
…a constant risk to misinform the audience, and
…they still didn’t remove him because his ratings were good and he was making money for the company.
