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Apple can't escape health drama

Posted Jul 28 2008, 12:42 PM by Kim Peterson
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Apple, of all companies, shouldn't underestimate the appeal of CEO Steve Jobs. Or, rather, the appeal of the Steve-looks-really-thin-is-he-sick story. The drama has continued to dog the company, which has responded with a clumsy duck-and-dodge that reminds me of a woozy boxer on his last legs.

The latest response is truly bizarre. A pugilistic Jobs called New York Times columnist Joe Nocera and began the conversation with the following words, "This is Steve Jobs. You think I'm an arrogant [expletive] who thinks he's above the law, and I think you're a slime bucket who gets most of his facts wrong."

Jobs proceeded to tell Nocera about his health problems, but only if Nocera agreed not to write about it. So Nocera did a little dancing around the subject himself, writing in his column that the health problems were "a good deal more than 'a common bug'" but weren't life-threatening and weren't related to cancer (Jobs recovered from pancreatic cancer a few years ago).

All of which clears up nothing. Perhaps that's why Apple shares are down more than 3% in heavy trading to $156.44. Investors are back where they started, wondering if the future of the company is at all at risk. Apple could have cleared this up on day one with a simple statement from Jobs addressing the issue. But instead, a spokeswoman said he had "a common bug." It's now clear that she was lying.

The company allowed the rumors and speculation to build until last week, when an analyst asked about it during the quarterly earnings call. CFO Peter Oppenheimer said Jobs' health is "a private matter." That set off a vocal debate among analysts and other observers about whether Jobs' health was indeed private or whether investors could rightfully be concerned because of Jobs' importance to the company and the stock.

And now, we have Jobs' mysterious phone call to dissect as well.

Newsweek columnist Dan Lyons says that no other company would behave this way. "Don't pull this crap with leaks and off-the-record conversations," he writes. "Either answer the question, out loud, in public, or don't."

Portfolio writes that "Apple spun Jobs' health like a Tilt-a-Whirl. And we're supposed to believe them next time?"

CNBC's Jim Goldman writes that Jobs should have known better. "Either come clean, on the record, and set a new precedent, or stand pat. Hold your ground. Stick to principle. He chose not to do that."

Related reading:

Is it fair to analyze Steve Jobs' appearance?

Apple CEO's health: Who will ask about it?

 

Comments

 

It is amazing that a company with such refined marketing tactics can blow the Jobs story and the MobileMe launch so poorly.

But clearly the business press take the Jobs story way out of bounds: tinyurl.com/stevejobs-lives

"The latest response is truly bizarre."

Its not bizarre if you know the backstory. The journalist has been known to conspire with hedge funds and Jobs was particularly pissed at how he 'arbitrarily' brought up a story of his personal health the morning before their earnings call. The stock tumbled that day and the hedge funds came in to buy low. These and other manipulations are what Jobs is euphemistically referring to as "getting facts wrong" but the journalist knew what he really meant.

Jobs has been dealing with his own company on the stock market for over 30 years so he keeps tabs on these sort of things.

without jobs apple will crumble as the did before he came back and begged gates for investment cash and to write office for apple.

this is why this story is gaining momentum. without jobs kiss apple bye bye

They are probably preparing for some new product launch related to health.  iHealth?  If so, count me in as the first to have this opinion.

Great product line.Great pipeline of new product's to be introduced soon.

World appeal.RECORD ERNING'S........Shake the health obsession thing.Find a

new topic forthe OCD.

Hey Kim Peterson,

Do you have any stake in Apple?  Kinda interested to know......

Apple and Google used to be the guys you could trust, but they got the corporate bug. Everybody does. Sad.

When oh when will the Americans learn the English language?

     You cannot "get your facts wrong". A fact is a truism which negates the the assumption that it could be wrong. Better to say statement instead of fact.

Steve was just upset over the fact that bill gates is free to raom the country while he's stuck in work mode with an ego bigger that all evlis impersonators in the world combined... true dat www.the websiteisnotdown.com

WHERE DOES TIM COOK END UP IN A POST JOBS APPLE WORLD?

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