When Nuzzi couldn’t connect with the Senate candidate through his media relations team, she took a different route, calling him on his wife’s cell phone directly. His wife, Lisa Oz, answered, and after trying to hang up, inadvertently kept Nuzzi on the line for 4-and-a-half minutes.
The short conversation, in which Oz criticized Nuzzi’s reporting and called her “the girl reporter,” revealed the paranoia surrounding the couple’s approach to the media.
“It’s not the most unflattering thing I’ve been called in the course of my career,” Nuzzi said.
Dr. Oz has been a household name for years as Oprah Winfrey’s medical expert. His own “Dr. Oz Show” ran for over a decade, though he has faced criticism from the medical community. The show ended in January after Oz announced his Senate run.
“I find it so hypocritical when he’s out there bashing the media on Fox,” CNN chief media corespondent Brian Stelter said, “when he’s been an elite member of the media for decades.”
Nuzzi said if she were a Pennsylvania resident, she would want to hear the candidate speak about issues specific to the state. But talking strictly to a right-wing audience is part of Oz’s strategy to win in the intra-party race.
“From the Oz campaign’s point of view, there’s really no upside to participating with the mainstream media, with people in the media who they perceive to be more Left leaning,” Nuzzi said.
It’s a strategy that is becoming more common, including with Sarah Huckabee Sanders running for governor in Arkansas.
Stelter pointed out the journalism lesson from Nuzzi’s story covering the Oz campaign — “try every cell phone number you have.” Nuzzi said it’s also been a lesson in overconfidence and hubris.
“Just because you are media trained in one area, just because you are able to succeed in one area, does not mean that you can translate that necessarily to another area,” Nuzzi said.