I've never heard of this guy but I wanted to remember this post...
https://medium.com/@alexey__kovalev/message-to-american-media-from-russia-6e2e76eeae77#.elhencmqd
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A message to my doomed colleagues in the American media
Congratulations,
 US media! You’ve just covered your first press conference of an 
authoritarian leader with a massive ego and a deep disdain for your 
trade and everything you hold dear. We in Russia have been doing it for 
12 years now — with a short hiatus when our leader wasn’t technically 
our leader — so quite a few things during Donald Trump’s press 
conference rang my bells. Not just mine, in fact — read this excellent round-up in The Moscow Times.
Vladimir
 Putin’s annual pressers are supposed to be the media event of the year.
 They are normally held in late December, around Western Christmas time 
(we Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas two weeks later and it’s not
 a big deal, unlike New Year’s Eve). Which probably explains why Putin’s
 pressers don’t get much coverage outside of Russia, except in a 
relatively narrow niche of Russia-watchers. Putin’s pressers are 
televised live across all Russian TV channels, attended by all kinds of 
media — federal news agencies, small local publications and foreign 
reporters based in Moscow — and are supposed to overshadow every other 
event in Russia or abroad.
These
 things are carefully choreographed, typically last no less than four 
hours, and Putin always comes off as an omniscient and benevolent leader
 tending to a flock of unruly but adoring children. Given that Putin is 
probably a role model for Trump, it’s no surprise that he’s apparently 
taking a page from Putin’s playbook. I have some observations to share 
with my American colleagues. You’re in this for at least another four 
years, and you’ll be dealing with things Russian journalists have 
endured for almost two decades now. I’m talking about Putin here, but 
see if you can apply any of the below to your own leader.
- Welcome to the era of bullshit.
Facts
 don’t matter. You can’t hurt this man with facts or reason. He’ll 
always outmaneuver you. He’ll always wriggle out of whatever carefully 
crafted verbal trap you lay for him. Whatever he says, you won’t be able
 to challenge him. He always comes with a bag of meaningless factoids 
(Putin likes to drown questions he doesn’t like in dull, unverifiable 
stats, figures and percentages), platitudes, false moral equivalences 
and straight, undiluted bullshit. He knows it’s a one-way communication,
 not an interview. You can’t follow up on your questions or challenge 
him. So he can throw whatever he wants at you in response, and you’ll 
just have to swallow it.
Some journalists will try to preempt this by asking two questions at once, against the protests of their colleagues also vying for attention, but that also won’t work: he’ll answer the one he thinks is easier, and ignore the other. Others will use this opportunity to go on a long, rambling statement vaguely disguised as a question, but that’s also bad tactics. Non-questions invite non-answers. He’ll mock you for your nervous stuttering and if you’re raising a serious issue, respond with a vague, non-committal statement (“Mr President, what about these horrible human rights abuses in our country?” “Thank you, Miss. This is indeed a very serious issue. Everybody must respect the law. And by the way, don’t human rights abuses happen in other countries as well? Next question please”).
Some journalists will try to preempt this by asking two questions at once, against the protests of their colleagues also vying for attention, but that also won’t work: he’ll answer the one he thinks is easier, and ignore the other. Others will use this opportunity to go on a long, rambling statement vaguely disguised as a question, but that’s also bad tactics. Non-questions invite non-answers. He’ll mock you for your nervous stuttering and if you’re raising a serious issue, respond with a vague, non-committal statement (“Mr President, what about these horrible human rights abuses in our country?” “Thank you, Miss. This is indeed a very serious issue. Everybody must respect the law. And by the way, don’t human rights abuses happen in other countries as well? Next question please”).
But your colleagues are there to help you, right? After all, you’re all in this together?
Wrong.
- Don’t expect any camaraderie
These
 people are not your partners or brothers in arms. They are your rivals 
in a fiercely competitive, crashing market and right now the only 
currency in this market is whatever that man on the stage says. Whoever 
is lucky to ask a question and be the first to transmit the answer to 
the outside world wins. Don’t expect any solidarity or support from 
them. If your question is stonewalled/mocked down/ignored, don’t expect a
 rival publication to pick up the banner and follow up on your behalf. It’s
 in this man’s best interests to pit you against each other, fighting 
over artificial scarcities like room space, mic time or, of course, his 
attention. It’s getting especially absurd because 
some — increasingly many — reporters will now come with large, bright 
placards aimed at attracting the president’s attention to names of their
 regions or specific issues. This is what it looks like:


Also, some people in the room aren’t really there to ask questions.
- Expect a lot of sycophancy and soft balls from your “colleagues”
A
 mainstay of Putin’s press conferences is, of course, softball 
questions. Which also happen to be Putin’s favorites. Mr President, is 
there love in your heart? Who you will be celebrating New Year’s Eve 
with? What’s your favorite food? “Questions” of this sort, sure to melt 
Putin’s heart, typically come from women working for small regional 
publications. A subtype of this is also statements-as-questions, but 
from people who really love the
 man on the stage and will bob their head and look at the stage 
adoringly and say something to the tune of “Mr President, do you agree 
that a lot of media are treating you unfairly?”
Another
 type of softball questions is hyperlocal issues that a president isn’t 
even supposed to be dealing with. Mr President, our road is full of 
potholes and local authorities aren’t doing anything about it. Mr 
President, our tap is leaking. Mr President, how about a chess club in 
our village. This is a real opportunity for him to shine. He will scold 
the local authorities and order to have a new road built. All of this, 
of course, has been choreographed well in advance.
Also, some of these people really love
 him and will meet his every answer with enthusiastic applause. There 
will be people from publications that exist for no other reason than 
heaping fawning praise on him and attacking his enemies. But there will 
also be one token critic who will be allowed to ask a “sharp” question, 
only to be drowned in a copious amount of bullshit, and the man on the 
stage will always be the winner (“See? I respect the media and free 
speech”).
- You’re always losing
This man owns you. He understands perfectly well that he is the
 news. You can’t ignore him. You’re always playing by his rules — which 
he can change at any time without any notice. You can’t — in Putin’s 
case — campaign to vote him out of office. Your readership is dwindling 
because ad budgets are shrinking — while his ratings are soaring, and if
 you want to keep your publication afloat, you’ll have to report on 
everything that man says as soon as he says it, without any analysis or 
fact-checking, because 1) his fans will not care if he lies to their 
faces; 2) while you’re busy picking his lies apart, he’ll spit out 
another mountain of bullshit and you’ll be buried under it.
I
 could go on and on, but I think at this point you see where this is 
heading. See if any of this rings any bells if you covered Trump’s 
presser or watched it online.
P.S. You’re welcome to repost/reblog/republish this if you like.
My
 name is Alexey Kovalev, I’m a Russian journalist and I’m writing about 
propaganda, fake news and Russian state media on noodleremover.news. 
It’s all in Russian, but here’s an example of what I’m doing in English. You can contact me at kovalever@gmail.com. I tweet as @Alexey__Kovalev.
 
 

 
