Richard Nixon spent more than two years away from public life after
resigning from office due to the
Watergate scandal. However, Nixon granted
David Frost an exclusive series of interviews in 1977. He was publishing his memoirs at the time, but his publicist
Irving Paul Lazar believed that he could reach a mass audience by using television. Frost's New York–based talk show had been canceled some years earlier. Frost had agreed to pay Nixon for the interviews but the American television network news operations were not interested, regarding them as
checkbook journalism. They refused to distribute the program and Frost was forced to fund the project himself while seeking other investors, who eventually bought air time and
syndicated the four programs. The interviews were also broadcast on radio by the
Mutual Broadcasting System. Nixon's chief of staff
Jack Brennan negotiated the terms of the interview with Frost. Nixon's staff saw the interview as an opportunity for him to restore his reputation with the public and assumed that Frost would be easily outwitted. He had interviewed Nixon in 1968 in a manner that
Time magazine described as "softly". Frost recruited author and intelligence officer
James Reston Jr. and ABC News producer
Bob Zelnick to evaluate the Watergate details prior to the interview. Nixon's negotiated fee was $600,000 () and a 20% share of any profits. ==Interviews==