NEW YORK (AP) — Catch and kill. Checkbook journalism. Secret deals. Friends helping friends.
Even by National Enquirer standards, testimony by its former publisher David Pecker at Donald Trump’s hush money trial this week has revealed an astonishing level of corruption at America’s best-known tabloid and may one day be seen as the moment it effectively died.
“It just has zero credibility,” said Lachlan Cartwright, executive editor of the Enquirer from 2014 to 2017. “Whatever sort of credibility it had was totally damaged by what happened in court this week.”
On Thursday, Pecker was back on the witness stand to tell more about the arrangement he made to boost Trump’s presidential candidacy in 2016, tear down his rivals and silence any revelations that may have damaged him.
However its stories danced on the edge of credulity, the Enquirer was a cultural fixture, in large part because of genius marketing. As many Americans moved to the suburbs in the 1960s, the tabloid staked its place on racks at supermarket checkout lines, where people could see headlines about UFO abductions or medical miracles while waiting for their milk and bread to be bagged.
Strictly star Giovanni Pernice's former partner Rose Ayling
8 EU members say conditions in Syria should be reassessed to allow voluntary refugee returns
Michael Cohen is torn to shreds by Trump's attorneys in blistering cross
Double child killer Colin Pitchfork who raped and strangled two 15
Ben Whishaw lights up the Croisette as he joins his co
Vermont to grant professional licenses, regardless of immigration status, to ease labor shortage
Man kills 2 officers at police station in Malaysia in a suspected Jemaah Islamiyah attack
Who is Jacob Zuma, the former South African president disqualified from next week's election?
Turkey's Erdogan pardons elderly generals imprisoned over 1997 'postmodern coup'
French sports minister calls for sanctions after Monaco player tapes over anti
Rishi squirms under the fire of the Loose Women: Awkward scenes on daytime TV as Janet Street