Selling Credibility

by digby

One of the puzzles of the 9/11 movie is the fact that they are so adamant about the fact that this movie was based on the 9/11 Commission Report when they actually optioned two other books and the story is obviously at least partially based on them.

I suspect that this is ABC marketing all the way. This FoxNews story from last summer gives it away:


At the moment, ABC officials are calling the miniseries "Untitled Commission Report" and producers refer to it as the "Untitled History Project."


The production company was called "UHP" productions. One can assume that the rightwing creative team believed that they were making their version of an "historical" docudrama based on various sources. They didn't seem to see this as "the story of the 9/11 Commission."

"We are trying to maintain as much accuracy, integrity and be as sensitive as we can in documenting an important series of historical events," producer Marc Platt told The Post.

The film focuses mostly on the events leading up to the attacks, which don't appear on screen until the very end, says Platt.


(Platt's comments about accuracy and integrity are nonsense as but that's another story.)

It's Steve McPherson, the ABC executive in charge of the project who emphasizes the commission:

"For us, having talked to Thomas Kean and the whole commission, we just felt it was a really important thing to bring to air," ABC chief Stephen McPherson told The Post yesterday at the TV critics press tour in L.A


I have not heard that they spoke with "the whole commission." Thomas Kean may have been a "consultant" on the series but considering the numerous inaccuracies, it appears the producers may not have really used the 9/11 Commission report as much of a source at all. It was a phony marketing hook.

In any case, Kean doesn't appear to have been much of a stickler for accuracy. As most of you have probably read by now, the movie features an entirely fabricated scene --- and it's a doozy. Here's Rush Limbaugh gleefully describing it:

So the CIA, the Northern Alliance, surrounding a house where bin Laden is in Afghanistan, they’re on the verge of capturing, but they need final approval from the Clinton administration in order to proceed.

So they phoned Washington. They phoned the White House. Clinton and his senior staff refused to give authorization for the capture of bin Laden because they’re afraid of political fallout if the mission should go wrong, and if civilians were harmed…Now, the CIA agent in this is portrayed as being astonished. “Are you kidding?” He asked Berger over and over, “Is this really what you guys want?”

Berger then doesn’t answer after giving his first admonition, “You guys go in on your own. If you go in we’re not sanctioning this, we’re not approving this,” and Berger just hangs up on the agent after not answering any of his questions.


Richard Clarke vociferously denies that this ever happened and it is most definitely not part of the 9/11 commission report. This is apparently a key scene, perhaps the most important scene in the movie, in that it indicts the Clinton administration for being too soft and weak to take out bin Laden when they had the chance. Rush certainly does seem to love it. Unfortunately, it just ain't true.

But what did the last of the "good Republicans," the 9/11 commissioner/consultant Kean have to say about this completely fabricated scene?

Neither Berger nor Ben-Veniste was consulted on the film. Kean, however, is an official adviser; he says the incident was a fictionalized composite. It was "representative of a series of events compacted into one," he replied to Ben-Veniste at the time. In a phone interview a few days later, he added, "It's reasonably accurate."


No it actually isn't. It's a fraud. But Kean's official impramatur on this project is what ABC has been selling from the beginning. Well, not selling, actually. They are giving this film away for free to the public and to school children saying it is an objective, accurate historical account of the events that led to the worst terrorist attack in American history.

One wonders whether Kean has actually seen the movie or if he understands that his credibility has just been flushed down the toilet by the marketing department at ABC news. But then, perhaps he doesn't care. Matt Stoller reports on the allegedly bi-partisan Kean. It isn't pretty.


Update: Firedoglake's spotlight project has an interesting way to contact ABC affiliates. ThinkProgress has another helpful tool.
.


Update II:
Jennifer Nix at FDL reports that she was on a call with journalists questioning Tom Kean today and that they were asking some tough questions. It also appears that ABC may be shamed into changing its phony "based on the 9/11 Commission Report" pitch. That is excellent news, if true.

The single most damaging thing about this rightwing fiction is that they have been presenting it as based on the bipartisan 9/11 Commission Report, which gave it credibility that it simply has no right to. If they are forced to discard that then we have a tiny victory. I would hope that they will also edit out the blatantly fraudulant scenes, allow a rebuttal after the movie or pull it from their schedule all together. But this would be a start.


.