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Round Two: ABC News 2, Metabolife 0
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Chatterbox completely forgot
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to watch 20/20 Friday night! He'd been meaning to
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watch it, or to tape it, so he could compare Arnold Diaz's report on the herbal
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diet supplement Metabolife to the full transcript of Diaz's interview with
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Metabolife chief Mike Ellis--which Metabolife had mischievously posted (along
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with a streaming video of the interview) on a special "kiss my butt, ABC News"
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Web
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site. (See "Metabolife: Read This! No, Wait, Don't Read This!,"
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"Metabolife's Lawyer Assures C'box He Won't Sue," and
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"Round One: ABC News 1, Metabolife 0.") But when the
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hour arrived, Chatterbox, having spent a pleasant evening 'round the hearth
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with Pappy and Mammy Chatterbox--who were
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visiting from California--was preoccupied, along with Mrs. Chatterbox, by the
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somewhat arduous task of tucking the Chatterkinder snugly into their beds. The
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potential dangers of diet pills, and the potential irresponsibility of any TV
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news coverage of same, slipped entirely from Chatterbox's mind.
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Fortunately, in this age of cyberjournalism, everything
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is retrievable. ABC News was kind enough not only to e-mail Chatterbox a
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transcript of the broadcast but also to post the transcript, along with a streaming video of the segment, on the
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20/20 Web site, so that people who don't work for
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the press can retrieve it, too.
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Having now both watched and
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read Diaz's report, Chatterbox pronounces it ...
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quite fair. It begins with a favorable testimonial
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from one Monica Skeens, who says she lost 10 pounds by taking Metabolife.
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(Admittedly, the testimonial's credibility is undermined somewhat by Skeens'
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princessy claim that she isn't willing to exercise and is "physically incapable
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of dieting." On the other hand, Skeens is precisely the sort of person
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Metabolife markets its product to.) This is followed by an unfavorable review from Julie Cunningham-Potier, who claims that
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Metabolife caused her to suffer two seizures and slip into a coma (she is now
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suing the company). Cunningham-Potier's claim is followed by Metabolife's Ellis
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saying, on camera: "There's nothing in the medical records that indicate that
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her condition was caused by Metabolife."
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Diaz then says that 20/20
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conducted a "four-month" investigation (TV reporters like to brag about how
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long they spend on a story, a statistic that by itself means nothing) and was
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"surprised at what we found" ("surprised" is a TV-news euphemism for
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"appalled"). Diaz hits Metabolife for saying that its product was determined by
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two universities "to be safe." Not true, says Dr. Harry Gwirtsman of Vanderbilt
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and Dr. Steven Heymsfield of St. Luke's Roosevelt hospital, who helped conduct
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the tests. Gwirtsman says the study he worked on involved patients who took
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Metabolife for one day . Heymsfield says, "These
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products may be safe in some people, but not all people," and that side effects
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such as heart palpitations and sleeplessness may be harbingers of "potentially
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more dangerous side effects, such as increases in blood pressure and pulse,
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that in turn may led to problems like heart attack and stroke."
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At this point, Diaz says Metabolife claims Gwirtsman and
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Heymsfield weren't principal researchers in the
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studies, but Diaz goes on to say that their participation was confirmed by
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Vanderbilt and St. Luke's (Chatterbox never really thought they were making it
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up) and that both institutions "requested that Metabolife stop using their
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studies to claim the product is safe." Diaz saves for later in the segment
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Metabolife's other significant counterattack, that Heymsfield is "a trustee of
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the Slim-Fast Nutrition Institute," and that Slim-Fast is a Metabolife
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competitor. Diaz counters that with a quotation from
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a letter Heymsfield wrote to St. Luke's general counsel that denies any bias
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(not that anyone would expect him to admit any) and asserts that Metabolife is
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"trying to suppress information regarding a potentially unsafe product."
