Here is a link to the Bob Costas interview. 54 minutes long.
John and Liz talk with legendary sports broadcaster Bob Costas
John and Liz talk with legendary sports broadcaster Bob Costas
The addition of Liz to the mix to moderate Ziegler is a big improvement. Ziegler still asked a bunch of leading questions that Costas deftly dealt with, and Liz kept the interview generally on track. Although there wasn't much of interest, I was at least able to get through the entire podcast.Here is a link to the Bob Costas interview. 54 minutes long.
John and Liz talk with legendary sports broadcaster Bob Costas
Having Liz as a co-host is also interesting because she was very strongly in the "Jerry is guilty/Joe Knew" camp and as she learns more and more about the case, she is coming around. She seems genuinely outraged at some of the facts as they come out.The addition of Liz to the mix to moderate Ziegler is a big improvement. Ziegler still asked a bunch of leading questions that Costas deftly dealt with, and Liz kept the interview generally on track. Although there wasn't much of interest, I was at least able to get through the entire podcast.
Ziegler has some sort of mental disorder that I have seen in other people before. He starts out calmly, but once he gets wound up, he becomes wild and incoherent in his speech patterns. Liz is doing a good job at keeping that issue mostly under control.
And his voice gets more shrill. It's annoying, and maybe I'm just used to it, but I cut him slack because this whole case is so obviously effed up, I think JZ's perpetual case of exasperation is understandable.The addition of Liz to the mix to moderate Ziegler is a big improvement. Ziegler still asked a bunch of leading questions that Costas deftly dealt with, and Liz kept the interview generally on track. Although there wasn't much of interest, I was at least able to get through the entire podcast.
Ziegler has some sort of mental disorder that I have seen in other people before. He starts out calmly, but once he gets wound up, he becomes wild and incoherent in his speech patterns. Liz is doing a good job at keeping that issue mostly under control.
I would imagine that also happens at his kitchen table. “I mean, could somebody pass me the corn?!?! It doesn’t make any sense that I’ve asked for the corn, you see the corn, but I don’t have any corn on my plate! All I want is some corn!!!”And his voice gets more shrill. It's annoying, and maybe I'm just used to it, but I cut him slack because this whole case is so obviously effed up, I think JZ's perpetual case of exasperation is understandable.
I am saying is that if the incident did not occur in February (which is seems like is the case) then either:
Mike did call his father immediately after the incident (in December) and his father (and Dranov) lied (or misremembered) the timing of this call/conversation.
OR
Mike saw whatever he saw in December, didn't do anything, then months later attempted to parlay this into a full time job timed around Kenny Jackson's departure, he then called his father to say "I just saw this" even though he saw it months before.
Here is a link to the Bob Costas interview. 54 minutes long.
John and Liz talk with legendary sports broadcaster Bob Costas
The biggest thing that Costas says is that Joe was treated unfairly and his legacy should not be tarnished by this saga. He says he is open to the idea that Jerry isn't guilty but is not familiar enough with all of John's work to come to that conclusion.I didn't listen to the Costas interview (yet).
For those who have, will this interview make any real difference? Zig forecasts everything as bombshell. Will it be published by anyone significant in the media in order to really make a splash?
I will listen, and maybe that will help answer my first question.
I just really think most of the people listening to this podcast series are just Penn Staters. I just don't see how this amounts to anything without a broader audience or a better person to carry the torch other than Ziegler.
I didn't listen to the Costas interview (yet).
For those who have, will this interview make any real difference? Zig forecasts everything as bombshell. Will it be published by anyone significant in the media in order to really make a splash?
I will listen, and maybe that will help answer my first question.
I just really think most of the people listening to this podcast series are just Penn Staters. I just don't see how this amounts to anything without a broader audience or a better person to carry the torch other than Ziegler.
This is not what Costas says at all. Please listen to it again.Zig starts out by re-playing his initial claims that Costas believes Jerry is innocent.
Costas essentially wanted to go on record saying that Jerry is likely guilty of the majority of the charges against him.
He goes well beyond that and says that Joe Paterno bears blame for the scandal but that Paterno's legacy should not be defined by it.
John then spends another 20 minutes rehashing and reframing what Costas clearly said, and essentially argues that Bob thinks Zig's theories are plausible. Again, Costas went out of his way to deny that.
