Kara Swisher

Recent Posts by Kara Swisher

Prankster Jason Calacanis Talks About His Apple iPad Hoax (Warning: Cute Baby Alert!)

While in Los Angeles for a brief second on Friday, BoomTown motored over to the Brentwood home of puckish entrepreneur Jason Calacanis to talk to him about his prank tweets the night before the introduction of the iPad last week.

On Tuesday night before the much hyped launch of the newest device from Apple (AAPL), Calacanis let loose with a series of over-the-top posts to Twitter, claiming he had been a beta tester for the iPad tablet computer for 10 days.

Unfortunately, these were assertions that some in the mostly mainstream media took too seriously.

So was it a jump-the-shark moment for journalism?

It was certainly sloppy, given that Calacanis is well known for slapping Apple around and that the secretive computer giant does not even give its own employees access to new products.

All this might have sent off alarm bells.

But he followed up with a series of tweets on a myriad of features of the new iPad–one nuttier, pricier and heavier than the next, such as a built-in HDTV tuner, a solar recharging pad and more.

For example: “Yes, there are 2cameras: one in front and one in back (or it may be one with some double lens) so you record yourself and in front of u.”

The problem was that a few big media outfits, including CNNMoney.com and WSJ.com, posted reports on the tweets without much of a raised eyebrow or first checking on their veracity with Apple or with Calacanis.

While anyone can get caught in a prank–and this was a pretty elaborate one pulled by Calacanis, who claims he was just trying to point out how ridiculous Apple hype had become–it’s still an instructive moment for journalism.

Here’s my interview with Calacanis, explaining it all (with a little shot of his new baby girl at the end), as well as images of his faux iPad tweets below:


comments so far. Add yours.

  • http://www.flickr.com/photos/looksmart/ zxspectrum

    Still funny ?

    I particularly enjoyed this part, “Steve Jobs confirmed that he didn’t give me(J.C) one…”.

    Keep them coming!

  • http://blog.3bigheads.com John Stack

    You got the best part in Kara! The baby! Jason is hilarious and these things make us all a little more human. I think we tend to get ahead of our own curve at times and Jason called everyone – he created the right suspension of reality at the right time! Cheers!

  • TomForemski

    It's easy to poke fun at traditional media but if anything, I think this damages Mr J.C just as much. Journalists can't confirm the story with Apple, they have to go on their instincts. And in this case, their instincts told them that it might be, that J.C has a tablet, after all, he's a connected guy. The fact that if they spent more time looking into it they could have spotted clues to the hoax is fine, but deadline journalism doesn't have such luxuries.

    Once bitten ten times shy… When it comes to Mr J.C I think journalists will give him a wide berth from now on, no matter what the topic. Is that what he wants? I would think not but that's what he'll get. He busted his trust rating, imho.

  • http://alwayson.goingon.com/permalink/post/34314 Emeri Gent [Em]

    This wasn't quite gotcha journalism. Sometimes things just happen. Why I am writing this tonight is simply to figure out in my own head:

    What do we mean today by “deadline journalism” and what is it's current value relationship to quality journalism?

    If the bar is set this low for “deadline journalism” then in my VERY IMHO, Jason Calacanis might just have done “deadline journalism” a mighty big favor. Whatever it is called, but let's use “prank” as a meaningful pejorative, it is only a trade off. Whatever Calacanis might lose in terms of brownie points in terms with some journalists, he more than makes up for potential folklore.

    IMHO journalism moved from its high noble standards and ideals into the center of the marketing cog a long, long time ago. That point of transformation is the one that Newton Minnow stated as the “Vast Wasteland”. It is a speech that is still relevant to those who still believe in the renaissance of quality media (if not journalism) and these people may be few in number but they are out there :

    http://www.americanrhetoric.co.....ton…

    What Calacanis did here and also in 2008 when he announced his blogging retirement should serve in my view as a reality check as to what the D in Deadline should mean today.

    http://calacanis.com/2008/07/1.....oun…

    I would rather view what Calacanis did as a great eye roll to the ever deepening abyss of entertainment and/or hyped up news. Indeed there can be a lot said for what Calacanis was doing with the Apple tweets as well as the link above about “retirement”. We do live in a fuzzy age of perception, which Seth Godin for one has done very well to bring to our attention, and as far as I am concerned, Calacanis simply met this fuzzy test, and on just on that score, he is ahead of the social curve ball in my book.

    A realignment of perspective would separate journalism which needs to break an Apple story, from that form of journalism which is life and death itself, for who shall honor those journalists who lost their lives trying to both report from conditions of danger, but also from deadlines of imperative? These journalists who risk their lives for a story, deserve to be put on a different footing, than that which Jason Calacanis is deemed to have disrupted.

    This fuzzy logic world we live in is one I accept, but if the bar on “deadline journalism” needs to be raised, can we find a way to reset it at the level of Edward R. Murrow once attained?

    At the end of the day, what reading this has stirred in me is a quest to discover what quality journalism is. I have never really studied this, for I only know only a few of it's standard bearers. At the end of the day, modern media may well have become a full-time marketing equation, but as an individual I have the freedom to extract myself from this attention machinery, and so take a fresh breath of air to discover for myself, those who practice quality journalism, and in the process learn when to ignore those who have not.

    The D that is meaningful for me today isn't “Deadline” at all, it is Discovery – and today each of us can discovery it in our own unique way.

    [Em]

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