 The media analyst Brian Morrissey wrote recently about Media People. Embodied by the writer Michael Wolff, they are exasperating to manage, reflexively skeptical, mischievous at best. Media People cut across other categories. For instance, Tucker Carlson is a Media Person. Ben Shapiro is not. Kara Swisher is. Scott Galloway is not. Donald Trump is, obviously. JD Vance is not. (I apparently am.) Jeffrey Epstein, the latest cache of emails confirms, was certainly a Media Person. And Media People were part of the vast network with whom Epstein traded gossip, advice, and intelligence. Wolff comes off in recently released emails as “a kind of unofficial consigliere to him — and seem[s] to fulfill some people’s worst impression of the entangled worlds of power players and the press,” per The Wall Street Journal. That’s not all: As we report exclusively this evening, Wolff sent a long, unpublished profile of the disgraced financier to Epstein in 2014. I recall Wolff fretting in 2021 about how to publish an essay he’d written exposing his own relationship with Epstein before anyone else could. He buried it, in a way, in a published book of essays, which I covered at the time. Wolff is perhaps the most disreputable face of a profession that is, generally, in pretty bad repute. And while he is now getting one of his periodic public pilloryings, he argues that he played a morally ambiguous role in exchange for valuable access — something he also successfully did in the past with Rupert Murdoch and with Trump’s circle. “How do you get inside with these people?” he said to me Friday. “There’s not a lot of mystery: You suck up — and then you spit out!” Also today: Max’s exclusive reporting on the fast-arriving future of MS NOW. |