Zig completely gaslighted Costas and surrounded the new interview with his own blither blather "view" of Costas's view, instead of letting Bob just say it form himself.
Boils down to junk factors -Why has JZ chosen this, of all things, as his hill to die on?
Costas defended Paterno. Costas said he doesn’t know the facts therefore he won’t give an opinion one way or another. I am sure he thinks Jerry is likely guilty because he doesn’t know the details which point to Jerry being a stupid naive guy who had boundary issues. Costas admitted to thinking that Amendola was incompetent. Costas also said some of Zig’s theories were plausible.Zig starts out by re-playing his initial claims that Costas believes Jerry is innocent.
Costas essentially wanted to go on record saying that Jerry is likely guilty of the majority of the charges against him.
He goes well beyond that and says that Joe Paterno bears blame for the scandal but that Paterno's legacy should not be defined by it.
John then spends another 20 minutes rehashing and reframing what Costas clearly said, and essentially argues that Bob thinks Zig's theories are plausible. Again, Costas went out of his way to deny that.
Zig completely gaslighted Costas and surrounded the new interview with his own blither blather "view" of Costas's view, instead of letting Bob just say it form himself.
Zig starts out by re-playing his initial claims that Costas believes Jerry is innocent.
Costas essentially wanted to go on record saying that Jerry is likely guilty of the majority of the charges against him.
He goes well beyond that and says that Joe Paterno bears blame for the scandal but that Paterno's legacy should not be defined by it.
John then spends another 20 minutes rehashing and reframing what Costas clearly said, and essentially argues that Bob thinks Zig's theories are plausible. Again, Costas went out of his way to deny that.
Zig completely gaslighted Costas and surrounded the new interview with his own blither blather "view" of Costas's view, instead of letting Bob just say it form himself.
JMO but I would take everything that poster says with a huge grain of salt.That's some pretty weak sauce then. Maybe I won't listen to it now.
This is a good synopsis. I would add that Ziegler then attempts to re-characterize Costas' interview into something consequential, after the Costas interview is over and JZ is recapping with Liz.I listened. Not only is Bob having audio issues he says nothing that would move any needles. Not only that, he pretty much says without saying he doesn't have all that much interest into looking into the story any further.
I haven't listened. I may not listen because I personally find Ziegler's communication approach insufferable as I've said several times. That said, I don't expect this interview to move the needle at all, regardless of content. The public and mass media no longer care about this story. That, and any sort of mass market statement that Jerry may be innocent (in a hypothetical media sense, this is not my personal opinion) would be completely toxic publicly. Unless there's some sort of smoking gun, which there isn't or it would have come out by now and a smoking gun to prove a negative is essentially impossible, the narrative is never going to change. Ziegler will continue to tease "bombshells" because that's one way he generates clicks but his bombshells are always duds.I didn't listen to the Costas interview (yet).
For those who have, will this interview make any real difference? Zig forecasts everything as bombshell. Will it be published by anyone significant in the media in order to really make a splash?
I will listen, and maybe that will help answer my first question.
I just really think most of the people listening to this podcast series are just Penn Staters. I just don't see how this amounts to anything without a broader audience or a better person to carry the torch other than Ziegler.
JMO but I would take everything that poster says with a huge grain of salt.
I haven't listened to all of it yet but from what I've heard so far I have to agree.Yeah I'm listening now. Basically Costas just says John's theories are plausible but he doesn't have the depth of knowledge to say he personally believes them. Costas gives himself an out on just about everything he says. It's very obvious he doesn't want to go on the record on anything that would be controversial. He plays it very very safe and expresses his reasons for that at the end. From that standpoint, "Nothing to see here".
Bombshell!Yeah I'm listening now. Basically Costas just says John's theories are plausible but he doesn't have the depth of knowledge to say he personally believes them. Costas gives himself an out on just about everything he says. It's very obvious he doesn't want to go on the record on anything that would be controversial. He plays it very very safe and expresses his reasons for that at the end. From that standpoint, "Nothing to see here".
You have been an integral part of every Sandusky related thread since forever. Why are you asking questions like this?Well, that is avoiding the question though. And I agree with your point. Likewise, if McQueary had just seen Jerry and a boy showering at separate shower heads he probably doesn’t do anything at all. Seeing a grown man alone, having physical contact in a shower with a child doesn’t have to be sexual assault for it to be alarming and concerning. That’s what I’m asking because I don’t remember. Did he actually call his dad and did his dad call Dranov over that night?
