Megyn Kelly could find her upcoming interview with conspiracy monger Alex Jones scooped -- by Jones himself.
Amid
a firestorm leading up to Sunday evening’s NBC broadcast of Kelly’s
next major interview for the network, Jones claimed he had secretly made
his own tape of the interview -- as well as talks leading up to it --
and planned to release his version in advance. Jones says his tape will
show the former Fox News personality sandbagged him.
“It’s not
going to be some gotcha hit piece, I promise you that,” Kelly tells
Jones in a recording released on Jones’ website, Infowars.com. “All I
can do is give you my word and tell you if there is one thing about me I
do what I say I’m going to do and I don’t double-cross.”
Kelly
goes on to say in one of the pre-interview recordings that she is a
“combination of Mike Wallace, Oprah Winfrey and Larry the Cable Guy.
“That’s
what you’ll get in the interview – a little bit of all three of those
and hopefully everybody will walk away feeling like they had a good
dinner – nutritious, some red meat with some dessert at the end,” she is
heard saying.
“Of course I’m going to do a fair interview I’m still
me – I’m not going to go out there and be Barbara Walters,” she added.
MEGYN KELLY’S INTERVIEW WITH ALEX JONES GETTING COMPLETE OVERHAUL
However, Jones, in commentary interspersed throughout the recordings, accused Kelly of going back on her word.
“When
she got here with her crew of intelligence operatives she did the
opposite of what she said,” Jones told viewers. “And so I was recording
the whole time, from our pre-interviews, right through the interviews,
we have a record of it so that you can decide for yourself what I really
said and what I stood for.”
“You alone will be the judge,” he adds. “You alone will be the jury of who is fake news.”
Kelly's
follow-up to her debut interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin
was already steeped in controversy. By early this week, the network was
reportedly in crisis meetings over how to respond to enraged parents of
children killed in the horrific Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings.
Their criticism is that NBC’s decision to send its newest star to
interview Jones – infamous for having said in 2014 that “Sandy Hook is
synthetic, completely fake, with actors, in my view, manufactured” --
will only dignify the alt-right celebrity broadcaster.
“I don’t
know what the truth is, all I know is that the official story of Sandy
Hook has more holes in it than Swiss cheese,” Jones later said in a
video he posted online in November 2016.
Lawyers representing the
families of the victims of Sandy Hook say that NBC airing the interview
will only give more credibility to conspiracy theories surrounding the
tragic shooting which left 20 children and six school staffers dead.
"Airing
Ms. Kelly's interview implicitly endorses the notion that Mr. Jones'
lies are actually 'claims' that are worthy of serious debate, and in
doing so it exponentially enhances the suffering and distress of our
clients," lawyers Josh Koskoff and Katie Mesner-Hage wrote in a letter
to NBC, according to The Associated Press.
Then, following the
parental backlash, a major sponsor said it was pulling advertising
dollars. J.P. Morgan Chase announced no more money for NBC until after
the Jones interview aired, or the broadcast is cancelled.
“When
you say parents faked their children’s deaths, people get very angry,”
Kelly said in a teaser of the interview released by NBC.
“I looked at all the angles of Newtown and I made my statements long before the media even picked up on it,” Jones responds.
MEGYN KELLY DEFENDS ALEX JONES INTERVIEW, NBC PRESSURED TO CANCEL IT
An
interview with at least one Sandy Hook parent whose child died in the
shootings will be included in NBC’s report Sunday, a person familiar
with the show told The Associated Press.
In other parts of the
pre-interview recordings released by Jones, Kelly appears to butter up
the InfoWars host after the NBC interview is agreed upon.
“I’m not
looking to portray you as some boogie man or do any sort of a gotcha
moment...the craziest thing of all would be if some of the people who
have some insane version of you in their heads walk away saying ‘You
know what I see the dad in him, I see the guy who loves those kids and
who is more complex than I’ve been led to believe’,” Kelly says,
referencing Jones’ child custody trial.
In Texas, Jones’
recordings are protected from any potential legal action Kelly and NBC
could pursue, as the state has a “one-party consent” law where only one
person needs to agree to having recorded communications.