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Goring the Bull

By Seth Hettena



Monday, May 19, 2008 | San Diego County Supervisor Bill Horn recently added a new section to his official website called "The Whole Story." Supervisor Horn has attracted a great deal of critical coverage since he was first elected to represent northern San Diego County in 1995. "The Whole Story," he said, provided a forum "to respond in like manner to distortions, innuendos, misstatements, bias or lies."

The site would counter media bias and distortion with accurate information and give readers "a better chance of getting the truth."

Seth Hettena

If that was the goal, "The Whole Story" failed miserably. Its ham-fisted approach only served to draw attention to a story that could have been brushed aside. It bungled up its facts, accusing other supervisors of doing something they had not. And that led to an embarrassing correction on a site that purported to give the unvarnished truth.

"The Whole Story" is a textbook case of how NOT to deal with bad press.

Horn and San Diego City Attorney Mike Aguirre may not seem to have much in common but Horn's recent foray into public criticism of the press reminds us of the fiery lawyer at City Hall. Aguirre directed his ire toward reporter Alex Roth (who recently left the Aguirre beat at The San Diego Union-Tribune for the Wall Street Journal). Now, Horn appears to have picked up the torch. Nobody wins in these disputes, least of all the voters. So I’d like to offer some suggestions on how to improve the dialogue (or lack of it). But first, a bit of context:

The focus of the "The Whole Story" was an April 30 article in the North County Times. Reporter Darryn Bennett’s story revealed that Horn met with the chief executive of a wireless company that had official business before the council. Horn has a reputation of being unreachable, and Bennett wrote that the meeting revived complaints that the supervisor is more accessible to developers than his constituents.

Compared to earlier scandals involving the Republican supervisor, this one didn’t seem like such a big deal at first. In his first campaign, Horn faced down brutal accusations about his service in Vietnam. KFMB-TV discovered that Horn, a frequent critic of U.S. immigration policy, had immigrants living illegally on his Valley Center ranch. And the California Fair Political Practices Commission fined Horn $12,000 for failing to report, among other things, $349,000 in income he had received from his chief of staff, Joan Wonsley, who was living in a house her boss owned in Carlsbad.

But Bennett’s story about Horn’s meeting with Leap Wireless Chief Executive Doug Hutcheson struck a nerve. Two days later, Horn and his spokesman posted more than 3,000 words on "The Whole Story." Horn published the e-mails Bennett had sent to his office and questioned her motives and her reporting.

Horn’s spokesman, a former local TV news anchor named John Culea, followed with a column about the state of the media, in which he revealed the "manipulation" by Horn haters in the local press. One example of this, and I’m not making this up, was a radio station who invited Horn to talk about a community grant and then "used the opportunity to 'ambush' him about the cost of transportation in San Diego County."

In their zeal to poke holes in the story, Horn and Culea wrote that the four other supervisors had also met with Leap Wireless’ Hutcheson. That wasn’t true. Supervisor Dianne Jacob demanded a correction. A few days later, "The Whole Story" set the record straight. As for Bennett’s story, no corrections have been published and none requested, she told me.

What a mess, right? Well, this whole thing could have been avoided rather easily. There is a right way to deal with bad press, one that will go a long way to quieting the nattering nabobs of negativism.

Here’s how:

  • 1. Stop whining. No one likes a baby. You’re an elected official, for Pete’s sake. Have some self-respect.


  • 2. Get your facts right. Do I really need to explain this?


  • 3. Maintain focus. Attack the story, not the reporter or the news organization. A politician who goes after an individual reporter comes off as slightly unhinged (see Mike Aguirre). What purpose did printing Bennett’s e-mails serve? She comes across as polite and professional.
  • 4. Don’t quibble. Point out errors of fact. A misspelled name. An incorrect title. Demand a published or on-air correction or apology. Even small errors undermine the story and reporters hate nothing more than a correction. Complaints about tone or statements taken out of context will most often get you nowhere.


  • 5. Be fair. You can’t complain about the anonymous attacks against Supervisor Horn on the Internet and then turn around and do the same thing yourself. Horn's "Whole Story" had just that. What’s the name of the reporter who "hated Supervisor Horn" so much he or she wouldn’t write about an organization Horn supported? Which TV station twisted Horn’s statement to put its own slant on the story?
  • 6. Make nice. Reporters aren’t that hard to figure out. A little decency goes a long way. Answer their calls, meet them for lunch (reporters love to eat!), share some off-the-record gossip and compliment them on a story. Make them see things your way.


  • It’s simple really. The press is part of the job. And if you can’t stomach the idea of making friends with a bunch of miserable media elites then say as little as possible, or better yet, nothing at all.

    Next time, you’ll be glad you did.

    Seth Hettena, a San Diego-based freelance journalist and author, writes an occasional column "The Peanut Gallery" about local media and journalism. You can e-mail him at seth@sethhettena.com with your complaints, thoughts or stories about San Diego reporters.




