Apple opens up for new Steve Jobs biography to shape co-founder's public image

Posted:
in General Discussion edited March 2015
Apple executives like CEO Tim Cook were willing to participate in interviews for the new biography Becoming Steve Jobs because of the main author's connections to Jobs, and because the company wants to influence its co-founder's public image, according to an official spokesman.




"After a long period of reflection following Steve's death, we felt a sense of responsibility to say more about the Steve we knew," Steve Dowling told the New York Times on Sunday.

"We decided to participate in Brent [Schlender] and Rick [Tetzeli]'s book because of Brent's long relationship with Steve, which gave him a unique perspective on Steve's life. The book captures Steve better than anything else we've seen, and we are happy we decided to participate."

Schlender and Tetzeli explained to the Times that they first approached Apple about the book in 2012, but were informed at the time that no executives would give an interview. The company reversed course 18 months later, something Schlender attributed to "patience and quiet perseverance." Schlender covered news about Jobs for almost 25 years.

Tetzeli added that while parts of the biography were fact-checked with Apple, and the final product was shown to the company, executives weren't allowed to have "any editorial input whatsoever."

Apple has become more open under the helm of CEO Tim Cook, with executives more willing to take part in promotional interviews and publish personal opinions via Twitter. In the new book, Cook in fact calls Walter Isaacson's 2011 Steve Jobs biography a "tremendous disservice" even though it was authorized by Jobs, featured prominently on the iBook Store, and was based on interviews with Jobs, Cook, lead Apple designer Jony Ive, and head of Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue. Isaacson also spoke with friends, relatives, and competitors.

Last year Cook criticized another Jobs-related book, Yukari Kane's Haunted Empire: Apple After Steve Jobs, calling it "nonsense." A week ago Cue used Twitter to attack an Alex Gibney film documentary premiering at SXSW in Austin, Texas, calling it an "inaccurate and mean-spirited view of my friend" that was "not a reflection of the Steve I knew." Shortly after he tweeted in support of Becoming Steve Jobs.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 27

    Apple executives telling lies to try and cover up that Steve was a complete asshole by re-writing history and passing it off as a book.

     

    There, got that one out of the way before the inevitable...

  • Reply 2 of 27
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    Isn't this how religions get started?
  • Reply 3 of 27
    boredumbboredumb Posts: 1,418member

    I've been searching and searching for fond testimonials by MS execs of Steve Ballmer...

    No luck...I must be doing something wrong.

  • Reply 4 of 27
    kent909kent909 Posts: 731member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post





    "After a long period of reflection following Steve's death, we felt a sense of responsibility to say more about the Steve we knew," Steve Dowling told the New York Times on Sunday.

     

    Meaning, "we can make money doing this".

  • Reply 5 of 27
    geekmeegeekmee Posts: 629member
    kent909 wrote: »
    Meaning, "we can make money doing this".

    Yeah, we all know Apple needs more money.
  • Reply 6 of 27
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,286member

    Regardless of whether you like Isaacson's book, he is a bonafide historian, biographer and author. These other guys are not.

  • Reply 7 of 27
    magic_almagic_al Posts: 325member

    The Isaacson book will be retitled Unbecoming Steve Jobs. Collect the two-part set!

  • Reply 8 of 27
    kibitzerkibitzer Posts: 1,114member
    This article's use of the word "influence" is troubling. If the new book presents a more accurate depiction based on Apple people's interviews, that's good. If the book merely furthers a desire by Apple people to rebut Isaacson, maybe not so much. Or we could all be sucker bait for a publisher's very adept book marketing strategy. I gave up on "fair and balanced" ever since Fox News co-opted the term.
  • Reply 9 of 27
    maestro64maestro64 Posts: 5,043member
    Apple executives telling lies to try and cover up that Steve was a complete asshole by re-writing history and passing it off as a book.

    There, got that one out of the way before the inevitable...

    Yeah they can not cover up that Steve was a crazy man and berated people, there are too many people who have direct interactions with him at Apple who back this up and not because they were the ones being berated but that witness it. But, you do not become that successful being nice to everyone. Not sure why they have this need to paint him in a better light, we all knew what he was like and many would still want to be by his side.

    mac_128 wrote: »
    Isn't this how religions get started?

    Yeah image some idiots coming up with Steve Religion, kind of like Scientology which was base on a book, ops so was Catholicism. Imagine that.....
  • Reply 10 of 27
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    mac_128 wrote: »
    Isn't this how religions get started?

    No, it isn't.
  • Reply 11 of 27
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    mike1 wrote: »
    Regardless of whether you like Isaacson's book, he is a bonafide historian, biographer and author. These other guys are not.

    Walter Isaacson is a bonafide popular/commercial biographer and journalist.

    These other guys are bonafide journalists, and now perhaps more serious biographers.

    All are authors, because they all have books out, big deal. We'll see which are the better historians.
  • Reply 12 of 27
    kerrybkerryb Posts: 270member
    It's best to not talk bad about the dead.
  • Reply 13 of 27
    inklinginkling Posts: 772member
    Henry Ford = Ford Motor Company

    Charles Schwab = Charles Schwab (investments)

    John Cadbury = Cadbury (chocolate)

    William Colgate = Colgate-Palmolive (toothpaste etc.)

    William Wrigley = Wrigley Co. (gum)

    Etc.

    So why not:

    Steve Jobs = Steve Jobs Inc.

    Naw, I think not. People have grow too used to Apple.
  • Reply 14 of 27
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Flaneur View Post





    No, it isn't.

    It kinda is. 

  • Reply 15 of 27
    The iBook Store has a sample to download now. I've read it, and so far there isn't anything new that hasn't already been written before. I'll certainly read the full book when it comes out -- and withhold further comment until then. It will, hopefully, offer greater insight into him.
  • Reply 16 of 27

    As others have stated here, Isaacson's book seemed "rushed." I pre-ordered Becoming Stevo.

  • Reply 17 of 27
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Maestro64 View Post





    Yeah they can not cover up that Steve was a crazy man and berated people, there are too many people who have direct interactions with him at Apple who back this up and not because they were the ones being berated but that witness it. But, you do not become that successful being nice to everyone. Not sure why they have this need to paint him in a better light, we all knew what he was like and many would still want to be by his side.

     

    Uh, who's trying to cover anything up? Nobody is denying Steve could be a bear to work for. However, everything you read in the press always concentrates on the negative. Here is an account showing some of the positive sides of Steve.

     

    Unless your position is Steve was 100% asshole and there isn't a single nice attribute about him or that he's never done anything good for anyone in his entire life.

  • Reply 18 of 27
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Mac_128 View Post



    Isn't this how religions get started?

    Where do I sign up?

  • Reply 19 of 27
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    It kinda is. 

    Sorry that you, of all people, bit.

    Religions start with a concept of something supernatural, usually a god or a goddess, or some kind of spirit being. This is why Buddhism is not considered a religion in its original form as a technique of enlightenment.

    Steve Jobs was a realist. There is no need for supernatural explanation to attempt to interpret him or his philosophy.

    Quite different when disciples of a prophet representing an absent supernatural Being are arguing about how they are supposed to best serve the Being.
  • Reply 20 of 27
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by kerryb View Post



    It's best to not talk bad about the dead.

    I guess you never took a History class.... or must have some very bad memories from that class...

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