Because I don’t remember. There were things that were known and then people claim they were not true. Just checking to see what the belief is about this part of the story. I follow the story but don’t have an encyclopedic memory of it by any means.You have been an integral part of every Sandusky related thread since forever. Why are you asking questions like this?
Needs clarity, like Beaver av.You have been an integral part of every Sandusky related thread since forever. Why are you asking questions like this?
I think Jerot has a new screen name.Boils down to junk factors -
"In March 2011 [Gov.] Corbett proposed a 52 percent cut in PSU funding," Snedden wrote. "Spanier fought back," publicly declaring the governor's proposed cutback "the largest ever proposed and that it would be devastating" to Penn State.
At his trial last week, Graham Spanier didn't take the witness stand. But under oath while talking to Snedden back in 2012, Spanier had plenty to say.
"[Spanier] feels that his departure from the position as PSU president was retribution by Gov. Corbett against [Spanier] for having spoken out about the proposed PSU budget cuts," Snedden wrote.
"[Spanier] believes that the governor pressured the PSU BOT [Board of Trustees] to have [Spanier] leave. And the governor's motivation was the governor's displeasure that [Spanier] and [former Penn State football coach Joe] Paterno were more popular with the people of Pennylvania than was the governor."
As far as Snedden was concerned, a political battle between Spanier and Gov. Corbett, and unfounded accusations of a coverup, did not warrant revoking Spanier's high-level security clearance. The special agent concluded his six-month investigation of the PSU scandal by renewing the clearance and giving Spanier a ringing endorsement.
"The circumstances surrounding subject's departure from his position as PSU president do not cast doubt on subject's current reliability, trustworthiness or good judgment and do not cast doubt on his ability to properly safeguard national security information," Snedden wrote about Spanier.
At the time Snedden interviewed the key people at Penn State, former athletic director Tim Curley and former PSU VP Gary Schultz were already under indictment.
Spanier was next in the sights of prosecutors from the attorney general's office. And former FBI Director Louie Freeh was about to release his report that said there was a coverup at Penn State masterminded by Spanier, Curley and Schultz, with an assist from Joe Paterno.
Snedden, however, wasn't buying into Freeh's conspiracy theory that reigns today in the mainstream media, the court of public opinion, and in the minds of jurors in the Spanier case.
"I did not find any indication of any coverup," Snedden told Ziegler on the podcast. He added that he did not find "any indication of any conspiracy, or anything to cover up."
Snedden also said that Cynthia Baldwin, Penn State's former general counsel, "provided information to me inconsistent to what she provided to the state." Baldwin told Snedden that "Gov. Corbett was very unhappy" with Spanier because he "took the lead in fighting the governor's proposed budget cuts to PSU."
That, of course, was before the prosecutors turned Baldwin into a cooperating witness. The attorney-client privilege went out the window. And Baldwin began testifying against Spanier, Curley and Schultz.
But as far as Snedden was concerned, "Dr. Spanier was very forthcoming, he wanted to get everything out," Snedden said.
"Isn't possible that he just duped you," Ziegler asked.
"No," Snedden deadpanned. "I can pretty well determine which way we're going on an interview." Even though he was a Penn State alumni, Snedden said, his mission was to find the truth.
"I am a Navy veteran," Snedden said. "You're talking about a potential risk to national security" if Spanier was deemed untrustworthy. Instead, "He was very forthcoming," Snedden said of Spanier. "He answered every question."
On the podcast, Ziegler asked Snedden if he turned up any evidence during his investigation that Jerry Sandusky was a pedophile.
"It was not sexual," Snedden said about what Mike McQueary allegedly heard and saw in the Penn State showers, before the prosecutors got through hyping the story, with the full cooperation of the media. "It was not sexual," Snedden insisted. "Nothing at all relative to a sexual circumstance. Nothing."
About PSU's top administrators, Snedden said, "They had no information that would make a person believe" that Sandusky was a pedophile.
"Gary Schultz was pretty clear as to what he was told and what he wasn't told," Snedden said. "What he was told was nothing was of a sexual nature."