    11 Comments so far on this story...

    EASY for you to say Seth. When the media is held accountable in their reporting, all of what you espouse would be the correct way of handling inaccurate, incomplete, twisted, fabricated and out right libelous reporting. The best advise for any politician is to remember one fact; NEVER; NEVER get into a war of words with someone who buys ink by the barrel and paper by the role. IF the print media had REAL investigative reporters who VERIFIED facts and printed ONLY FACTS; there would not be this back and forth "setting the record straight". There would be no need. Problem is that takes work, effort and the ability to understand the issue and then write about it so it holds someones attention. MOST of the stories written, if written accurately would not generate the hoopla they do. So, twist, fabricate; tell only half the story to sell papers.

    Posted by Sparky | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 7:37 am

    I'm no fan of Bill Horn, but Seth...your notion that tone and out-of-context statements are off limits for criticism is self-servingly arrogant. Any professional writer knows that tone and context are crucial to accuracy. The UT and other local media deliberately manipulate tone and quotes to twist the news. Politicians shouldn't kiss journalists' butts (nor vice-versa) and neither should they buy you lunch. No wonder San Diego is in such a mess.

    Posted by Fred_Williams | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 8:45 am

    Wait, Horn (Culea) actually said he was going to respond "IN LIKE MANNER" to "distortions, innuendos, misstatements, bias or lies"? Does he realize that's saying he is going to respond with "distortions, innuendos, misstatements, bias or lies"? That's what responding "in like manner" is -- with the same behavior. What an idiot. I have dealt with Culea, and that guy is a total henchman a la Fred Sainz, only not as sharp. Still, I have to say, often the worst part of a story is what's left out. You can't ask for a correction on a crucial ommission. You can't get a reporter to correct a quote that was uttered in response to a different question. When a reporter runs across facts that ruin their story, they leave them out. Reporters are so enamored of their profession, they think everyone approaches things honestly, but I've seen otherwise.

    Posted by Semantics | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 8:55 am

    As an old media person myself, I couldn't have said it better Sparky. The credibility in reporting has long since disappeared and the public is left the victim. Another breakdown in our society.

    Posted by Rocky | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 9:55 am

    Well you said it yourself Seth, right here in this column. Nothing reporters hate more than making corrections. Don't nitpick, only point out legitimate mistakes. Well, there is no "council" Seth. That would be the city. Horn sits on a "Board." So could you please correct that mistake. We wouldn't want you to be inaccurate while pointing out someone else's inaccuracies who are complaining about media inaccuracy. Whew. Thanks.

    Posted by Common Sense | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 10:31 am

    Sparky = John Culea? The gross misuse of semi-colons is the same as the errors found on "The Whole Truth." And, it seems that Mr. Horn & Co. weren't so good about getting their facts right. Horn and Culea launched an attack, through e-mails sent to constituents and Horn's web site, trying to discredit a young female reporter who, by all accounts, simply reported an issue raised by some Escondido residents (it's called Freedom of the Press, boys). Funny that Horn and Culea can attack Bennett over simple wording but can't be bothered to ask other supervisors if they, too, met with Hutcheson.

    Posted by Semi-Colon stickler | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 1:14 pm

    Not even close "Semi-Colon stickler". If you payed attention to what goes on here for any length of time you would know I am NOT Mr. Culea; nor do I have any ties to Horn. Don't actually like the man. The use of the "semi-colon" here is but a way to break the sentences and continue the thought. Sorry to have sparked your sense of grammar. Pay more attention to the message than the spelling and grammar; you may learn something.

    Posted by Sparky | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 3:02 pm

    It's time that John Culea move on and let the house of cards fall. He was a good man prior to the present company he keeps. Horn is getting older and more tired, his memory of half truths will fail him. No matter which press is reporting Horn just can't walk the straight and narrow. The lost briefcase with tax receipts, the suit bought by fundraising dollars. The Whole Truth will turn into The Rest of the Story with a respected career ending with corruption. Good Day

    Posted by P Harvey | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 3:06 pm

    It's time that John Culea move on and let the house of cards fall. He was a good man prior to the present company he keeps. Horn is getting older and more tired, his memory of half truths will fail him. No matter which press is reporting Horn just can't walk the straight and narrow. The lost briefcase with tax receipts, the suit bought by fundraising dollars. The Whole Truth will turn into The Rest of the Story with a respected career ending with corruption. Good Day

    Posted by P Harvey | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 3:06 pm

    Sparks, when poor grammar and punctuation muddle your message, it undermines whatever point you're trying to make. Try spending a week as a reporter and then you'll see all the crap they have to deal with from people who are trying their best to hide the facts. Cat-and-mouse, Sparks.

    Posted by Semi-colon luvah | reply to this comment
    May 19, 2008 7:04 pm

    I'm surprised Larry has nothing to say about this. Should I mock your common sense, writing abilities, and reporting in his stead, Seth? You are a horrible writer! The Voice of San Diego should have a REAL writer, who knows how to write, and is not a horrible writer! Bah! Worth noting: Telling public officials to stop whining (especially ones who think an appropriate response to perceptions of media bias is to create a section of their web site called "The Whole Story" -- seriously, this sounds like a 9th-grader's LiveJournal entry, for Pete's sake) seems like a colossal waste of potentially valuable time.

    Posted by Ruthie | reply to this comment
    June 15, 2008 9:39 pm


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