Julian Assange to speak at SXSW

By Monica Ayala-Talavera Published: Friday, February 28, 2014, 3:00 pm

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange makes a statement to media gathered outside the High Court in London, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

AUSTIN (KXAN) WikiLeaks founder and publisher Julian Assange will join SXSW Interactive 2014 via satellite video for a live conversation with The Barbarian Groups Benjamin Palmer on Saturday, March 8 at 11 a.m.

Assange, who rarely agrees to interviews, will talk about the spread of surveillance, advantages and abuses of the digital age and the future of democracy. This is one of more than 800 daytime programming sessions at the 2014 SXSW Interactive Festival.

In 2006, Assange gained notoriety when he established WikiLeaks, a platform which publishes government documents in an effort to confront corruption and publish the truth. Since its creation, WikiLeaks has published several million documents. Benjamin Palmer is co-founder of The Barbarian Group, an agency that since 2001 has specialized in digital branding for businesses.

You can access the http://schedule.sxsw.com/.

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Julian Assange to speak at SXSW

‘Julian Assange couldn’t bear his own secrets’: ghostwriter speaks out

Award-winning Andrew O'Hagan reveals WikiLeaks founder's behaviour $2.5m book deal imploded because Assange changed his mind O'Hagan found him inconsistent, vain, funny, proud - a Peter Pan

By Abigail Frymann

PUBLISHED: 12:26 EST, 22 February 2014 | UPDATED: 12:41 EST, 22 February 2014

The writer who was working with Julian Assange's failed 2011 autobiography has for the first time described what it was like collaborating with the WikiLeaks founder who he found by turns inconsistent, passionate, funny, lazy, courageous, vain, paranoid, moral and manipulative.

Andrew O'Hagan, an award-winning, Booker-nominated writer, was drafted in by publishers Canongate to ghost-write but as the deadline loomed Assange was increasingly uncomfortable about the whole venture and one of the highest profile book deals of recent times collapsed.

Canongate had sold books in more than 40 countries for a staggering US$2.5m before the deal imploded.

Complex: Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, whose behaviour O'Hagan sheds light on

O'Hagan told his story in a lengthy essay for the London Review of Books, a version of which he delivered in a lecture in London last night, the Guardian reported.

Ultimately, the book deal collapsed, O'Hagan wrote, because Assange had never wanted to write it.

'The man who put himself in charge of disclosing the world's secrets simply couldn't bear his own. The story of his life mortified him and sent him scurrying for excuses. He didn't want to do the book. He hadn't from the beginning,' he said.

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'Julian Assange couldn't bear his own secrets': ghostwriter speaks out

Ghostwriter: Assange™ is NARCISSISTIC and UNTRUTHFUL

4 reasons to outsource your DNS

The ghost writer hired to help Julian Assange with an autobiography deal that ultimately fell apart has described the WikiLeaker as "thin-skinned, conspiratorial, untruthful and narcissistic".

Andrew O' Hagan, who started working with Assange while he was on bail over the allegations of sexual assault in Sweden three years ago, has finally opened up about his months on the project, a hugely lucrative book deal that ended in a publishing disaster.

O'Hagan, who remained on good terms with Assange for a number of years after the deal went sour, wrote a long essay for the London Review of Books that described how the WikiLeaks head procrastinated, delayed and ultimately torpedoed the book contract.

Shortly after Assange got out on bail, he signed a multi-million-dollar deal with Canongate and foreign publishers for an autobiography that he and his lawyers believed would help him to cover his legal costs. But O'Hagan came to believe that Assange never wanted the book to happen.

"His vanity and the organisations need for money couldnt resist the project, but he never really considered the outcome, that Id be there, making marks on a page that would in some way represent this process," he said.

"He had signed up for a book he didnt really want to publish because as he alleged to me separately [his lawyer] Mark Stephens had suggested it might help cover costs."

According to O'Hagan's account, Assange would do anything to change the subject from the questions the writer had for the book and spent months avoiding marking up the first draft of the book or contributing any of the written material he had promised. As deadlines for the book crept closer, Assange started to rant that he'd never wanted to write an autobiography and wanted a manifesto instead, even though he wouldn't write down any of his thoughts and beliefs for a manifesto.

"The man who put himself in charge of disclosing the worlds secrets simply couldnt bear his own," O'Hagan said. "The story of his life mortified him and sent him scurrying for excuses. He didnt want to do the book. He hadnt from the beginning."

O'Hagan eventually left the project, which Canongate published as an unauthorised biography in September 2011 in an attempt to salvage something out of the deal, despite Assange's attempts to stop the presses. However, the biography sold just 644 copies in the first three days, a disaster for the publishing house.

