THE BATTALI® ell leaders under ivestigation for azing allegati Yell leaders are underinvest n by University officialsfmlij ; and could face < ictions. Dr. Dave Parrot, dean of Sliiilj e, declined to discuss reifies of the allegations ether they implicated all fisejt ders, but said his depart® tan an investigation the »ttl ore spring break after yell leal dser Rusty Thompson fon® ha/ing allegations to Sink "We were looking into sm lavior indicating the possii hazing among the yell lead® rott said. The fact-finding phase of i estigation is complete. Pai 1, and a Student Life disci? y panel will conduct a he® each of the yell leaders mvot; decide whether to hand te ctions. The process couldtaki weeks to complete, he said Although the current jit Jers are all Corps memk:: rott said Corps officials41 initiate the investigate ause yell leaders are as® student organization. Bailey declined to discussti gations. but said he does n eve the hazing investigate dd erode students’ trust in he- and Lusk. ‘I ’m not worried about (theta- allegations) being anythitiglu ild prohibit us from beingjd ers," said Bailey, a junior apt oral development major. ALIGN in Chief rough Friday during the fall and spring» Kcept University holidays and exam penodsn lion. IX 77840. POSTMASTER: Send addrN ege Station. TX 77843-1111. Texas A&M University in the Division olStudf'!! i in 014 Reed McDonald Building. New Veb site: http.7/www.thebatlcom lip or endorsement by The Battalion, For can- issified advertising, call 845-0569.Mertyj 5p.m. Monday through Friday. Fax: 845-2678 fexas A&M student to pick up a singlecoffd :)tions are $60 per school year, $30fortheW To charge by Visa, MasterCard. Disco* * :et >’ Aggielife The Battalion Page 3 • Tuesday, March 18, 2003 Diggin’ up celebrity dirt Stars’ dark secrets exposed on the Smoking Gun Web site By Michelle Megna KRT CAMPUS NEW YORK —William Bastone and Daniel Green, co founders of www.thesmokinggun.com, are guys who don’t round things off. Ask how many visitors their expose Web site had in February, and they’ll tell you: 4,756,767. It’s all in the details. Consider the difference between reading in the newspaper that, according to court documents, Michael Jackson allegedly molested a young boy, or reading a graphic account of a sexual act from the 13-year-old’s 1993 deposition, which was posted on the Web site. “It’s a much more compelling narrative,” Bastone says, dryly. Remember Rick (Restraining Order) Rockwell of “Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire?” What about bondage babe Sarah Kozer of “Joe Millionaire”? The Smoking Gun broke those stories by posting the restraining order against Rockwell, as well as stills from the Kozer videos. It also busted Busta Rhymes’ contract request for ribbed condoms backstage at concerts. In fact, concert riders are such a hit with visitors to the site that Bastone and Green created a “Backstage” section that currently features 134 acts. There you’ll discover that J.Lo must have designer candles, white drapes, white furniture and white lilies in her dressing room. But it’s not just sensational tidbits that make the site so suc cessful. In addition to exposing celebrity foibles, it posts docu ments such as prison, police and medical examiner’s records (such as those relating to the death of Malcolm X). A flight manual investigators believe was used by the Sept. 11 terrorists was also posted. “You will always find something at our site that you can’t find anywhere else,” says Bastone. Washington Post media reporter Howard Kurtz believes that “The Smoking Gun has become a journalistic gold mine because it produces the one thing —raw documents— that every reporter needs to nail down a story. Journalists get hundreds of tips and mmors to check out, (and they don’t) always have the time to go through dusty files to find supporting documents (such as memos and letters) for their stories.” Kurtz refers to the period in 2001 when a number of prominent journalists wrote “embarrassing suck-up letters to (Unabomber) Ted Kaczynski” in an effort to get an exclusive interview. Kaczynski ultimately donated the pitch letters to the University of Michigan, which turned them over to The Smoking Gun. “That story never would have seen the light of day without the Gun site,” says Kurtz. Larry Pryor, professor of journalism at USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and executive editor of Online Journalism Review, says that print and broadcast media, constrained by space, time and advertisers’ sensibilities, can miss the essence of a story by glossing over the details. “I saw TV reporters who start ed to read the Jackson document, (but) because it was too graphic, they paraphrased (it) with ambigu ous language,” Pryor says. “What works really well in online jour nalism is documents. The Smoking Gun had the whole dep osition, made under oath. It’s sen sational, but it isn’t gossip, and it leads the public to think we have a right to prosecution. Where’s the DA?” (A civil suit by the boy’s family was settled out of court.) Before creating their niche in cyberspace, Bastone and Green worked in print: Bastone was a crime reporter for The Village Voice, and Green worked as a freelance magazine writer. As investigative journalists, the two accumulated a collection of FBI reports, court affidavits and memos. They realized the powerful effect raw documents can have on readers —seeing an FBI “confidential” stamp makes you feel like you’re in on the discovery, part of the gumshoe game. In 1997, they first posted their collection on the Web, never expecting their project to become a full-time occupation. “They’re good at fact-gathering and have a good sense of tim ing,” says Pryor. “They’re topical. And they’re focused on a spe cialized beat. That’s one reason why they’re capable of beating large organizations that have to focus on the bigger picture.” Another plus is that it often takes less than 20 minutes from the time a document is discovered to confirm and post it, says Bastone, giving the site what amounts to a journalistic fast break. Armed with little more than the Freedom of Information Act, help from two other reporters (Joseph Jesselli and Andrew Goldberg), computers and scanners, Bastone and Green work in an office in the East 30s that was once Court TV’s mailroom. “We follow leads for months. We check court dockets, municipal records, things like that,” says Green. Scott Pansky, president of the Entertainment Publicists Professional Society, disagrees. He thinks the site is more about Andrew savulich • KRT CAMPUS Smoking Gum’s founders Daniel Green, front left, and William Bastone, front right, work with reporters Andrew Goldberg, left rear, and Joseph Jesselli to dig up newsworthy documents. digging up dirt than uncovering compelling facts. “They’re taking advantage of people in the limelight, and of the sensationalism of being a celebrity,” he says. As for the site’s greatest hits, Bastone says, “Anything bad that’s related to a reality TV show came out of this office. We sort of lump all those together as our best stuff. It just never ends.” It’s not just PR reps who have been unhappy about The Smoking Gun’s popularity, though. Consider Jim Weir, a graphics designer in San Francisco. His Web-design business, called Smoking Gun, resides at www.smokinggun.com (no “the”). This makes Weir the digital equivalent of the family with the phone number one digit off the local pizza parlor’s. Thanks to millions of people looking for The Smoking Gun, traffic to Weir’s site has risen so much that his service provider is charging him extra. And after getting some 3,376,831 visitors on Feb. 11, Weir posted his own memo: “There are no documents on Joe Millionaire, Michael Jackson or anyone else at this Web site. There never were. Don’t e-mail asking where they are.” “He’s called a few times to speak with us,” Bastone says with a chuckle. “Maybe we should let him call collect.” reed arena tickets on sale NOW!! reserve tickets: $17.50 student $20 public $15 groups of 20+ ticket outlets: reed arena box office, msc box office & all ticketmaster outlets charge by phone 979.268.0414 - group orders & info 979.862.7333 sponsored by msc town hall The University W.rIting. Center can answer your rhetorical questions. Write right. O University Writing Center in Evans Library http://uwc.tamu.edu 458.1455 Open Monday through Thursday. 10 a.m. -10 p.m.. Friday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.