The media campaign surrounding Bruce Jenner’s public transformation into Caitlyn Jenner
has been nothing short of masterful, from the substance of Diane
Sawyer’s two-hour “20/20” interview special in April to the sizzle of
this week’s Vanity Fair cover reveal of Caitlyn in a bustier.
The person guiding the strategy behind the scenes has been Alan
Nierob, a seasoned showbiz publicist and longtime exec at Rogers &
Cowan. Last fall Jenner hired Nierob, who has handled crisis PR for some
of Hollywood’s biggest names including Robert Downey Jr. and Mel
Gibson, for help in guiding her through a storm of media attention as
she came out as transgender. Nierob declined to comment on this story.
Sources close to the situation said Jenner turned to Nierob for a
very specific reason — one that is poignant in light of the turns in
Jenner’s life today. In the mid-1980s, Nierob helped Jenner at a moment
of crisis when a reporter for the New York Times was pursuing a story
about Jenner being a cross-dresser.
At the time, Jenner was on the rebound from a career downturn and was
enjoying a new round of endorsement deals and media gigs. In the
mid-1980s, a story about the Olympic decathlon star dressing in women’s
clothing would have severely damaged, if not destroyed, Jenner’s public
image.
Jenner had previously been repped by Rogers & Cowan around the
time of his 1976 Olympic triumph but never by Nierob. The two knew each
other through mutual associates. In the early 1980s Jenner worked for
ABC and NBC covering auto racing at a time when Nierob represented star
driver Danny Sullivan.
When Jenner was approached by the Times with questions about
cross-dressing, Jenner confided in Nierob about her gender dysphoria
condition. Nierob was never formally hired as Jenner’s rep — he helped
her out as a friend. Nierob worked briefly but intensely with Jenner’s
then-manager and attorney to dissuade the Times reporter from pursuing
the story. He used all the PR pressure tricks: strenuous denials,
questioning the motives of his sources and emphasizing the ramifications
of such a story for Jenner and his family. No story ever ran.
Thirty-odd years later, Jenner turned to Nierob for help on the
journey to becoming Caitlyn because of the level of trust between them.
Jenner felt Nierob never betrayed the confidence and never gossiped in
Hollywood circles about the incident.
Work on the campaign to explain Jenner’s transformation began late
last fall when Nierob reached out to Diane Sawyer for what he knew would
be a landmark TV moment for public awareness of the transgender
community. He knew it had to be serious and substantive to dispel any
suggestion that the emergence of Caitlyn was a publicity stunt.
Sawyer’s work on the Jenner interview began at an emotional time for
the ABC News anchor, following the November death of her husband,
director Mike Nichols.
After the April 24 “20/20”
interview generated rave reviews and 17 million viewers, the first
promotion for Jenner’s upcoming E! docu-series, which was officially
announced during Sawyer’s interview, began to hit.
The June 1 release of the Vanity Fair cover, which revealed Jenner’s
new name and look, coincided with the launch of her @Caitlyn_Jenner
twitter account. Jenner racked up more than 1 million followers in a few hours, a new Twitter record, and had more than 2 million as of Friday.
On Tuesday ESPN announced that Jenner would receive the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at the July 15 ESPY Awards. That will be followed by the July 26 premiere
of E!’s “I Am Cait,” which runs eight episodes. The series will
chronicle Jenner’s transformation over the past few months and also show
her on a new mission to be an advocate for public understanding and
tolerance of transgender community concerns.
In fact, sources said Jenner has been on the road this week shooting
material for “I Am Cait” and hasn’t had much time to catch up with the
latest round of coverage.
“She’s doing it,” a source close to Jenner says. “She’s not sitting
at home reading her own press. She’s on a mission to save lives and make
a difference.”
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