As for Joe Paterno, Snedden said, "His involvement was very minimal in passing it [McQueary's account of the shower incident] to the people he reported to," meaning Schultz and Curley.
Spanier, 68, who was born in Cape Town, South Africa, became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1955. When Snedden interviewed Spanier, he couldn't recall the exact date that he was approached by Curley and Schultz with the news about the shower incident supposedly witnessed by McQueary.
It was "approximately in the early 2000 decade," Snedden wrote, when Spanier recalled being approached by Schultz and Curley in between university meetings. The two PSU administrators told Spanier they wanted to give him a "head's up" about a report they had received from Joe Paterno.
"A staff member," Snedden wrote, "had seen Jerry Sandusky in the locker room after a work out showering with one of his Second Mile kids. [Spanier] knew at the time that Jerry Sandusky was very involved with the Second Mile charity," Snedden wrote. "And, at that time, [Spanier] believed that it only involved high school kids. [Spanier] has since learned that the charity involves younger disadvantaged children."
Because it was Spanier's "understanding at that time that the charity only involved high school kids it did not send off any alarms," Snedden wrote. Then the prosecutors and their friends in the media went to work.
"Curley and Schultz said that the person who had given the report was not sure what he had seen but that they were concerned about the situation with the kid in the shower," Snedden wrote.
Curley and Schultz told Spanier that the person who had given the report "was not sure what he saw because it was around the corner and that what he has reported was described as "horse play" or "horsing around." In his report, Snedden said that Spanier "assumed the terminology of horse play or horsing around came from Joe Paterno."
"They all agreed that Curley would talk to Jerry Sandusky, tell him not to bring kids into the locker room facilities," Snedden wrote. "And Curley was to tell the Second Mile management that it was not good for any of the Second Mile kids to come to the athletic locker room facilities, and that they should suspend that practice."
Spanier, Snedden wrote, never was told "who the person was who made the report. But "nothing was described as a sexual or criminal in any way," Snedden wrote.
The initial conversation between Spanier, Curley and Schultz about the Sandusky shower incident lasted 10 minutes, Snedden wrote. A few days later, Curley told Spanier "in person that the discussion had taken place and that everything went well."
"The issue never came up again with Curley, Schultz, Paterno, Sandusky, or anyone," Snedden wrote. "It did not appear very significant to anyone at the time."
Gary Schultz corroborated Spanier's account. Schultz told Snedden that back in February 2001, Tim Curley told him "something to the effect that Jerry Sandusky had been in the shower with a kid horsing around and wrestling. And Mike McQueary or a graduate assistant walked in and observed it. And McQueary or the graduate assistant was concerned."
Schultz believed the source of Curley's information was Joe Paterno, and that the conduct involved was horseplay.
"McQueary did not say anything of a sexual nature took place," Snedden wrote after interviewing Schultz. "McQueary did not say anything indicative of an incident of a serious sexual nature."
While Snedden was investigating Spanier, Louie Freeh was writing his overpriced $8.3 million report where he came to the opposite conclusion that Snedden did, that there was a coverup at Penn State. Only Louie Freeh didn't talk to Curley, Schultz, Paterno, McQueary or Sandusky. Freeh only talked to Spanier relatively briefly, at the end of his investigation, when he had presumably already come to his conclusions.
Ironically, one of the things Spanier told Freeh was that Snedden was also investigating what happened at Penn State. But that didn't seem to effect the conclusions of the Louie Freeh report, Snedden said. He wondered why.
He also wondered why his report had no effect on the attorney general's office, which had already indicted Curley and Schultz, and was planning to indict Spanier.
"I certainly think that if the powers that be . . . knew what was in his report, Snedden said, "They would certainly have to take a hard look at what they were doing."
Freeh and the AG, Snedden said, should have wanted to know "who was interviewed [by Sneddedn] and what did they say. I mean this is kind of pertinent to what we're doing," Snedden said of the investigations conducted by Freeh and the AG.
"If your goal in any investigation is to determine the facts of the case period, the circumstance should have been hey, we'll be happy to obtain any and all facts," Snedden said.
Snedden said he understood, however, why Freeh was uninterested in his report.
"It doesn't fit the narrative that he's [Louie Freeh] going for," Snedden said.