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(Incidentally, Chatterbox should confess here that in an earlier item, he said Ellis told Diaz that "some of the
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scientists" Diaz cited had economic ties to Metabolife competitors; on closer
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inspection of the raw transcript, Chatterbox now realizes that Ellis made that
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accusation only about Heymsfield . Metabolife's
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repetition of the reference to Heymsfield's Slim-Fast link, in notes
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interspersed throughout the manuscript, tricked Chatterbox into thinking,
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mistakenly, that there was more than one Metabolife critic who was receiving
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payment from a Metabolife rival.)
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Diaz then juxtaposes Ellis' assertion that a certain
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health claim for Metabolife is "not on the Metabolife Web--Web page," with
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Ellis' subsequent embarrassed admission, when presented with contrary evidence,
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that "I don't know my company Web site. ... I haven't even looked at it."
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(Chatterbox would have preferred Diaz to use this marginally more embarrassing
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Ellis quote, spotted in the unedited interview transcript: "You know, to be
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honestly fair with you, I do not know what our Web site looks like.")
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Diaz then trots off to interview Yale's Dr. Robert
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Stark, whom Metabolife "insisted we interview." Stark says that Metabolife is
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"safe as--as any other herb--or dietary product," but that larger studies are
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needed to prove its safety. Diaz also gets Stark to say that Metabolife's
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labeling "could be misleading" because it downplays the fact that it's been
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tested on lab animals, not humans. "Remember," Diaz gloats (who can blame
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him?), "he's the doctor Metabolife referred us to."
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Diaz then says that the Food and Drug Administration
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wants to impose "strict limits on the daily dosage" of ephedrine, the key
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ingredient in Metabolife, though he concedes (as Ellis prodded him to do in the
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unedited interview transcript) that "another government agency" (he means the
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Government Accounting Office) has criticized the FDA's scientific findings.
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Diaz saves the nastiest part for next-to-last. "[W]hat
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do we know about the man behind Metabolife? Ellis is a former police officer
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and real estate agent [this last strikes Chatterbox as a cheap shot] who, it
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turns out, is also a convicted felon." Diaz says that Ellis was arrested in
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1988 in what the Drug Enforcement Administration called "the largest
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methamphetamine bust in history" (an interesting statistic that Diaz failed to
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drop in his interview with Ellis), and that Ellis "pleaded guilty to a reduced
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charge, using a telephone 'to facilitate a drug trafficking offense.' And got
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five years' probation."
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Oddly, this part of the 20/20
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segment isn't quite as damaging to Ellis as the raw interview transcript was.
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Diaz points out that ephedrine is "also a main ingredient in Metabolife,"
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though he duly notes Ellis' claim that this is mere coincidence (he fails,
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however, to repeat Ellis' assertion, apparently backed up by DEA- and
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FDA-certified labs, that you can't actually make
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methamphetamine out of Metabolife). Diaz does not
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quote, at full embarrassing length, Ellis' explanation that he got mixed up
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with the wrong folk because one of them was "like a brother to me." Diaz also
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doesn't say, as he said in the raw interview transcript, that the lesser
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offense Ellis pleaded guilty to was a felony. And--this is Ellis' biggest break
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in the 20/20 segment--Diaz doesn't quote Ellis'
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astonishing admission that until about a year ago the fellow who was "like a
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brother to me," convicted with Ellis in his methamphetamine bust, was a partner
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in Metabolife. Chatterbox had felt certain this damning fact would make the
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cut, but it didn't.
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The segment wraps up with a review of Metabolife's Web
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campaign against ABC News and gives the final word to the formerly comatose
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Cunningham-Potier: "I wouldn't have taken it if I'd known the side effects,
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because I almost didn't make it. I almost died."
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So who wins Round Two? It depends on how you score it.
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If the question is whether ABC News ran a fair-minded expose, then ABC News
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wins. If the question is whether Metabolife's online intimidation campaign got
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ABC to pull a punch or two ... well, you could argue that Metabolife wins. If
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the question is whether people who read Metabolife's raw transcript will come
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away with a more favorable view of the company than if they just watch
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20/20 , Metabolife clearly loses. And if the question
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is whether Chatterbox (who could stand to lose a few pounds) will now ever be
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tempted to try Metabolife as a product, ABC News wins big.
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