How Chris and Andrew Cuomo’s on-air comedy
routines compromised CNN
The news network implicitly endorsed the former New
York governor amid accusations of sexual harassment and corruption
Danielle
Tcholakian
Wed 1 Dec
2021 18.01 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/01/chris-cuomo-cnn-routine-brother-undermined-network
For months,
CNN’s primetime anchor, Chris Cuomo, refused to cover the multiple scandals
surrounding his brother, the former New York governor Andrew Cuomo.
Chris Cuomo
said it would be a conflict of interest for him to report on the sexual
harassment, corruption and misuse of public funds his brother had been accused
of. But many wondered how CNN could justify what amounted to a blackout of one
of the nation’s top news stories during the news network’s most-watched time
slot.
Finally,
last night, CNN announced that Chris Cuomo would be “suspended indefinitely”
from the network, not because of his inability to cover his brother’s scandals
but because he’s become a part of them.
According
to evidence made public from the New York attorney general’s investigation into
Andrew Cuomo’s workplace misconduct, Chris Cuomo used his position as a journalist
to ferret out information to help his brother, such as how far along Ronan
Farrow was with his first story about the governor. Top gubernatorial aide
Melissa de Rosa told the investigation that Chris Cuomo frequently initiated
contact with her, and text messages show him pleading “please let me help with
the prep” on 3 March and offering “I have a lead on the wedding girl being put
up to it” the following day.
The
evidence suggests that Chris Cuomo was dishonest in August when he said during
his show, “I never made calls to the press about my brother’s situation.”
It was
already known that Chis Cuomo had taken a role advising his brother during his
scandals and in May, he apologised on air for doing so and was not further
reprimanded by CNN. But after this new evidence was released, CNN announced
that Cuomo would be suspended from the network indefinitely. In a statement a
CNN spokesperson said:
“When Chris
admitted to us that he had offered advice to his brother’s staff, he broke our
rules and we acknowledged that publicly. But we also appreciated the unique
position he was in and understood his need to put family first and job second.
However, these documents point to a greater level of involvement in his
brother’s efforts than we previously knew. As a result, we have suspended Chris
indefinitely, pending further evaluation.”
It’s
unclear whether the suspension is paid or unpaid.
Both CNN
and Chris Cuomo have wider questions to answer about how they enforced
impartiality in their coverage of Governor Cuomo.
During the
early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, the network allowed Chris not just to
cover his brother, but air buddy-comedy style entertainment segments which
bolstered his public image. In one, the pair jostled about who was the better
looking or had the biggest nose (with Chris at one point bringing out a giant
prop cotton swab suggesting his brother would need it).
The
segments might have raised more eyebrows at the time if the nation hasn’t been
in a state of emergency. When criticism did arise, the network argued that they
made an exception to a rule banning Chris Cuomo from reporting on his brother
that had been in place since 2013 because “Chris speaking with his brother
about the challenges of what millions of American families were struggling with
was of significant human interest.”
The
decision to suspend their own rule benefited CNN: the ratings for Chris Cuomo’s
show climbed during the months of the brothers’ stunt shows.
Cuomo did
robust reporting on other elements of the Covid-19 outbreak but he could have
been interviewing any American about the challenges their families were facing,
instead of bantering with his brother about who was “the meatball” as he did on
31 March 2020, less than a month after the first Covid case in New York was
detected, and less than two weeks after his brother and Bill de Blasio, New
York City’s mayor, delayed closing schools with petty political squabbles.
The dozen
or so episodes with his brother served as free press for the governor’s
million-dollar book deal about how he handled the crisis. Still, Chris Cuomo
argued that he was simply acting as a concerned and loving brother, as anyone
might, and many seemed sympathetic to that argument.
When
messages indicating Chris Cuomo’s involvement in his brother’s defense first
came to light in August, CNN employees anonymously expressed frustration at the
network’s refusal to censure him.
“The fact
that Chris Cuomo wasn’t fired over his inappropriate conflict of interest in
actively affecting a news story is not only irresponsible of CNN, but also a
disgrace to journalism,” one employee told BuzzFeed News at the time.
Another
griped that it was typical of the network, a place where “the more prominent
you are, the less the rules and discipline apply to you.”
Marissa
Hoechstetter, a high-profile victims’ rights advocate and survivor of sexual
abuse, cautioned against trusting CNN with sensitive stories if Chris Cuomo
continues to face no consequences.
“As a
survivor who has trusted CNN with my story, it is deeply disturbing that Chris
Cuomo remains employed. His unethical behavior – plus that of anyone giving him
any info in the first place – should be disqualifying for a journalist. If they
keep him on, they can’t be trusted,” Hoechstetter tweeted on Tuesday.
And
Charlotte Bennett, one of the young women who reported experiencing sexual
harassment in the governor’s employ, issued a statement condemning the
network’s inaction.
“Just like
his older brother, Chris Cuomo used his time, network and resources to help
smear victims, dig up opposition research, and belittle our credible
allegations,” Bennett said Tuesday. “Anything short of firing Chris Cuomo
reflects a network lacking both morals and backbone. Does CNN stand by
journalistic integrity, or will it simply excuse his actions because Chris
Cuomo drives ratings?”
For his
part, Chris Cuomo didn’t address his role in his brother’s debacle, but on his
radio show Tuesday complained that his brother was denied “due process”. But
how else would the investigation that turned up the messages and transcripts be
described? Andrew Cuomo was afforded, to date, at least two thorough
investigations into the complaints about his conduct. He had access to legal
counsel and an apparently robust team of people working in his defense.
By allowing
the Cuomos their buddy routine during the pandemic, CNN was implicitly
endorsing a politician they considered to be one of the good guys (it’s
difficult to imagine Andrew Cuomo would have been offered the same leeway were
he a Republican governor). That suspension of ethical guidelines has made
things very uncomfortable for the channel, and its star host, now that normal
politics has resumed and both brothers appear mired in scandal.
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