The Hite Report on Shere Hite (20 page)

It is so hard for me. I can only reconstruct what happened in the most crude and jumbled sort of way. This is the first time I have tried to record an objective picture of what was happening.

Here is chapter and verse of the media madness of 1987/8, for readers with strong stomachs (or a good sense of humour).

When I published the result of my seven-year research,
Women
and
Love,
Time
magazine made it their cover story. I was surprised and happy when I heard in advance, impressed. Of course they don't share with
you what it will be like before it comes out, but I had no reason to expect anything other than a responsible discussion of the issues. Some criticism, but a basic discussion of the ideas.

When I saw
Time
on Monday morning, my heart sank. The cover had a terrible cliché drawing of a male and female symbol – arguing. The cliché was this: a screaming, nagging woman attacking a surprised and gentle looking man. She was ‘nagging' at him, and he was looking surprised and perfectly ‘innocent'. My mind boggled: instead of erasing the stereotypes I had worked so hard to overturn, it reinforced them! But, anyway, I thought, don't let your ego get in your way, this is probably just the way the cover is. Inside will be better.

Inside was worse. Rather than discussing the new issues for women which I had devoted almost ten years of my life to researching, working painstakingly seven days a week for long hours, funding it all myself – rather than saying what I had concluded (even if only to knock it down),
Time
went out of its way to miss the point. Instead it said that I had no point, or if I did, nobody could believe it anyway, because my methodology was so laughable. It went on to trash me, devoting column after column to quoting people who said my work wasn't any good. And these were people who could not even have read this book. How do I know this? Because no one even had any review copies yet; the publisher did not have them ready.

What
Time
seems to have done was to create a brief, three-paragraph synopsis, and give it to their bureau
chiefs in certain key cities, then have that bureau call local therapists or whomever, read them a part of this page, who knows in what context, and ask their reaction, parts of which they then quoted as ‘informed opinion' about my work! In other words,
Time
used almost all of its space, not to discuss the book's general ideas, basic statistics, or new theories, but to cite over twenty assorted individuals saying they didn't agree with the distorted ideas they seemed to have of my work or how it was done. Exactly what they did or did not agree with was hard to tell. People who were called and said positive things were not cited, as many informed me by letter.

I was shocked and amazed. I never expected such shoddy journalism or bias from
Time.
It was dishonest not to let its readers know that none of the people they quoted had read this book, in fact to imply that they had, and weight the story towards the negative, not using any positive citations. There were plenty of positive reactions, including in the book's prefaces and appendices; professional associates and collegues I knew were called, and kept on the telephone for up to an hour, but not quoted.

(Does this remind any readers of the media madness surrounding the Clinton sex scandal of 1998/9?)

At the same time, the
Washington
Post
co-operated (financially) with
ABC
News, to conduct their own poll, based largely on my questions (to which they had selectively early access because I was to be interviewed first
on their weekly current affairs programme,
20/20
). They then promoted the results as ‘proving Hite wrong'.

Do you think they told me in advance that they were doing a comparative study? Quite flattering in a way. This could have been informative, and real collegiality developed. But no. They didn't tell me a thing, but went out of their way to trick me onto their show. In fact, most of
ABC
's results proved me right: Most women in their study also said that they wanted more emotional closeness from men, and felt men were too distant. But the bit that interested
ABC
was only this:
How
many women were having extramarital sex?
ABC
's number was fantastically lower than mine! (Of course, their lower figure couldn't have been because of their ‘poor methodology', i.e., they called people up on the telephone, so those interviewed were hardly anonymous or speaking in privacy! How many would admit current or past affairs to a stranger from the national media on the telephone?)

What happened was that I got a call from the
ABC
Nightly
News.
‘Ms Hite, we would like to come and interview you tomorrow for the evening news.' ‘You would?' I asked, puzzled, ‘Do you know that I have been on one of the other nightly news shows? Do you mind not being first? Is there a different angle you have in mind?'

A woman's voice reassured me from the other end of the line, ‘No, we just think your book,
Women
and
Love,
is so interesting and so important that we want to interview you. Can we come tomorrow?'

I agreed, and the following afternoon, three women arrived – one carried a camera, one was the producer, and one the interviewer. I was surprised and happy to see that the network understood women's issues, since they had sent an all-woman crew; in fact, two women were black.

The interview began, camera pointing at me. During the preliminary questions, all seemed to be normal, then my interviewer reached down into her briefcase and pulled out a large sheaf of papers. ‘Ms Hite,
ABC
News and the
Washington
Post
have together conducted a survey which proves your statistics wrong! What do you say to that!' And she thrust the papers into my lap, camera rolling.

