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A lawsuit would likely fall into the lap of a Bush appointed judge who would dismiss it, thus giving the movie more credibility than it deserves. Also, slander is real hard to prove when you are a very public figure. ABC probably skirted a slander case by saying that the movie was a "dramatization".
A lawsuit would only give the movie more publicity and scrutiny, and keep it in the news. Think of the Willy Horton ad in 1988. Very few people actually saw it as a regular ad, but because it was so controversial, it was played over and over again on news, dissected and analyzed. Sure, when we cut through the weeds we found the ad to be misleading and arguably racist, but that kind of stuff gets lost amid the whole debate. Any campaign consultant, political scientist and ad producer will tell you that people remember the charges from the ad, not the facts and the rebuttal. The same thing would happen were a lawsuit to be filed here. We'd be subject to more deconstruction of PT911, and people would remember the charges and accusations, and kind of dismiss the rebuttal and the facts.
PT911 is already becoming yesterday's news. It's ratings were mediocre at best, and its effects were only temporary.
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