Criticism Spicer's press conference and Conway's follow-up comments drew quick reactions on social media. Journalist
Dan Rather posted a criticism of the incoming
Trump administration on his Facebook page. Rather wrote:
The New York Times responded with a
fact check of statements made during Spicer's press conference. This included a side-by-side photographic comparison of the crowds from Obama's 2009 inauguration and that of Trump. Journalist and former
New York Times executive editor
Jill Abramson characterized Conway's comments about alternative facts as "Orwellian newspeak", and said Alternative facts' are just lies". NBC News quoted two experts on the psychology of lying who said that the Trump administration was engaging in
gaslighting, and reported that the domain name
alternativefacts.com (offline) had been purchased and redirected to an article in
Psychology Today on gaslighting. The
Merriam-Webster dictionary website reported that lookups for the word "fact" spiked after Conway used the phrase "alternative facts". They also got involved by tweeting about it: "A fact is a piece of information presented as having objective reality." The tweet included a link to their article about Conway's use of the term. Following Conway's
Meet the Press interview and the viral response on social media in which "alternative facts" was likened to
doublethink and
Newspeak, terms from
George Orwell's dystopian novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four, sales of the book increased by more than 9,500 percent, rising to the number one best-selling book on
Amazon.com.
The New York Times and others attributed this to Conway's statement.
Snopes journalist Alex Kasprak noted that a passage from
Carl Sagan's book
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark became a viral
meme about alternative facts after the inauguration of Trump; Kasprak commented "the proffered description of that nightmare was authentic". On January 24, 2017, the
Public Relations Society of America, a public relations trade group, put out a statement that said "Encouraging and perpetuating the use of alternative facts by a high-profile spokesperson reflects poorly on all communications professionals."
Legal usage In a
Breitbart News article dated January 23, 2017, editor
Joel Pollak defended Conway's use of "alternative facts" by arguing that it was a "harmless, and accurate term in a legal setting, where each side of a dispute will lay out its own version of the facts for the court to decide". However,
The Guardian noted that "[a] search of several online legal dictionaries did not yield any results for the term." On February 23, 2017, fifteen professors of law, some of whom are themselves obliged to adhere to the
District of Columbia Bar Association's Rule of Professional Conduct, rule 8.4(a), filed a disciplinary complaint with the D.C. Bar's Office of Disciplinary Conduct. Their complaint applies against Conway, a lawyer in public office, on the grounds that under rule 8.4(c): "It is professional misconduct for a lawyer to engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation", because of Conway's pattern of misrepresentation as well as her misuse of words such as "massacre" at a time when she holds high public office. The letter of complaint makes a specific reference to the use of the phrase "alternative facts" as being involved in one of the cases of alleged misconduct, citing as a reference for its claim an opinion article by
The New York Times op-ed columnist Nicholas Fandos.
In popular culture The term alternative facts became a mainstay in popular culture, from late night comedians to serious news outlets.
Jimmy Fallon created a segment "Two Truths and an Alternative Fact" on
The Tonight Show.
Stephen Colbert criticized Conway for saying she was not
Inspector Gadget or "in the job of having evidence" on
The Late Show, claiming "Kellyanne Conway has only one move: 'Go, go, alternative facts!
CNN's ad campaign "Facts First" was a direct response to the concept of alternative facts and
fake news.
USA Today listed it in their "Glossary of Trump terms". Both
Robert De Niro and
Steven Spielberg referred to alternative facts in their acceptance speech at the
National Board of Review awards for the Spielberg film
The Post. Spielberg said: "We are in a fight and it's a fight not just about alternative facts but it's a fight for the objective truth." The 2017
short film Alternative Math is a satire about the absurdity of the concept of alternative facts. On January 16, 2018, German linguists declared the phrase "alternative facts" the
un-word of the year 2017. It was also chosen by Austrian linguists as the un-word of the year in December 2017. == See also ==