I stared at her, fascinated. ‘You have? How interesting! You mean, you replicated my questions, exactly the ones I used! Asked people anonymously?' I began reading the reams of computer print-out data, scanning it to note the questions and percentages of answers. ‘But this looks like you found just about the same thing I did – women wish men would talk to them more about personal issues – and on this page …'

‘But get to the end, get to the end!' the interviewer exclaimed. ‘Our results there are totally different!
We
found that only seven per cent of American wives are unfaithful to their husbands!'

I looked up and was about to comment on this, but was amazed to see that the camera was still rolling. ‘You don't mean to say that you've been filming this whole thing, have you?' Silent nod from the camera woman. ‘Do you expect me to comment on your study before
reading it? Is this some kind of a set-up? You wanted to try to catch me off guard, shake me up? Why are you doing this? Don't you feel a little strange, three women coming here on dishonest premises?' But they went away happily with their film, edited it, and ran it on the news. Since I hadn't ‘broken down', they asked other people to comment negatively on me, and thus ‘proved their point'.

This was followed by a
Washington
Post
‘investigative article' – a huge two-page attack on me and my work. Though the
Washington
Post
and
ABC
had jointly sponsored the survey, readers of the paper (and viewers of
ABC
) were probably unaware of the joint sponsorship. Nowhere was this mentioned in the
Washington
Post
article ‘exposing' my flaws, nor in several subsequent articles attacking my research, and, increasingly, me personally.

One of their reporters, David Streitfeld, ‘investigated' my personality and (yes, again) my ‘science' (yawn). What a challenging and heroic assignment – not like investigating a big corporation, or a professional business executive with expensive lawyers for defence; more fun to ‘investigate' a lone, independent feminist writer, for sure. Well, it is not difficult to find flaws in my personality! Yet I don't think his research into me was anywhere near as balanced and scientific as my research into others. He describes the flaws in my comportment (as little as he knew them; he had met me twice, for a total of two hours each time; the second time Friedrich had literally thrown him out of the apartment, with a crew from Brazilian television
applauding him for this) and the flaws in my famous methodology (yet again).

Frighteningly, not only did this reporter personally harass me, and then attack
me
(not my ideas, he never mentioned them, but implied there were none) in the
Washington
Post,
he also made intimidating telephone calls to at least two of my publishers (Knopf
US
and Viking
UK
), asking them if they were not now, after the negative articles, planning to withdraw my book from the market? ‘Since they are calling it a fraud …' (It was he and related media who called it ‘a fraud.')

At this point, I called Ben Bradlee, editor-in-chief of the
Post,
who told me over the telephone (when I asked him to ask this reporter to stop calling me), ‘We tried to get you, but now we'll stop.' He laughed and sounded like he thought it was all in good fun! I was amazed, couldn't believe my ears, and asked him to repeat it. He repeated it verbatim, ‘Well, well, we tried to get you, but now we'll stop!' And he chuckled some more. I reminded him of this some two years later, at the annual meeting of American Women in Radio and Television held in Washington, DC, and recorded by C-Span television network. He answered, ‘Oh, uh, but didn't we somehow make this up to you, uh, give you a chance to …' ‘No,' I said. ‘Oh well' was the sum total of his response.

Set-ups became common, intimidating situations contrived in advance, attempts to rile me, designed to make me angry so I would do something ‘dramatic'. And when this rarely happened, then in the editing, the missing events or details would just be added in!

Not only did
ABC
Nightly
News
lie about the reason for their wanting an interview with me in order to ambush and surprise me into breaking down (which I didn't, of course – why should I?), but also another television network decided to join the free-for-all: Fox TV decided to trick me into an ‘interview' with them via satellite. In a situation like this by satellite, one doesn't see one's interviewer, but simply sits in front of a blank camera; you hear the voice and the questions, then respond into a black screen; only the interviewer can see you. I was asked by my publisher to do an hour of satellite interviews to various stations from a Washington studio. I was not told who any of them were in advance, this was just one hour slotted into a hectic book tour schedule, and I trusted my publisher …

As it turned out, Fox TV (from New York, where I had just been!) was on the other end of one of these slots and made it their business to create as much tension and confrontation as possible, before I knew what was happening. When I tried to leave the set, to get away from the brutal attack the unseeable ‘interviewer' was making on me, the studio personnel refused to let me out of my chair, refused to detach the various wires and microphones placed all over my body so I could walk away! Then Fox stationed a ‘reporter' outside my apartment building in New York, mixing in some of this footage, to ‘tell the public' the ‘awful truth' about me … (with my address plainly in sight behind the reporter). This ran as ‘major news' several times a day, then was given to
CBS
for its prestigious
Sunday
Morning
News
of
the
Week
with Charles Kuralt.

