![]() ![]() Wolff responded to Sherman saying, "I kept waiting for that call to be made." ![]() "ll they needed to do was call Murdoch and he would have said don't cooperate Wolff had written nasty book on him," Sherman tweeted on Thursday. Gabriel Sherman, a writer for Vanity Fair, said Thursday that it was "baffling" that Trump's team gave such access to Wolff, who conducted more than 200 interviews over the course of 18 months from his perch on a West Wing couch. The book, and its bombshell quotes from former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, has roiled the administration. In "The Man Who Owns the News," Wolff was said to have had "unprecedented access to Rupert Murdoch himself, and his associates and family."įor "Fire and Fury," Wolff was a fly on the wall in the White House throughout the early, tumultuous months of the Trump presidency. Wolff's proximity to power has been one of the common threads throughout his professional life. He has also written for New York Magazine and The Guardian. ![]() In 2010, Wolff took over as editor of Adweek but lasted about a year due to reported friction with ownership. He has most recently been a columnist and media critic for USA Today and The Hollywood Reporter, and before that Vanity Fair. Wolff, 64, is a fixture of New York media and a regular of the cocktail party circuit. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |