Topofthekey wrote:queridiculo wrote:Topofthekey wrote:I mean, at least he immediately owned up to his mistake
And why do we assume that he lied to gain attention
Maybe someone else told him the story and he simply repeated it
Or maybe it was a case of something getting distorted as it got repeated and passed along
Of all the possibilities, why do we assume that lying intentionally is the correct one?
Immediately?
It took an article published a full 6 days later to have Leonsis fess up about his story being manufactured, and it's not exactly like he had a choice.
The Washington Post article on the trophy is based on a first hand account by Ted Leonsis, and how do we assume he did it to gain attention?
His pompous ass made a story about honoring the 1977-78 NBA Champion Bullets all about himself, his incredible wealth while painting himself as the savior of a moribund franchise.
I mean, it'd take someone with monumental incompetence to think that he can tell a lie, one that can be easily debunked, on record on the Washington Post and get away with it, doesn't it
Not saying that billionaires aren't capable of incompetence or mendacity
But I'm willing to entertain the possibility that it was a slip up, than an intentional lie
Are these posts intentional irony? Maybe PIF with a secret second account? "Monumental incompetence" indeed!
Why give him the benefit of doubt? This was an elaborated narrative with him at the center, asking people where the trophy is, initiating a search for the missing trophy, describing in detail the (apparently fictitious) appalling condition of the trophy and his own and his wife's steps to restore it to its former luster.
Lies fall on a spectrum, from "I know what the truth is but I'll tell the police this lie and maybe they'll believe it," to "I'm a brilliant billionaire to whom the rules of incompetence and mendacity do not apply. This was a Janet Cooke/Stephen Glass/Donald Trump level of whole cloth fabrication. Maybe to billionaires. it doesn't even seem like a lie if told to suckers and peons, but that was definitely a big ol' lie.



















