Entries from June 2005 ↓

Cool gadgets in TV shows

Why do I have so many ridiculously bright flashlights? I do not conduct a neighborhood patrol, either armed or unarmed.

Darnit. It’s CSI and its hybrids, each in a different city. Those pricey little crime scene investigation flashlights are everywhere in the show. (They seem to reveal smudged prints across a park at night.) Heck, why don’t they just give a toll-free number to order them during the credits?*

Wired has an article talking about the “infiltration” of Cisco Systems ™ high-tech security-video phones into 24. It’s a barter deal: Cisco has provided networking equipment for the show for years, without disclosing the details of their agreement.

Apparently, many companies are starting to barrage TV shows with tech gadgets that might make it into a future episode.

Nowadays, it’s not advertising, it’s “branded entertainment” woven into the show. (See my earlier comments on product placement, back when ET was a pup.)

* Oops, I spoke too soon. There’s technology afoot that will let you to order a product with the click of your remote.

Woodward writes of Deep Throat

Drum roll. I guess now it can be told by Bob Woodward.

He wrote a long article in today’s Washington Post, explaining his long history with Deep Throat.

Appparently, this is a warm-up exercise for an instant book to be released soon by Mr. Woodward. Then, too Mark Felt’s little-read out-of-print autobiography, The FBI Pyramid from the Inside
will be revised and re-released with new Deep Throat information. (Amazon has a used $900 first edition that apparently has put there this week because the blurb for it mentions Deep Throat.)

Quite frankly, I feeel Mr. Felt should get my first book-buying dollar on this matter, because of the risks he took. (That puts aside that I actually like Nixon as a president. He was great on foreign policy but apparently a paranoid wacko on domestic policy. Really now, could student Vetnam protesters bring down the US government? Did they even want to do that?)

Woodward describes how he met Mark Felt so long ago that Woodward was in the Navy, a mere messenger carrying important papers to a meeting Felt attended. They somehow hit it off. Woodward realized Felt’s importance as an inside source in his future endeavors, and they kept in touch.

Deep Throat is former FBI deputy director

The identity of Deep Throat has been the biggest journalistic secret of the last thirty years.

It has finally come out who the mysterious Deep Throat informant of the Watergate scandal is. Apparently, those who know DT’s real identity — Bernstein, Woodward and their editor at The Washington Post Ben Bradlee — swore never to reveal it during DT’s lifetime. (Apparently, Mr. Bradlee did not even reveal the name to the late Katharine Graham, the publisher of the Post.)

While the revelation is front-page news in The N ew York Times , The Washington Post and other papers today, the publication that uncovered the secret is Vanity Fair. The details are in the July issue and on its website.

Mr. Throat is none other than the number two man at the FBI at the time, W. Mark Felt. Just a month before the break-in, he was passed over by President Nixon to replace the lifelong head of the agency, J. Edgar Hoover. (The agency was started back in 1908, but Hoover became its chief in 1924 and remained in that capacity until his death in 1972.) It is said Mr Hoover had so much dirt on prominent politicians, including presidents, that as he got up in years, they were afraid to replace him.

So there must have been some bitterness on Mr. Felt’s part that he was passed over for the key position. President Nixon chose L. Patrick Gray, one of Nixon’s loyal supporters.

After the break-in, political dynamite arrived daily on Mr. Felt’s desk: he had 1, 500 pages of reports of the FBI investigation of Watergate, the investigation that Nixon wanted to use the CIA to stop, on bogus claims of national security. So Felt had both the weapon and the motive to bring President Nixon down in flames. And he did so by tipping Watergate secrets to Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward.

Mr Felt, now 91, has confirmed the story. Even more persuasively, Bob Woodward confirmed it on
The Washington Post
website. (Apparently six years ago, Woodward visited Mr. Felt possibly as a gesture of goodwill to the aging “ultimate insider,” who helped launched Woodward’s career. Significantly, Woodward cautiously parked his limo some distance from the house, as Woodward had no clear connection to the retired FBI official. Woodward was not reporting upon any FBI matters at the time.)

Even highly-placed Washingtonians were as in the dark as the public about the real Deep Throat. In fact, one of Nixon’s attorneys Leonard Garment published a book in 2000 In Search of Deep Throat. In that book, he hypothesized incorrectly that DT was John Sears, a young Republican party political strategist 1n 1972.

Some insiders guessed the truth, according to The Washington Post. James Mann, a reporter with Woodward, wrote an Atlantic Monthly article in 1992 that named Felt as a likely candidate. Read that article: it is almost clairvoyant in its accuracy. Mann portrays Felt and other FBI long-timers as fighting Nixon’s efforts to muzzle the FBI or to use it for his own political purposes. (For example, the President’s counsel, John Dean, had been put in place to observe crucial FBI interviews in the developing Watergatre investigation.)