White House: Your 'status' is wrong!
By Olivier Knox on 30-09-2008, 12:56 GMT - Reporters' Notebook - Permalink
Today, for the first time ever, the White House complained about my status.
No, they didn't finally catch on to the fact that I am (I think) the only Frenchman to set foot on Vice President Cheney's Air Force Two airplane. Or try to deflate my ego, or banish me from a room in which I was not supposed to be.
Instead, deputy White House press secretary Scott Stanzel raised an issue with my "status update" on the social networking site "Facebook."As most of you probably know, that's a small space available for offering a brief written summary of what you're doing, or thinking, or thinking of doing.
Well, at 10 am today, after doing research for a piece on the embattled economic rescue package, I posted: "Olivier just counted, and President Bush has pushed the bailout in 12 of the past 13 days."
Stanzel, one of the most technology-savvy spokespeople I have ever worked with, noticed my count, decided to double-check it, and left the following comment on my personal page objecting to the term "bailout," which the White House intensely dislikes: "Rescue plan, Mr. Knox. Your count is accurate. The only time the word 'bailout' appears, however, in any if those transcripts/statements is when a reporter used it in the Uribe avail."
No, Scott doesn't call me "Mr Knox" in real life. And his point was very light-hearted, something that can be easily missed in electronic communication. And he was right that the president had not used the world bailout. And it was his first time interacting with a reporter this way on Facebook, which means we may have made a little Washington media history.
At 10:30 am, tongue firmly planted in cheek, I updated my status to: "Olivier (UPDATES; CHANGES LANGUAGE) Just counted, and President Bush has pushed the economic rescue package in 12 of the past 13 days."
The all-caps message is something like what AFP puts in its invisible "trash line" that can be read by clients when we make changes to stories.
You'll note I didn't say "corrects language." And the B-word is still in my copy on the wire.
I'm sure Scott isn't giving up either. In fact, I'll be on the lookout for a blog comment signed "WHSPOXGUY."