Freeh was on a tight deadline, Ziegler reminded Snedden. Freeh had to get his report out at a highly-anticipated press conference. And the Freeh report had to come out before the start of the football season. So the NCAA could drop the hammer on Penn State.
"He [Freeh] doesn't have time to read a hundred page report," Snedden said. He agreed with Ziegler that the whole disclosure of the Freeh report was "orchestrated" to come out right before the football season started.
It may have been good timing for the news media and the NCAA, Snedden said about the release of the Louie Freeh report. But it didn't make much sense from an investigator's point of view.
"I just don't understand why," Snedden told Ziegler, "why would you ignore more evidence. Either side that it lands on, why would you ignore it?"
I believe what I've believed the last several years but have become MUCH more convinced and am open to the possibility Jerry is 100 percent innocent, although I am not there yet.Have listened to most of these ... sooo.. what does everyone think / believe ?
I don't really have an opinion regarding Sandusky's guilt. I suspect he was merely a weird, dopey guy who had significant boundary issues, but I don't know that for sure.Have listened to most of these ... sooo.. what does everyone think / believe ?
Have listened to most of these ... sooo.. what does everyone think / believe ?
I'm not sure the BOT was driven by some pure evil motivations (and I'm saying this as someone who hates the 2011 BOT).I don't really have an opinion regarding Sandusky's guilt. I suspect he was merely a weird, dopey guy who had significant boundary issues, but I don't know that for sure.
The far more consequential matter to me is what crimes were committed by key members of the Penn State BOT. Some folks believe that members of the BOT were motivated by a hatred of Joe. These BOT members used the Sandusky matter to get rid of Joe, and things just got out of hand.
But in my view, the far more likely case is that we can't even imagine the level of depravity of some of the 2011-12 BOT members. They needed to throw Joe and the football program under the bus in order to distract from their crimes. Those crimes were being conducted via the Second Mile and other ventures.
I tend to agree here. They were convinced of everyone's guilt by Corbett and became so invested in the "move on" strategy that once they fired Joe and Spanier, there was just no turning back.I'm not sure the BOT was driven by some pure evil motivations (and I'm saying this as someone who hates the 2011 BOT).
I think Surma (and some others) wanted to get rid of Paterno. I think others (political appointees) were beholden to Corbett who had a beef with Spanier (and PSU in general). And the rest were too cowardly to stand up for what was right (although it is possible that, the way the BOT is structured, that minority couldn't have fought it anyway).
Once Paterno and Spanier were fired, the BOT put on their corporate hats to enter post-crisis management mode. They managed the crisis as if the were managing the BP oil spill, i.e. the stockholders don't really care about the public perception of BP (to an extent); they really just want the news cycle to move to something else and the lawsuits to go away. So PSU did what BP did; they blindly threw money at the problem, hoping that it would go away.
Beyond the philosophical problems I have with this approach, the reason that it is inappropriate for a University is that alumni (analogous to stockholders) care A LOT about the public perception. PSU saying "mea culpa" when the facts clearly suggest it was NOT PSU's fault enraged a lot of people.
The BOT won't admit that they botched this, partially because it would expose the amount of money wasted (Freeh Report, poorly vetted settlements, etc).
Surma and Corbett knew precisely what they were doing. I get that some members of the BOT were busy at the onion dip and schrimp....Surma, Suhey, Tsar Ira the Terrible and Judas knew exactly what the plan was. Kenny had career and corporate brownie points to muster.I'm not sure the BOT was driven by some pure evil motivations (and I'm saying this as someone who hates the 2011 BOT).
I think Surma (and some others) wanted to get rid of Paterno. I think others (political appointees) were beholden to Corbett who had a beef with Spanier (and PSU in general). And the rest were too cowardly to stand up for what was right (although it is possible that, the way the BOT is structured, that minority couldn't have fought it anyway).
Once Paterno and Spanier were fired, the BOT put on their corporate hats to enter post-crisis management mode. They managed the crisis as if the were managing the BP oil spill, i.e. the stockholders don't really care about the public perception of BP (to an extent); they really just want the news cycle to move to something else and the lawsuits to go away. So PSU did what BP did; they blindly threw money at the problem, hoping that it would go away.
