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Tiger Woods Explodes After Golf Digest Publishes Parody Interview With Him

"Journalistically and ethically, can you sink any lower?"

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Tiger Woods wrote a blog post slamming Golf Digest and golf writer Dan Jenkins for publishing a fake, parody interview with him.

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The article, " target="_blank"My (Fake) Interview with Tiger: Or how it plays out in my mind" appears in the December addition of the magazine. It's written by Jenkins, who's a legendary golf writer.

Tiger did not find the article funny, at all.

"Did you read Dan Jenkins’ interview with me in the latest Golf Digest? I hope not. Because it wasn’t me," he writes. "It was some jerk he created to pretend he was talking to me. That’s right, Jenkins faked an interview, which fails as parody, and is really more like a grudge-fueled piece of character assassination."

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"Journalistically and ethically, can you sink any lower?"

The article is meant to be satire. Here is a sample passage (Jenkins' voice in bold):

I don't get it. For a guy who can certainly afford it, you've become famous for being a bad tipper. It's almost like you take pride in it.

I just don't understand why you're supposed to tip people for doing a job they're already getting paid to do.

In many cases tips are expected to be part of their salary.

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So let 'em go find a better job.

Now why didn't I think of that? What would you do if you couldn't play golf any longer?

I guess I'd buy an NBA team.

I'll try to remember to tell the next person who waits on me to ditch the stupid restaurant and go buy the Knicks or Mavericks.

You're enjoying this, aren't you?

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There's also a Kardashian joke, a joke about him firing people, and a Lindsey Vonn reference. It's supposed to be funny.

Tiger goes in on Jenkins and the magazine:

"The truth is, Jenkins has no idea how I think or feel about any of the things he claims to know about, which is why he had to make things up. Frustration or resentment because I have not been more available to him should not give him a license for an underhanded attack on me as an athlete, as a professional and as a person. I guess Golf Digest’s editors believe this is a good way to sell more magazines."

He also criticizes them for hiring an actor to pose for two photos that appear in the issue. Here's one:

The article is flagged as satire by the asterisk in the headline. It also says FAKE on the cover of the magazine:

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The story completely fabricates an interview between writer Dan Jenkins and Mr. Woods. What we would like to know is how this was approved by editors and whether you, as the publisher, will stand behind this as in any way journalistically responsible? What standards and tenets were used for the story and accompanying artwork? It is not enough to claim that Mr. Jenkins is an “opinion writer” or that this is mere “parody” when under that guise Mr. Jenkins makes a litany of disparagements that are either baseless or demonstrably untrue. Mr. Jenkins has long held a personal hostility for Mr. Woods, a fact that is common knowledge in golf journalism. Knowing that, editors ought to be holding him to a firmer standard of responsible reporting, grounded in fact. Instead, they have allowed him to realize his vendetta, concocting situations that arise out of his own grudges and frustrations. There’s a word for writers that stoop to this underhanded technique: Fabulist.

Golf Digest senior editor Ashley Mayo told BI, "The article stands on its own."

Jenkins fired off this tweet:

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