Five O'Clock Follies

The Five O'Clock Follies is a sobriquet for military press briefings that occurred during the Vietnam War. Richard Pyle, Associated Press Saigon bureau chief during the war, described the briefings as, "the longest-playing tragicomedy in Southeast Asia's theater of the absurd."[1]

The briefings occurred in a bar on the roof of Saigon's Rex Hotel, and journalists alternately cracked cynical jokes and shouted at officials, often complaining about a Credibility gap between official reports and the truth. Public affairs officer Barry Zorthian led the briefings, and he once lamented that where the US government's word was once true until proven false, in Vietnam it would be questioned until proven true.[2]

Journalists updated the name during the Gulf War. Press briefings at that time were unofficially known as the "Four O'Clock Follies."[3]

References

  1. "The Press: Farewell to the Follies", Time, February 12, 1973, retrieved August 7, 2014
  2. Martin, Douglas (January 5, 2011), "Barry Zorthian, U.S. Diplomat in Vietnam, Dies at 90", The New York Times, retrieved August 7, 2011
  3. Erlandson, Robert A. (February 11, 1991), "the 4 o'clock follies", The Baltimore Sun, retrieved August 7, 2014
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