Fire and Fury,Michael Wolff’s explosive bestseller about the inner workings of the Donald Trump presidency, is heading to television. According to The Hollywood Reporter, film and TV rights have been snapped up by Endeavor Content in a massive deal that spans into the seven-figure range. The forthcoming TV series, an adaptation of Wolff’s book, is not yet connected to a network, but is being shopped around, per T.H.R. Wolff will executive produce alongside BBC and Channel 4 vet Michael Jackson.
It’s the obvious next step for the shocking book, which takes an insider look at the first year of Trump’s presidency. The book is full of jarring allegations, including but not limited to these: Trump had no interest in winning the election; nearly everyone around him thought he was unfit to serve as president; and close adviser Steve Bannon once characterized Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with a Russian lawyer in Trump Tower as “treasonous.” The book also delivers some pettier blows, including Ivanka Trump’s alleged mockery of her father’s infamous hairstyle.
The White House has roundly condemned the book. White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanderssaid it is “trash” and largely fictional. Trump himself tweeted that Wolff is “a total loser” who wrote a “really boring and untruthful book.”
Questions have arisen about the total veracity of the book, as well as how Wolff was able to get such precious insider access. According to Bloomberg, Wolff pitched the book to the White House with the gentler title The Great Transition: The First 100 Days of the Trump Administration. According to reporter Jennifer Jacobs, “nearly everyone who spoke with Wolff thought someone else in the White House had approved their participation.” From that point forward, no one “raised any red flags” about the nature of Wolff’s work.
Though Trump’s lawyers attempted to stop the publication of Fire and Fury, the book was instead published early and has since sold more than 1.4 million hardcover copies, per T.H.R. Its move to television is timely in another way, too, as T.H.R. points out. HBO’s upcoming project about the Trump presidency was recently canceled after co-writer Mark Halperin was accused of sexual harassment by five women. He denied two of the claims, but released a statement acknowledging that he had pursued relationships with colleagues and has since learned that his “behavior was inappropriate.” Showtime, which airs Halperin’s political series The Circus, has since replaced Halperin with former CBS morning anchor Alex Wagner. Perhaps HBO will be one of the bidders on Fire and Fury when the time comes?
Otherwise, there has been no shortage of Trump-inspired TV in the last year—and not only in the serious docuseries world. Shows like American Horror Story,Broad City, and Black-ish have leaned into capturing the mood of living in Trump’s America, while the entire landscape of late-night television has had to adjust to the nation’s new appetite for political jokes. And last winter, Saturday Night Live entered a new golden age thanks to its dedicated mockery of everyone in the White House. Fire and Fury will just be the latest—and perhaps most shocking—entry into this overstuffed arena.
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Sean Spicer’s little white lie.
The first truth-bending claim of the Trump administration came just a day after the inauguration, when Sean Spicer introduced himself to the world by claiming that Trump’s inauguration had drawn the largest audience ever, despite several photos showing a rather sparse crowd. Within a month, Spicer, once a well-respected journeyman flack in D.C. media circles, had cemented his reputation as Trump’s own Baghdad Bob.Photo: Left, by Lucas Jackson/Pool/Getty Images; right, by Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images.
Trump’s first act of self-sabotage.
Less than two weeks after he was inaugurated, Trump bungled a major campaign promise when he signed an executive order restricting travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States. The order sparked protests across the country and threw border control into chaos as it struggled to implement . . . something. Federal courts immediately blocked the ban, declaring that it was an unconstitutional religious test meant to discriminate against Muslims, and pointed to Trump’s own comments as proof. The ban continues to wind its way through federal court, continually hamstrung thanks to the way Trump and then adviser Steve Bannon mangled its initial rollout.Photo: By Stephanie Keith/Getty Images.
Kellyanne Conway’s quest for the perfect angle.
Back when she was still known as Trump’s maternal handler, the White House adviser drew scrutiny for kneeling on an Oval Office couch as casually as if she owned the place (she does not). She told the press that she had done so to snap a photo of Trump and a group of visiting presidents of H.C.B.U.s, and that it seemed to be the best angle.Photo: By Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images.
Donald Trump’s little side gig.
The lawsuit against Trump University was the perfect allegory for a Trump presidency: the real-estate billionaire stood accused of taking tens of thousands of dollars from regular folks, promising that his financial know-how would make them wealthy overnight, and then leaving them with nothing. Back in March, Trump settled three separate lawsuits—two class-action suits and a fraud case—against the university for $25 million.Photo: By Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images.
Melania’s hurricane stilettos.
Of course Melania Trump, former model and Upper East Side inhabitant, would think nothing of wearing stiletto heels while preparing to visit a hurricane disaster zone. But after the Internet slammed her for her tone-deaf fashion faux pas, a practice that goes back centuries, she emerged from Air Force One just hours later wearing a brand-new pair of white sneakers and what appeared to be a men’s button-up shirt.Photo: By Alex Wong/Getty Images.
Trump’s Twitter feuds, part 2.
North Korea’s “three generations of punishment” law dictates that if a citizen commits a crime, they and their entire family will be sent to prison camps, and the next two generations of children will remain there. Somewhat similarly, Donald Trump declared that Steph Curry’s refusal to attend a White House ceremony acknowledging the Golden State Warriors N.B.A. Championship meant that the entire team’s invite was withdrawn. (When N.F.L. player Tom Brady’s turn came for a White House invite, he sidestepped controversy by claiming an illness in the family.)Photo: By Maddie Meyer/Getty Images.
Tom Price’s nasty private-jet habit.
Of all the Trump administration officials who habitually use taxpayer dollars to fund their private jet travel, Tom Price, the former Health and Human Services secretary, was the only one let go because of it. Granted, his plane use was egregious compared to the other Cabinet members being investigated: whereas Ryan Zinke,Steve Mnuchin, and Scott Pruitt racked up a few thousand dollars in dubious flights to their homes and to the occasional donor party, Price spent $400,0000 on flights to places like Nashville (where his son lives), Philadelphia (which is less than a two-hour train ride from D.C.), and St. Simons, a private island in Georgia where he and his wife happen to own a million-dollar property. Such graft somehow infuriated Trump, who told reporters that he was “not happy” with Price’s plane profligacy.Photo: By Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images.PreviousNext
Yohana DestaYohana Desta is a Hollywood writer for VanityFair.com.