Read more from the original source:
Ghostwriter: Assange™ is NARCISSISTIC and UNTRUTHFUL

Ghostwriter Reveals the Secret Life of WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange

An anonymous reader writes "From the Telegraph, 'He is vain, secretive, paranoid and jealous, prone to leering at young women and making frequent sexist jokes and that's not the view of one of his many enemies, but of a friend ... A damning picture of Julian Assange ... has emerged in a detailed account by his ghostwriter. Assange behaves ... like an egotistical tyrant interested more in his own self-publicity than in changing the world. Worse still, he turns on his friends with increasing regularity ... Assange describes the Ecuadorean ambassador offering him diplomatic asylum as 'mad', 'fat' and 'ludicrous'. Even Assange's girlfriend, WikiLeaks researcher Sarah Harrison, grew increasingly frustrated at his behaviour. 'He openly chats girls up and has his hands on their a**e and goes nuts if I even talk to another guy,' she says. O'Hagan, who had hoped to find an anti-authoritarian rebel figure worthy of admiration, says he comes to regard Assange as someone who sacrificed the moral high-ground by attempting to evade trial over the rape charges.' The Scotsman adds, 'Canongate director Jamie Byng yesterday hailed O'Hagan's account of the "impossibility of trying to ghost Assange's memoirs". He tweeted: "Andy O'Hagan's compelling, ring side account of Being (& being around) Julian Assange is smart, accurate and fair."'"

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Ghostwriter Reveals the Secret Life of WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange

Julian Assange’s ‘Ghostwriter’ Eviscerates The WikiLeaks Founder In Crushing Tell-All

REUTERS/Valentin Flauraud

Assange "talked as if the world needed him to talk and never to stop," O'Hagan writes. "Oddly for a dissident, he had no questions."

The project failed spectacularly over the next five months.

O'Hagan, an Editor at Large of Esquire, has now written a 25,000-word lambasting in the London Review of Books, in which he describes the 42-year-old Australian as "thin-skinned, conspiratorial, untruthful, [and] narcissistic."

O'Hagan, who is actually quite sympathetic to Assange, spent months around the publisher and his entourage.

The account, which seems genuine, is devastating to popular notions of Assange as a hero of transparency who has been persecuted by the governments that he holds into account.

Here are some of the most damning parts:

"His paranoia was losing him support and in a normal organization ... he would have been fired."

"The man who put himself in charge of disclosing the worlds secrets simply couldnt bear his own. The story of his life mortified him and sent him scurrying for excuses."

"His pride could engulf the room in flames. ... I was often the only person over 35 near him, apart from himself, of course, and he didnt see the problem. He didnt see the cult-leader aspect."

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Julian Assange's 'Ghostwriter' Eviscerates The WikiLeaks Founder In Crushing Tell-All

Writer dishes dirt on ‘sexist’ Assange

Writer dishes dirt on 'sexist' Assange

The man who tried to co-write Julian Assange's autobiography says the Australian can be sexist and anti-semitic as well as a courageous purser of the truth - so long as it doesn't relate to himself.

Scottish writer Andrew O'Hagan has penned a lengthy essay about his three-year relationship with Assange, which started when he was asked to ghostwrite the WikiLeaks founder's autobiography.

Like with journalist David Marr's essay on former prime minister Kevin Rudd, some might accuse O'Hagan of pop psychology.

But no one will deny his London Review of Books (LRB) article is a riveting read.

O'Hagan argues Assange has a habit of self-regard and truth-manipulation.

"The man who put himself in charge of disclosing the world's secrets simply couldn't bear his own," he writes of the failed collaboration which resulted in an unauthorised biography being published in late 2011.

"The story of his life mortified him and sent him scurrying for excuses."

O'Hagan believes the computer hacker was worried personal material - about his stepfather's drinking and the cult leader who followed his mum - would be used to suggest he was "weak".

"He wanted to cover up everything about himself except his fame."

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Writer dishes dirt on 'sexist' Assange

Julian Assange ‘couldn’t bear to reveal his own secrets’, says ghostwriter

But as the deadline for submitting the manuscript approached, Assange was "totally shocked" at the prospect of his own story being told, describing men who reveal their private lives in books as "weak" and people who write about their family as "prostitutes", O'Hagan revealed.

In the essay, O'Hagan describes Assange as passionate, funny, lazy, courageous, vain, paranoid, moral and manipulative.

He reveals how Assange sent Sarah Harrison, described by O'Hagan as Assange's secretary and girlfriend at the time, to check for assassins in bushes on his behalf during a trip to the local police station.

O'Hagan also describes one car journey in which Assange demanded the writer pull off a small country road to avoid a white Mondeo that he was convinced was tailing them, but which turned out to be a taxi dropping a child off from school.

Assange tried to convince O'Hagan to accompany him to the Hay Festival by helicopter, despite the book being unfinished and unlikely to ever be completed, said the ghostwriter.

"He wanted me to see him on the helicopter and he wanted me to assist him in living out that version of himself," O'Hagan said.

"The fact he was going to a book festival to talk about a book we both knew he would never produce was immaterial: he was flying in from Neverland with his own personal J.M. Barrie.

He also reveals details about Assanges unusual personal habits such as his insistence on eating everything with his hands including baked potatoes and jam pudding.

Frustrated by Assanges reluctance, Canongate published a version of O'Hagan's manuscript as "Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Biography" in September 2011 without the Australian's consent, in an attempt to recoup some of their investment.

Despite Assange telling O'Hagan he had covertly encouraged sales and tweeted links to its Amazon page, the book was a spectacular flop, selling fewer than 700 copies in its first week.

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Julian Assange 'couldn't bear to reveal his own secrets', says ghostwriter