James Alefantis |
Comet Ping Pong, the restaurant at the centre of Pizzagate, in After Truth |
After
Truth: how ordinary people are 'radicalized' by fake news
An
eye-opening documentary traces the terrifying trajectory of disinformation,
from Jade Helm to Pizzagate to Russian interference in the 2016 election
Adrian
Horton
Thu 19 Mar
2020 16.04 GMTLast modified on Thu 19 Mar 2020 16.39 GMT
James
Alefantis first learned about the conspiracy theory surrounding his pizzeria
from a reporter’s phone call. In the waning days of the 2016 election, Will
Sommer, then of the Washington City Paper in DC, had been following a thread on
the site Reddit in which leaked emails from the Clinton campaign adviser John
Podesta were used to justify an elaborate, and entirely false, story of a
Clinton-run child abuse ring in the back of Comet Ping Pong pizza. Alefantis
had never heard of the faux online hysteria and assumed, as he recalled in
HBO’s new documentary After Truth: Disinformation and the Cost of Fake News,
that “everybody is up about this election and passions are high – I’m sure this
will go away in a couple of days”.
It did not
go away. The ludicrous theory, known as Pizzagate, was picked up and propagated
by infamous conspiracy monger Alex Jones, and disseminated on Facebook and
Twitter. Harassment of Comet and its staff escalated: one-star Yelp reviews
appeared with references to child dungeons. Pictures of Alefantis posted to
Instagram of his godchildren were repurposed to attack him as a pedophile, with
specific, hateful references to his identity as a gay man. Prank callers issued
death threats. And then, on 4 December 2016, Edgar Welch, a 28-year-old man
from North Carolina, convinced from online forums that he had to find the
children himself, entered the pizzeria with an AR-15.
No one was
hurt and Welch was arrested, but the episode underscored the terrifying power
of conspiracy theories and fake news articles, cultivated in forums such as
Reddit and 4chan and propagated by Facebook and Twitter, to metastasize
offline, with dire consequences. “I don’t think you can understand Pizzagate
until you see that bodycam footage from the DC metro police that we have in the
first 20 minutes of this film,” Brian Stelter, host of CNN’s Reliable Sources
and an executive producer of After Truth, told the Guardian. “It shows how
average Americans can be radicalized by insane content on the internet and can
be motivated to get in a car with a gun and go confront people at a pizzeria.”
After Truth
tracks the influence of disinformation – a deliberately disseminated falsehood,
as opposed to “misinformation”, which is an unintentional factual error – from
a niche topic in 2015 through Russian weaponization in the 2016 election and
ubiquity in the Trump presidency. “We’re looking at some of the biggest lies
that continue to manipulate people’s imaginations, even after they’ve been
thoroughly debunked and clarified,” Andrew Rossi, the director, told the
Guardian. Though the term “fake news” dates back to 2014 – when BuzzFeed News’s
Craig Silverman popularized it to describe false stories about the Ebola crisis
– After Truth begins in 2015, with online conspiracies around a military drill
in Bastrop county, Texas. Known as Jade Helm, the theories, harnessed by
YouTube personalities, spilled into the town’s real life – now eerie footage
depicts an army spokesperson shouted down by people who dismiss his
reassurances as propaganda; instead, they believed an internet
personality-driven theory that underground tunnels connected the town’s
Walmarts to the military base. The hysteria caught Texas governor Greg Abbott’s
attention, who treated it seriously. Russia took notice, and started
replicating the pattern heading into America’s election year.
Beginning
the arc in 2015 was deliberate – “this is bigger than any one president or term
in office,” said Stelter – but disinformation certainly ramped up in unison
with Donald Trump’s rise to the Republican nomination and, eventually, the
presidency. His weaponization of the term “fake news” against legitimate news
outlets in January 2017 represented “a signal moment”, said Stelter. “The
president took the term and exploited it for his own political gain. Now, it’s
the world’s worst game of whack-a-mole.”
After Truth
seeks to put a face on the generally amorphous, sterile concept of disinformation,
whether that be the pizzeria owner hounded by internet trolls or the
frustratingly human role of prejudice and hate as “a foundation for fake
stories and as a magnet for people who feel aggrieved to channel their
confusion with the world and their disappointment into demonizing a group”,
said Rossi. Comet Ping Pong was targeted as an LGBTQ+ safe space, for example;
the Barack Obama birtherism theory in the early 2010s, of which Trump was a
vocal proponent, was transparently racist.
For Comet,
there was a somewhat happy ending: loyal customers rallied around the business,
keeping it open. The same cannot be said for the family of Seth Rich, a
27-year-old Democratic National Committee (DNC) staffer killed in an unsolved
botched robbery in the summer of 2016. Rich’s death became fodder for online
conspiracy theorists, who baselessly linked the staffer to DNC emails actually
leaked by Russia and claimed murder by the Clintons. The Fox News host Sean
Hannity ran a primetime story boosting the Rich conspiracy, which the network
later retracted (Hannity never apologized). Aaron Rich, speaking with Rossi, says
fighting incessant trolls has left him unable to grieve his brother, even three
years later.
Whether
it’s Pizzagate, activating people into believing an outlandish pedophilia ring
must be stopped, to Rich conspiracy theorists who feel they have access to
privileged information, After Truth explores how much of disinformation’s power
lies in human emotion. “Fake stories are often successful when they capture
their audience’s hearts,” said Rossi. “What we’re trying to do in the film is to
provide a different story that also appeals to people’s hearts, which is the
pain and the devastation that’s caused to the victims of these stories.”
Putting a
face on disinformation, however, means also looking at its perpetrators; After
Truth includes interviews with or footage of noted conspiracy theorists,
hucksters or far-right media personalities, including Jones and Jack Burkman, a
notoriously incendiary Washington lobbyist who hosted a press conference in
2018 with bad-faith provocateur Jacob Wohl, meant to smear Robert Mueller with
a sexual assault allegation that fell apart, somewhat thrillingly, on Rossi’s
camera as the “victim” elects not to show up.
Talking to
figures who believe all press is good press has been “the third rail of the
project, and has been in the conversation among documentary film-makers who
want to tackle this topic,” said Rossi. “How do we do this without giving
oxygen to the liars and propagandists?” For Rossi, it was partly having someone
like Burkman admit his cynicism, as in a 2017 interview in which he called
disinformation a “tool of war”, like chemical weapons – if someone else can use
it, he says, I may as well use it too. “And then also to combine observational
film-making with context, to immediately rebut a lie and debunk it in the
moment.” Journalists such as Silverman, CNN’s Oliver Darcy, Recode’s Kara
Swisher and the New York Times’s Adam Goldman debunk false claims in real time
and add crucial context to the film’s scope and timeline. “It’s a delicate
balance to strike,” said Rossi, “but always make sure it’s not misleading and
the truth is very clear.”
Ultimately,
according to Stelter, when it comes to dispersing or de-escalating
disinformation, “there’s no one solution, there’s no one right answer”. It’s
understanding media literacy 101, it’s legislating responsibility for massive
platforms of information, Facebook first among them. And in the midst of a
once-in-a-generation pandemic in which correct, reliable information and public
trust are now literally a matter of life and death, an understanding of the
tools of disinformation may be more important than ever. “Disinformation in the
sense that our information world is polluted is something we all have in
common,” said Stelter. “It’s something we all share, and it’s a problem that we
all collectively have to address.”
After
Truth: Disinformation and the Cost of Fake News premieres on HBO on 19 March
and will air in the UK at a later date
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