The media now became more and more aggressive, as they discovered there was little way I (or any ‘public figure') could fight back or stop them. Later, I understood a lot of what Princess Diana had felt about being hunted by the media. They were in for the kill, hot on the chase. The colouring, sensationalizing, dramatizing of events, inventing of conflict and magnifying personality characteristics – all this became frequent. Reporters called at odd hours and said provocative things, hoping to get a response (they were taping) and then use it out of context. It was exhausting and tedious. I tried to counter these attacks by doing other interviews and television shows, hoping to speak about the actual issues and ideas in the book. But it was a circus, one ridiculous out-of-context attack after another.

Yet I was not alone. After a few months, an article by Louise Armstrong describing the whole farce appeared in the
Women
'
s
Review
of
Books
:

A cover story in
Time
. A cover story in
Savvy
. A feature in
Newsweek
. A turn on
Oprah,
on
Donahue
… The publication of Shere Hite's newest report,
Women
and
Love,
has triggered a media mêlée.

It has prompted both exuberant endorsement and ferocious attack …

6 November 1987. It is a mindless moment for me between promotional phone interviews. I click on the tube to catch up with reality. It is halfway through the
Oprah
Winfrey
show and there is: Shere Hite. Surrounded, as though engulfed, even imprisoned, by men seated on her left, men seated on her right, men seated the full row
behind her. Stringy men, rangy men, big men, fat men, little men, white men, black men … a line of them thrusts toward the aisle microphone to – ejaculate venom.

My God! It's 1987! What has happened to the veneer of the ‘new man'? Where is his tenderness? His compassion? His nurturing? The scene gives ‘surrounded by hostility' a whole new meaning. Shere Hite is being personally held accountable for not just the entire women's movement but for these men's wives and girlfriends – their expressed thoughts, their behavior – for their own mothers' betrayals, and for everything else they can throw in the fracas.

‘She Says It's a Dog's Life in a Man's World', heads the review by Andrew Ferguson in the
Wall
Street
Journal
(13 November 1987). The review is awash in sneer and mockery; reading it feels like sexual harassment. Ferguson says the book ‘serves up the kind of buncum we have come to expect from “feminist scholarship”; the bloated generalization, the bizarre pseudo-ethnology masquerading as a critique of “patriarchy,” the sure-handed dismissal of tradition and history, the free-floating indeterminate malice.'

27 November. There, on the
Donahue
show, is – Shere Hite. Donahue is uncharacteristically leading his (mostly female) audience in a feeding frenzy on Hite's (yet again) methodology, her alleged invention of an allegedly fictitious secretary/assistant using Hite's original name. But mostly – her message. Come on, are you really saying men are this awful? Men are this terrible?

Even Donahue, friend and public parish priest to women raped, women blamed, women battered, cannot tolerate the perceived message of Hite's book. The message that (to quote from Arlie Russelol Hochschild's review in the
New
York
Times,
15 November), ‘Women feel that men
don't listen to them or that they listen without real interest …' But has this not been the very stuff of sit-coms and women's magazine features for ever and ever? That ‘Men also don't say how they feel …' That ‘Some women also complain that men come on strong, then coolly withdraw into the cowboy's “Yep … yep … nope …”?, Why is the report that 81 per cent of Hite's sample say they find themselves in unequal emotional contracts gelignite in 1987? My mother could have told you that in 1924.

I do not mean to be snippy. What I mean to suggest, rather, is that the explosiveness of this report on the ‘cultural revolution in progress' is that it punctures the media-created mass of rising expectations. A truce, we were told, had been declared. Men had changed. Relationships had changed. Fatherhood had changed. We let you talk about that in the seventies, right? We let you go on and on. So now all that's been said, therefore it's been fixed.

And Shere Hite has the nerve to come along and say, ‘You're still not listening to us'. And Donahue explodes: ‘But we listened, dammit'.

I am reminded of a call-in radio show with a shrink a couple of years ago. The caller said, ‘Doctor, This is Ellen. You remember we talked a while back? And I told you I had this problem with my husband? And I talked to him about it? And he didn't answer?' And the shrink says, ‘Yes, Ellen.' ‘And you told me to try talking with him again? In a non-angry, non-threatening, sharing way?' ‘Yes, Ellen?' ‘Well, I did.' ‘And?' ‘And he said, “We already talked about that”.'

The degree of passion and vitriol (Hite's new study) has brought down must be taken very seriously indeed. It is as though, to men's minds, Hite stands for every woman in their lives who has ever instigated ‘that' conversation
about wanting more – house, money, closeness, communication, whatever.

And in return for all those times when they covered their rage at this perceived attack with stony silence – in return for that decade when they were forced to listen to this hogwash in the media – they have now been freed to leap to their feet as a mob and holler back, ‘Bitch! We already talked about that!'

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