NEW YORK (AP) — A presidential aide’s explosion of profanity while talking to a reporter about his new White House colleagues tested newsroom leaders Thursday, forcing decisions about whether to use the graphic language or leave much of what he said to the imagination of readers and viewers.
Anthony Scaramucci, the incoming White House communications director, aimed his tirade at chief of staff Reince Priebus and chief strategist Steve Bannon. An account of his conversation late Wednesday with Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker was published in graphic detail Thursday afternoon on the magazine’s website, complete with expletives and anatomical references.
Scaramucci used the language in suggesting to Lizza that Priebus had leaked information about him, and that Bannon was more interested in advancing his own agenda than President Donald Trump’s.
Following The New Yorker’s lead, The New York Times printed all of Scaramucci’s words. Times editors, including executive editor Dean Baquet, first discussed whether it was appropriate to do so, Clifford Levy, the newspaper’s deputy editor, said on Twitter.
Levy said the Times concluded that it was newsworthy that a top Trump aide would use such language, and its readers shouldn’t have to search elsewhere to find out what Scaramucci said.
The Washington Post similarly published the expletives Scaramucci used in reference to Priebus, but avoided the very graphic descriptor of self-love he used in reference to Bannon. Post analyst Aaron Blake called Scaramucci’s outburst “vulgar, vindictive and volatile.”
“Generally we don’t publish these words in full, but when they come from the highest-level government officials in the performance of their jobs, we believe an exception can be warranted,” said Kris Coratti, spokeswoman for the Post. “We felt it was warranted in this instance.”
Julie Bykowicz and Jonathan Lemire of The Associated Press wrote that Scaramucci was “exposing West Wing backstabbing in language more suitable to a mobster movie than a seat of presidential stability.” The service referred to Scaramucci’s description of Priebus as a “f—— paranoid schizophrenic,” using the dashes instead of spelling out the word. That was the AP’s only direct reference to a profanity.
The AP’s rules prohibit use of obscenities, racial epithets or other offensive slurs “unless they are part of a direct quotations and there is a compelling reason for them.” Scaramucci’s words satisfied the first part of that restriction, but editors concluded there wasn’t a compelling reason to use the profanity.
Television networks, knowing they would have to say the words out loud, generally stayed away from them. Anderson Cooper, in an interview with Lizza, let him describe the reference to Bannon.
“You’re going to make me read this one?” Lizza asked.
“Use your judgment,” Cooper replied.
Although CNN wouldn’t use the words on the air, they were printed on the network’s website, along with a stern warning that an article contained graphic language. In a column dissecting the remarks, CNN’s Chris Cillizza, wrote that Scaramucci’s phone call to Lizza was “bananas.”
TV anchors used variations of “expletive” and “bleeping” in reading the words.
MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow said the reference to Bannon suggested that he “performs an anatomically difficult but not impossible act of a kind that suggests he is more interested in serving his own self than the president.”
Fox News’ Laura Ingraham called it a “stunning attack” that has “gotten everybody’s attention tonight.”
On NBC’s “Nightly News,” reporter Kristen Welker said Scaramucci attacks Bannon in such vulgar terms they cannot be repeated on television.”
Major Garrett quoted the phrases used to describe both Priebus and Bannon on the “CBS Evening News,” substituting the word “expletive.” He said Scaramucci used language “more fit for the outhouse than the White House.”