Beyond the philosophical problems I have with this approach, the reason that it is inappropriate for a University is that alumni (analogous to stockholders) care A LOT about the public perception. PSU saying "mea culpa" when the facts clearly suggest it was NOT PSU's fault enraged a lot of people.
The BOT won't admit that they botched this, partially because it would expose the amount of money wasted (Freeh Report, poorly vetted settlements, etc).
I think there's still a Pulitzer in this for the right investigative reporter.
Freeh promised to make every effort to deliver the desired result.I will tell you, and I've said this to many people many times, if you don't believe the railroading of Joe, Spanier and Schultz was bought and paid for you aren't paying attention.
I want you to think of it this way to keep it simple. Go back and watch the Freeh press conference back in 2012.
The PSU BOT paid for the Freeh investigation, this is not debatable. This is also not the first or last time in situations like this a school or sports organization has hired a firm to investigate one of these scandals. You know what was a first? The investigation team holding a national press conference that was breaking news on every major news network in the country, and allow the investigator to completely eviscerate his own client, with inciteful language and pure opinion in said national television press conference.
Add this to the fact, this press conference happened before anyone had a chance to read the actual report so they could ask proper questions about it, was an incredibly calculated move.
Nobody, and I mean NOBODY, is doing that to a multi million dollar client unless they have permission, and more likely INSTRUCTIONS to do so. Those types of internal investigations are done as part of PR pieces and then used internally to help understand their failings. There would have been clear cut terms in those contracts that Freeh in no way is allowed to speak on this ever. Any organization on planet earth, would be smart enough to make him sign an NDA. If PSU didn't pay Freeh to do what he did, they could have and would have sued the holy hell out of him and won.
You nailed it with that summery. This does NOT happen without BOT approval.I will tell you, and I've said this to many people many times, if you don't believe the railroading of Joe, Spanier and Schultz was bought and paid for you aren't paying attention.
I want you to think of it this way to keep it simple. Go back and watch the Freeh press conference back in 2012.
The PSU BOT paid for the Freeh investigation, this is not debatable. This is also not the first or last time in situations like this a school or sports organization has hired a firm to investigate one of these scandals. You know what was a first? The investigation team holding a national press conference that was breaking news on every major news network in the country, and allow the investigator to completely eviscerate his own client, with inciteful language and pure opinion in said national television press conference.
Add this to the fact, this press conference happened before anyone had a chance to read the actual report so they could ask proper questions about it, was an incredibly calculated move.
Nobody, and I mean NOBODY, is doing that to a multi million dollar client unless they have permission, and more likely INSTRUCTIONS to do so. Those types of internal investigations are done as part of PR pieces and then used internally to help understand their failings. There would have been clear cut terms in those contracts that Freeh in no way is allowed to speak on this ever. Any organization on planet earth, would be smart enough to make him sign an NDA. If PSU didn't pay Freeh to do what he did, they could have and would have sued the holy hell out of him and won.
I think the possibility that Sandusky is completely innocent is far more likely than the idea that he’s a pedophile that didn’t act upon his desires.I believe what I've believed the last several years but have become MUCH more convinced and am open to the possibility Jerry is 100 percent innocent, although I am not there yet.
I like most believed initially Jerry was guilty as hell. For the last few years I thought Jerry was a pedophile that likely never truly acted on those urges in the form of any real assaults. I still think that, but Ziegler is painting a picture that makes me believe it's very highly possible he was a complete and total weirdo, but not guilty of anymore than that.
I think what most everyone who has followed this case can agree on is that JS did not get a fair trial. I'd be very interested to see another trial and let the truth prevail.I think the possibility that Sandusky is completely innocent is far more likely than the idea that he’s a pedophile that didn’t act upon his desires.
Freeh never got paid.I tend to agree here. They were convinced of everyone's guilt by Corbett and became so invested in the "move on" strategy that once they fired Joe and Spanier, there was just no turning back.
I want to know what role Lanny Davis played in all this!
The real crime is what Freeh was hired to do. By then, Joe was dead, yet they felt it necessary to destroy his legacy to show the public how PSU had purged itself of the "evil" within its ranks. Part of this included getting the NCAA to sanction the program.
The Freeh report, the NCAA sanctions and removing the statue was the BOT's/Corbett's version of
"shock and awe".
I think there's still a Pulitzer in this for the right investigative reporter.