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Deeper reality
Associated Press/The Spokesman-Review | 6-11-2003 | David Bauder

Posted on 06/11/2003 12:26:44 PM PDT by lilylangtree

Finding embarrassing secrets in the past of reality television stars is about as tough as finding botox in Hollywood. That doesn't stop The Smoking Gun from looking, or Web surfers from lapping it up. The Web site (www.thesmokinggun.com) has made a specialty of finding the drunken driving arrests, porn acting jobs or other not-so-shining moments behind the smiles of TV's newest stars.

"I don't know how many people in the country get arrested for driving under the influence," said William Bastone, the site's editor, "But it seems like a very high percentage of reality TV participants do."

Many of the findings offer a harmless diversion, but The Smoking Gun has altered games like "American Idol" and embarrassed television networks.

The site found plenty of dirt on stars of CBS' "Survivor": business bankruptcies, check bouncing, public drunkenness, a soft-core porn past. It found a "Big Brother" contestant that had a court appearance for drunken driving scheduled for when she was supposed to be sequestered for the show.

It revealed "Joe Millionaire" Evan Marriott's past as an underwear model and contestant Sarah Kozer's roles in bondage and fetish films--illustrated with plenty of colorful pictures.

This summer, The Smoking Gun tries its own hand at television. Court TV, which owns the site, is developing two specials based on it.

Bastone, a former Village Voice writer who covered organized crime, started The Smoking Gun largely as a way to reveal interesting court documents that didn't find their way into stories.

Two entertaining features of the site collect mug shots of famous people who ran afoul of the law--even a young Bill Gates--and contract riders of entertainers who expect well-stocked dressing rooms.

Bastone and colleagues Danny Green, Andrew Goldberg and Joseph Jesselli aren't reality TV fans. But when Fox's "Who Wants to Marry a Multimillionaire" caused a sensation in February 2000, they decided to poke around.

They quickly found, and posted, court documents revealing that the multimillionaire, Rick Rockwell, had once been under a restraining order sought by a former fiancee who said he had hit her and threated to kill her.

Everything unraveled for Fox. It canceled plans to rerun the show and briefly, promised more care and restraint in reality offerings.

The Smoking Gun had struck a nerve. Visitors and tipsters flocked to the site.

Bastone believes there's a fascination about these peccadilloes because reality TV created stars who were a mystery to the public, unlike comedies and dramas that have actors fans are often familiar with.

"You watch these shows and you're given a very sanitized version of who these people are," he said. "Half of the time they don't even give you their last names."

The reports at The Smoking Gun say the information is often ridiculously easy to find.

Bastone was surfing the Web one night when he saw Fox had tossed "American Idol" contestant Frenchie Davis off the show with no explanation. It took him less than an hour to find a friend who spilled the beans: Davis had once posed for an adult-oriented Web site, but the friend argued, "it wasn't a lot of nudity."

Informants help, too. The Smoking Gun knew that the actor in the Dell Computer commercials had been arrested for marijuana possession even before he'd been booked, Bastone said.

Sometimes the site uncovers damaging information that exposes flaws in network background checks. Another "American Idol" contestant, Corey Clark, was booted from the show this spring because he had charges pending for assault and resisting arrest.

Fox wasn't aware; The Smoking Gun found the case by checking court records under different spellings of his name.

Fox wasn't talking publicly, but Chris Ender, publicity chief for CBS entertainment, admits to cringing when The Smoking Gun calls.

"It is not the sort of publicity you want or seek," he said, although it does get people talking about the shows. "I think these are reality shows and in reality, people aren't perfect."

Bastone scoffs at the notion that a potential reality show participant might back away for fear that The Smoking gun will uncover skeletons from their past.

"I think there's a thirst and a lust for the spotlight and celebrity," he said.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
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The J. Edgar Hoover of reality television: William Bastone. Too bad he can't uncover the truth to the statement that Bill Clinton is sterile and therefore not the biological sire of Chelsea Clinton.
1 posted on 06/11/2003 12:26:44 PM PDT by lilylangtree
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To: lilylangtree
Ha ha
Let's leave Webster Hubbell out of this. :o)

They had a nice catch with revealing the bachelor on "For Love Or Money" had been kicked out of the Marine JAG Corps for sexual assaulting another officer (he groped a female Navy officer in her barracks but she kicked him the balls before he got any farther).

My sister told me about. She thought he was an actor-- no real man could be that big a pig on national TV -- until she read about his past.

2 posted on 06/11/2003 1:32:35 PM PDT by Maximum Leader (run from a knife, close on a gun)
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