Donald Trump (1970s) Page Six started covering affairs of
Donald Trump shortly after its launch in the late 1970s; much of the information about Trump was provided to
Page Six by
Roy Cohn, who worked as Trump's lawyer. Reportedly, Trump was featured in "hundreds" of
Page Six stories, authored by columnist
Cindy Adams.
Page Six editor Susan Mulcahy said that the column "definitely played a role in helping push Donald Trump to the first round of his never-ending whatever", she also claimed that Trump lied to her multiple times as she was reporting on him on
Page Six. In a 2016
op-ed, she apologized to readers for reporting on Trump, saying ''Page Six's'' attention "has parlayed into his presidential bid". Trump was ''Page Six's
tipster and anonymous source, supplying the column with information. Aide of Trump, Norma Foerderer, was sometimes called by Page Six
reporters to help them on their stories. In one instance, Foerderer called a story by Jared Paul Stern about Trump’s breakup with Melania in 2000 "bullshit" and "not correct" despite it using quotes supplied by Trump. such as Politico and the New York Times''.
PageSixSixSix.com (2004) In September 2004, American blogger
Mario Lavandeira set up a free
Blogger site named PageSixSixSix.com where he shared his writings. Months later, the site grew and was named by TV programme
The Insider as "Hollywood's most hated website". The name of the website was inspired by
Page Six and led to the
New York Post filing a lawsuit against him, he did not have enough money to defend himself so he agreed to rename the site. The lawsuit was filed in May 2005 alleged that the site committed
identity theft and infringed on ''Page Six's'' copyrighted name. Lavandeira later bragged, saying; "I'm more trustworthy than
Page Six".
Ian Spiegelman (2004/2007) In June 2004, editor of
Page Six Ian Spiegelman described his job as “being in a Mafia family”, he later sent a threatening email to fellow editor Douglas Decher, where he threatened to "take out" his girlfriend and "break" him. It resulted in Spiegelman being fired by the ''Post's'' editor-in-chief
Col Allan. His comments were prompted by an earlier argument he had with Decher and his 19-year-old girlfriend, where Decher called Spiegelman an "amorously intentioned midget" after he said he is 5-foot-8. In a statement, Col Allan said Spiegelman's behaviour was "completely unacceptable". Three years later, in May 2007, Ian Spiegelman accused Col Allan of corruption, alleging that he had taken bribes and sexual favors at a
strip club. He also accused
Page Six editor-in-chief Richard Johnson of taking bribes from individuals in exchange for positive coverage of them. Other accusations included
Page Six deliberately deleting a number of their stories critical of
Clinton family and the
Chinese government. Spiegelman's accusations were prepared in a four-page
legal document. The
New York Post dismissed his accusations, calling them "fantasy".
Page Six itself covered the incident, printing a 680-word-long column about the accusations.
Jared Paul Stern (2006) In April 2006, the
New York Post suspended and seized the computer of
Page Six editor
Jared Paul Stern due to him allegedly extorting an indivudual. Allegedly, Stern wrote bogus gossip stories about celebrities on
Page Six; one of these celebrities was billionaire
Ron Burkle who asked him to stop. Stern said he "could make that happen" if he gave him a sum of $220,000. Later, a federal investigation was opened against Stern for extortion. The
New York Post said it would cooperate with the government's prosecutors to gather evidence. In a statement, Stern's lawyer, Joseph Tacopina, described the accusations against Stern as a "campaign to spread lies based on false accusations fueled by Burkle's personal vendetta" and claimed there was no evidence of any crime. Stern described the accusations against him as lies and said they intended to "smear" him. Stern was alleged to have made the offer during a conversation with Burkle, during which he said he would remove gossip about Burkle from
Page Six if he paid him in cash, such as him having a relationship with fashion model
Gisele Bündchen. The conversation was closely monitored by the
DoJ and
FBI leading to the investigation. The incident caused a
scandal, with multiple
Page Six publicists condemning Stern; some did it anonymously due to fear of "retribution". Publicist
Ken Sunshine said he was "flabbergasted" by the incident.
New York Daily News covered the incident and featured it on its front page cover. In January 2007, it was announced that no charges will be filed against Stern because there was "no basis" to indict him. Tacopina said that he and Stern will file a
civil lawsuit against Ron Burke. The lawsuit was filed in March 2007 and accused Ron Burke, along with the
New York Daily Times and the Clinton family, of conspiring against Stern to defame him. The Clinton family was reportedly friends with Burke, former U.S. president
Bill Clinton once complained about Stern's article on
Page Six. The lawsuit was dismissed in June 2008 by Judge Walter Tolub, who said the case was not proven.
Anthony Scaramucci (2018) In March 2018, financier and former White House communications director
Anthony Scaramucci complained about
Page Six and its editor-in-chief Emily Smith on
Twitter for reporting that U.S. president's son
Donald Trump Jr and his wife
Vanessa Trump are considering
divorce despite no official confirmation from the couple. In a series of posts, Scaramucci said that Smith "enjoys" hurting people and that she has "no morals or journalistic standards". In October 2020,
Page Six reported that Scaramucci had an "intimate" conversation with
Kimberly Guilfoyle. Scaramucci became upset when he saw the article and made several Twitter posts where he complained about Smith and
Page Six once again. He said that Smith is "living off of others people’s pain" and will "stop at nothing to hurt innocents. Especially your children". == Reception ==