November 24, 2024

NBC’s Savannah Guthrie questions own network’s report on Fetterman’s ability to understand

Fetterman #Fetterman

NBC reporter Dasha Burns defended her observation that Democratic Pennsylvania U.S. Senate candidate John Fetterman had a “difficult” time understanding small talk prior to a recent interview.

Appearing Wednesday on NBC’s “Today” show to provide a follow-up on her high-profile sit-down with the candidate — the first in-person interview Fetterman has done since suffering a stroke in May — Burns told co-host Savannah Guthrie that small talk with Fetterman prior to the interview was “difficult.”

Guthrie pushed back, citing other journalists who have claimed Fetterman seemed fine to them during remote exchanges. Burns, however, was adamant that, in her experience, Fetterman had trouble understanding her and her crew until interview questions were closed captioned for him to read during their interview.

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John Fetterman, lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania and Democratic Senate candidate, speaks during a campaign rally in Pittsburgh on Oct. 1, 2022. (Nate Smallwood/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

On Wednesday morning, Burns told the host, “And Savannah, we did find that in small talk before the interview without captioning it seemed it was difficult for Fetterman to understand our conversation.”

Guthrie acknowledged that Burns made the same point the previous evening on “NBC Nightly News,” though questioned the claim: “Since then, other journalists who have also dealt with Fetterman came forward and said they had a different experience.”

Burns defended her initial assessment, responding, “Yeah, and Savannah, that’s completely fair that that was their experience. We can only report our own.”

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NBC correspondent Dasha Burns, right, told NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie that Democrat Senate candidate John Fetterman had a “difficult” time understanding small talk. 

Fox News Digital reported Wednesday on several prominent liberal journalists who, contrary to Burns, insisted that Fetterman was completely coherent during their interviews with him.

After seeing clips of Burns’ interview with Fetterman, Vox’s Kara Swisher tweeted, “Sorry to say but I talked to @JohnFetterman for over an hour without stop or any aides and this is just nonsense. Maybe this reporter is just bad at small talk.”

Liberal YouTube personality Brian Tyler Cohen tweeted, “Here’s my interview with @JohnFetterman from a few days ago. The notion that he wasn’t able to understand is mind-numbingly false.”

And New York Magazine writer Rebecca Traister wrote, “As someone who has recently interviewed him: Fetterman’s comprehension is not at all impaired. He understands everything, it’s just that he reads it (which requires extra acuity, I’d argue) and responds in real time. It’s a hearing/auditory processing challenge.”

Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, speaks in Philadelphia on Sept. 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Ryan Collerd) (The Associated Press)

Back on “Today,” Burns continued: “I will say, it’s important to note that according to the campaign itself, our team was the first to be in the room with Fetterman for an interview rather than via remote video conference and myself, my producer and our crew did find that small talk before that captioning was difficult because of those auditory processing issues I mentioned.”

She added, “Now, stroke experts do say that this does not mean he has any cognitive impairment, doesn’t mean his memory or his cognition is impaired, and he can fully recover from this. And once the closed captioning was on, he was able to fully understand my questions throughout that 25-minute interview.”

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Fox News’ Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report.

Gabriel Hays is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. 

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