Remember that juicy story last week of the Chinese mistress that convinced her rivals and her lover to go for a drive? The mistress that then drove them all off a cliff in revenge for being dumped for one of the rivals by the lover?
Great story. It had pathos, humor, revenge and... apparently it never happened. The U.S. media picked this story up from the Chinese speaking media and ran with it last week but obviously didn't do much by way of checking the accuracy of the tale. Turns out the Chinese "reporter" that wrote the story pulled a Jayson Blair -- he made up the whole thing.
CNN repeated the tall tale, so did Time Magazine, as did the New York Daily News. Then AOL News repeated the CNN copy, as did a host of other outlets. Along with the U.S. media a bunch of European and Australian news outlets also picked up the false tale (Like the Telegraph, the Scotsman and the Calgary Herald).
What supposedly happened was a rich (and married) Chinese businessman that was finding it hard to pay for his five mistresses held a lascivious dance competition among the rivals to decide which one he'd keep. After the contest and the selection, one of the spurned girl friends convinced them all to take a last drive together which supposedly resulted in a drive off a cliff in an effort to kill all involved.
The spurned woman heard around the world, however, turns out to have been a fabrication by Chinese writer Yi Lei from the Peneinsula Metropolis Daily in Shanghai.
Once again we see the Old Media running with a story without having performed the requisite due diligence of a good reporter. What, Who, When and where was covered. But having more than one source to assure veracity was sadly neglected.
Looks like this Chinese Jayson Blair fooled the world.
(H/T NewsBusters reader Cristy Li)



















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Whoa! Let's stop this stagecoach right here mister!
February 24, 2009 - 09:36 ET by JWFSo the guy got to keep his 5 mistresses?
Well good for him.
The stimulus bill worked!
Sincerely,
a Veteran of a 1000 psychic wars.
I hadn't heard this one.
February 24, 2009 - 09:39 ET by Saint ZeroI hadn't heard about this one yet.
Caveat emptor
February 24, 2009 - 09:48 ET by KC MulvilleAnother warning to be skeptical. The military says that first reports are almost always wrong ... and there's a reason why they say that.
Listening to the media is like listening to your five-year old explain the broken lamp. Some of the actual details may come through, but the explanation always needs some sifting ...
Fortune Cookie says...
February 24, 2009 - 10:23 ET by CapeCodScott"Man Who Looses Mistress' Apartment Key Gets no New Key"
Read it twice with appropriate accent
www.ScottOnCapeCod.com
"Most men lead lives of quiet desperation"... until they get fed-up enough to finally say something about it!
US Press
February 24, 2009 - 10:41 ET by GothampcWhat makes it twice as bad is that the US reported it from the viewpoint of the miserable economy and class warfare.
I wonder if Stephen Glass
February 24, 2009 - 12:04 ET by Carl KolchakI wonder if Stephen Glass is working in China.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fabulist
"Well I got nothing against the press. They wouldn't print it if it wasn't true" 'Sunday Papers'
Sounds like the makings for
February 24, 2009 - 16:19 ET by jdhawkSounds like the makings for another Oprah fronted "best" seller . . .
blonk!
Liberal bias?
February 24, 2009 - 23:14 ET by RagamuffinWhat does this have to do with liberal bias in the media?