![]() ![]() You can hear new episodes every Friday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Overcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. Too Embarrassed to Ask, hosted by Kara Swisher and The Verge's Lauren Goode, answers the tech questions sent in by our readers and listeners.Use these links to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Overcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. Recode Media with Peter Kafka features no-nonsense conversations with the smartest and most interesting people in the media world, with new episodes every Thursday.If you like this show, you should also sample our other podcasts: Give me money.’ He was always hustling to get you to give him your money how do you square that? The way he would always do it was, ‘This is for charity.’” “One was, ‘I’m the richest man you could possibly imagine, I live the life of Scrooge McDuck.’ The other side was, ‘I need your money. “There’s two sides to Trump’s character, at least his pre-presidential character,” Fahrenthold said. That shady philanthropy has been part of his routine since his days as a New York social figure, he said. There is a way to tell the truth about you without you, it’s just a lot more work.”įahrenthold has since become known for his investigations into the President’s often-dubious charity donations, which won him a Pulitzer Prize earlier this year. “That actually turned out to be useful for covering Trump because his reaction to a lot of these things was to say, ‘No, the only person who knows the facts about me is me, and if I don’t want to cooperate, you’re screwed,’” he added. “Writing about an agency doing something stupid and they’re hostile to me and don’t want to help me, I got practice building a story around the outside.” “I wrote a long story about the national raisin reserve, then a giant underground cavern underneath Pennsylvania, where the government has 28,000 file cabinets full of personnel records,” Fahrenthold said. But then he began covering two things that would deeply inform his work today: Unlikely presidential candidates and government waste. Donald Trump plans to shut down his charitable foundation, which has been under scrutiny for months by Mark Berman and David A.Fahrenthold said he similarly had not been on a career trajectory to write about the president, bouncing from covering the police to the environment to New England before 2010.David Fahrenthold tells the behind-the-scenes story of his year covering Trump.Trump charity ordered to stop raising money.Trump used charity’s money to settle his legal disputes.Trump’s charity runs on few of his own dollars.On TV, Trump pledged money out of my wallet by David A.Trump generous with his promises to charity.Four months later, Trump says he gave to veterans.Portrait of Trump as donor emerges by David A.Half of money Trump raised for vets reaches charities.The run of coverage benefited greatly from the work of Post researcher Alice Crites and reporter Rosalind S. Photographs of his reporter’s notebook on Twitter, signaling the lengths he’d gone to and asking readers to suggest more charities to call. Pioneering a new form of investigative reporting, Fahrenthold invited his Twitter followers to help him report these stories, asking for help in tracking down details of Trump’s past giving - or items that Trump had bought, improperly, with his charity’s money. His work also included an article disclosing that Trump had made crude comments and bragged about groping women during an unaired portion of an interview on “Access Hollywood” in 2005. That was the start of a much longer reporting effort, one that eventually expanded to cover all of Trump’s charitable giving - and the illusions he’d created, over his lifetime, that made his philanthropy seem more impressive than it was. Fahrenthold soon discovered that the candidate had stopped distributing money, despite having given out just a fraction of what he raised. Shortly after the Iowa caucuses, David Fahrenthold set out to learn what had become of the $6 million Donald Trump said he’d raised for veterans, including $1 million of his own money. National Reporting winner David Fahrenthold
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