In this episode of Communication Breakdown, hosts Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll examine the fallout from a rare, high-access Vanity Fair profile of White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. What looked like unprecedented transparency quickly turned into a reputational stress test, raising questions about intent, narrative control, and internal alignment. Steve and Craig move past the headline-grabbing quotes to analyze what they call “wedge warfare,” how third-party storytelling can disrupt relationships even without factual errors. The conversation offers practical lessons for communications leaders operating in high-salience, high-risk environments where perception often matters more than explanation.
Takeaways- High-access profiles create cumulative risk, every quote, image, and anecdote compounds meaning.
- Defending intent or tone can worsen a wedge by reinforcing doubt rather than stabilizing trust.
- Images function as narrative events and must be managed with the same rigor as interviews.
Topics MentionedWhite House communications, corporate reputation, wedge warfare, narrative control, media access, high-risk interviews, photojournalism, alignment signaling, claims-perceptions-reality framework, crisis communications, leadership visibility
Companies MentionedVanity Fair, CNN, The Atlantic, New York Post, Axios
Episode Hashtags#VanityFair #CNN #TheAtlantic #NewYorkPost #Axios #WhiteHouse #CorporateReputation #StrategicCommunications #PublicRelations #MediaStrategy #NarrativeControl #CrisisCommunications #LeadershipMessaging #StakeholderTrust #ReputationRisk #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork
Communication Breakdown is a production of the
Observatory on Corporate Reputation.
Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling.
Produced by
Shawn P Neal and the team at
AdvoCast.
For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcast@ocrnetwork.com