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“I don’t think anyone’s ever spoken to him like that.”
Stephanie Clifford was talking, on “60 Minutes,” about her alleged sexual encounter
 with Donald J. Trump in 2006. Specifically, the pornographic film 
actress and director, who goes by the name Stormy Daniels, was 
describing the moment when she suggested spanking Mr. Trump with a 
magazine that had his picture on the cover. (According to her, he 
acquiesced.)
But
 she could just as well have been describing the way she has told her 
story (which representatives for President Trump have denied). None of 
Mr. Trump’s many media antagonists have taken him on in quite this way, 
on his own terms, using some of the same tactics he did as a celebrity, 
candidate and president.
Others
 have come at Mr. Trump with indignation, righteousness and appeals to 
decency. Ms. Clifford swatted Mr. Trump with a rolled-up network 
newsmagazine.
Speaking
 to Anderson Cooper, Ms. Daniels was direct and conversational. She had 
playful one-liners. (“You didn’t even buy me breakfast,” she told Mr. 
Cooper.) She told a story. (Describing how she said Mr. Trump awaited 
her on the edge of a hotel bed — “perched” — she mimed his sitting 
position and bearing.)
But most important — most, dare I say it, Trumpian — she was unapologetic.
There’s
 a familiar script for discrediting women who accuse powerful men. 
They’re attacked as opportunistic and promiscuous, out to make a buck. 
If they deny any of that, it still ends up making the moral conversation
 about them.
Ms.
 Clifford owned her story and her life. Yes, she’s stripped and had sex 
on camera for a living, a “legitimate — and legal, I’d like to point out
 — career.” Yes, she’s gotten job offers from her publicity: “Tell me 
one person who would turn down a job offer making more than they’ve been
 making.”
That
 should sound familiar. Running for president, Mr. Trump jiu-jitsued 
facts that would have ended other candidacies into selling points. Did 
he give money to candidates he later attacked? That meant he knew how to
 work the system, and thus could fix it. Did he avoid paying income 
taxes? “That makes me smart.”
His
 brazenness was the brazenness of reality TV, the argument of a finalist
 in a “Survivor” tribal council who tells the jury to hate the game, not
 the player.
Just
 so, Ms. Clifford has used unshamability and quick-draw ripostes as a 
force field. When a critic on Twitter told her that “dumb whores go to 
hell,” she shot back, “Glad I’m a smart one.”
Ms.
 Clifford’s story had plenty of tidbits, salacious (her statement that 
Mr. Trump did not use a condom), bizarre (her recounting of watching an 
entire “Shark Week” documentary with him) and disturbing (her charge 
that a man threatened her, in front of her infant daughter, if she spoke
 about Mr. Trump). But running through it was a theme: I know who I am, 
and that’s exactly why you should believe me.
Mr.
 Cooper made the case that the story was worth covering, at double 
length, on CBS’s flagship newsmagazine. He recognized the story was 
about sex, asking for details up front and pressing Ms. Clifford on her 
motives — whether she might get a book deal, for instance. But he moved 
on to look, at some length, at the possibility that a $130,000 payment 
for Ms. Clifford’s silence might be an illegal campaign contribution.
Even
 more, as the subject turned to threats, payoffs and nondisclosure 
agreements, the interview became about power, the ability of wealthy men
 to pay, pressure or coerce women into silence. (The alleged parking lot
 encounter aside, Mr. Trump’s lawyers have openly threatened Ms. Clifford with financial ruin.) It’s about who gets to decide when their stories get told and under what terms.
Ms.
 Clifford made a point of emphasizing that she was “not a victim” in 
having sex with Mr. Trump, even though she described an encounter she 
was, at best, unenthusiastic about. “You put yourself in a bad situation
 and bad things happen, so you deserve this,” she said.
A few days earlier, Mr. Cooper sat down on CNN with Karen McDougal, a former Playboy model who says she had an extended affair with Mr. Trump
 at around the same time as Ms. Clifford. Ms. McDougal described having 
been in love with Mr. Trump, then guilty and apologetic for having a 
relationship with a married man with a newborn child.
Ms.
 Clifford, on the other hand, represented herself as having no illusions
 about herself or Mr. Trump. Asked if she thought he had offered her a 
role on “The Apprentice” to keep her romantically interested, she said, 
“Of course. I’m not blind.”
To paraphrase one of Mr. Trump’s campaign lines,
 she was saying that she knew he was a snake when he took her in. With 
this admission, she implicitly told the audience: Look, we’re all adults
 here. We know how these things work.
 
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