David Letterman Got it Right, and Unbelievably Wrong

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Last week, faced with an extortion attempt by someone who threatened to expose one or more affairs in which David Letterman had allegedly had with women employed by his production company and supervised by him, took the correct action. He disclosed the facts to his audience and, as the saying goes, stayed ahead of the curve. During the past years, we have witnessed numerous public figures who had engaged in immoral, or at least unworthy, behavior and decided to engage in a cover up of the incidents. From Richard Nixon and Watergate to Bill Clinton and his hanky-panky and the many evangelical preachers and politicians who have acted in a shameful manner, it has been shown time and time again that the "cover up" is far worse than the event sought to be hidden from view. It is far better for the accused to "fess up", take the public heat, plead for forgiveness and at least appear contrite! Most people, with some exceptions, will, eventually, forget if not actually forgive.

So Mr. Letterman was smart and did the right thing.

He was also unbelievably and incredibly stupid for having an intimate, or even a close social relationship with a woman under his supervision and authority. That is the sure and certain route to a sexual harassment accusation and, however enticing the lady is, 'taint worth it.

I will assume that the relationship was between two consenting unmarried adults and that no one was under any actual or implied duress; for the purposes of this discussion, moreover, I will assume that Mr. Letterman did not reward the lady or ladies, by money, promotion, favoritism or otherwise. It was still stupid because, by having an affair with a subordinate, he was placing himself, his production company, the CBS network and possibly others in financial jeopardy.

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