OPINION
LeaAnne Klentzman (“Klentzman”) and Carter Publications, Inc. d/b/a The West Fort Bend Star, Inc. (“the Star”) (together, “appellants”), bring this interlocutory appeal complaining that the trial court erred in denying summary judgment relief in a libel suit brought by appellee, Wade Brady (“Wade”). See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (Vernon 2008). 1 In seven issues, appellants assert that (1) Wade failed to produce more than a scintilla of probative evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the element of falsity, or, alternatively, appellants conclusively negated the element of falsity by establishing the substantial truth of the article; (2) Wade failed to produce more than a scintilla of probative evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the element of actual malice, or, alternatively, appellants conclusively negated actual malice; and (3) a portion of the article was an expression of opinion and not actionable as defamation. We affirm the denial of summary judgment.
Background
Wade is the son of Craig Brady (“Chief Brady”), chief deputy sheriff for Fort Bend County. The Star is a newspaper in Fort Bend County and Klentzman is one of its reporters. From August 2001 through May 2002, the Star published a number of opinion columns that included references to various incidents involving Chief Brady’s sons, Wade and Cullen Brady, and Chief Brady’s actions relative to such incidents or on behalf of his sons. None of those columns are the subject of the suit underlying this appeal. Among the incidents described in the opinion columns were the ticketing of Wade by sheriffs deputies for a minor-in-possession of *892 alcohol (“MIP”) charge, 2 and the stop and detention of Cullen and Wade in their driveway by a Department of Public Safety (“DPS”) trooper who had followed them to investigate suspected erratic driving by Cullen. The opinion columns also described various actions that Chief Brady had allegedly taken on behalf of his sons, including conducting numerous tape-recorded meetings with the deputies who had been present when Wade was ticketed for MIP in order to ask whether the deputies had been “ugly” when ticketing Wade.
On January 15, 2003, the Star published an article, written by Klentzman, entitled, “Deputy Brady’s tape collecting called ‘Roadside Suppression.’ ” This article (“the Article”) is the subject of this suit. The Article:
■ stated that since November 21, 2002, Chief Brady had been collecting audiotapes from deputies regarding Wade’s 2001 MIP charge;
■ recalled one of the incidents previously recounted in one of the columns involving Wade’s report of a stolen cell phone and Chief Brady’s pursuit of the man who had Wade’s cell phone;
■ described testimony from the August 2002 trial of Wade’s MIP charge regarding the circumstances leading up to the ticket;
■ noted that MIP citations are not uncommon, but called Wade’s unique because Chief Brady “continually made contact with the officers involved,” stating that, “[ajccording to officers, the issue would have been moot if everything had just ended with the ticket”;
■ recalled the audio-taped meetings that Chief Brady had held with the deputies who issued the ticket, and described Chief Deputy Brady’s conduct on the audiotapes as well as other details related to the meeting, basing some of the details on testimony from the August 2002 trial;
■ stated that “[pjersonnel of the sheriffs office [had] dubbed the numerous twilight meetings [with the ticketing deputies] held in various parking lots ... to be ‘roadside suppression hearings,’ making jest of a legal maneuver by defense lawyers to keep evidence out of court;”
■ described the circumstances of one of these meetings, which included the Sheriffs participation;
■ stated that “[d]uring this ‘Roadside Suppression Hearing’ another incident with Wade and Cullen Brady was unfolding in [Chief Brady’s] driveway,” namely, that “Brady’s sons had led a DPS Trooper from the streets of Rosenberg winding down narrow roads all the way to their riverside home”;
■ described that “in the DPS tape [of the stop] viewed by the Star ... Wade Brady was so unruly and intoxicated that the Trooper had to handcuff him and place him the backseat of the police car for safety”; and described other aspects of the stop based on the Star’s review of the tape;
■ stated that an order of expunction had been signed in a justice of the peace court on November 21, 2002, but that there was “some controversy over the validity of the order”; cited alleged text from a statute requiring courts presiding over cases where a defendant had been acquitted to enter an order of expunction within 30 days; noted that the order *893 was signed “59 days” late; and quoted a lawyer who said that the order was void and that documents were going to be filed to get the order set aside;
■ stated that Chief Deputy Brady had, since November 21, 2002, used the expunction order as legal authority to collect all the audio-tapes of his meetings with those deputies who issued Wade the MIP ticket; and cited Bud Childers, Fort Bend County Attorney, as stating that Chief Brady could not legally use the expunction order to confiscate the tapes from the deputies because the tapes were outside of the scope of the order;
■ suggested that “it should be glaringly apparent why the officers involved in the MIP incident with Wade Brady were intimidated when their boss Chief Deputy Craig Brady notified them that he had an order of expunction and demanded any and all audio tapes or notes from the incident in their possession”; and stated that the deputies had been ordered to turn over the tapes and had complied, “feeling that they had no choice”;
■ concluded with the statement that “[f|or now, the ‘Roadside Suppression Hearings’ have ended with personnel at the sheriffs office just wondering when the other shoe will drop.”
Procedural History
Wade brought suit against appellants for libel 3 and libel per se 4 based on statements in the January 15, 2008 article. He alleged that appellants published a writing that injured his. reputation by “omitting] material facts and therefore creating] a misleading presentаtion of the factual circumstances regarding [his] trial and the unrelated stop by the DPS trooper.” He asserted that “[m]any of the statements in the [ ] article [had] no basis in fact and [were] nothing other than deliberate lies,” that appellants knew that the writing was untrue, and that appellants had made the writing with malice and the intent to cause him harm and injury.
Wade further alleged that appellants had portrayed him “as engaging in criminal activity,” thus subjecting themselves to a claim of libel per se. As to the libel per se claim, Wade asserted that an ordinary person would have drawn a reasonable conclusion from the article that he had committed a criminal act, namely, that he had “engaged in a violation of the minor in possession statute, circumvented Texas law, and was the beneficiary of acts of official oppression.”
*894 Appellants filed a general denial answer and asserted a number of defenses, including that the statements were not materially false and were true or substantially true; some of the statements were non-actionable opinion, rhetoric, or hyperbole; some of the statements were privileged under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code sections 73.002(b)(1) and (2); and Wade was a limited purpose public figure thus requiring appellant to prove that the statements were published with constitutional actual malice, which appellants did not do.
Appellants filed a motion for summary judgment, which the trial court granted in part and denied in part. 5 About eighteen months later, appellants filed a second motion for summary judgment, the denial of which gave rise to this appeal. In their second motion for summary judgment, appellants asserted that:
■ Wade was a limited purpose public figure as a matter of law and so had the burden to show that the speech at issue was false;
■ Conversely, on summary judgement, a showing of substantial truth by the defendant precludes liability;
■ As a limited purpose public figure, Wade had to prove the speech was published with actual malice, not just negligence; and
■ appellants negated actual malice as a matter of law through attached affidavits.
Appellants then argued that they were entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law on the following “traditional” 6 grounds:
(1) “The Article and the statements complained of by [Wаde] are true or substantially true as a matter of law, thus negating an essential element of [Wade’s] cause of action;
(2) “[Wade] is a limited purpose public figure”;
(3) As a matter of law, [appellants] did not publish the Article with actual malice; and
(4) “The statement in the Article, ‘[i]n the DPS videotape viewed by the Star and then later obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Wade Brady was so unruly and intoxicated that the Trooper had to handcuff him and place him in the backseat of the police car for safety,’ is opinion and, therefore non-actionable under Texas law.’ ”
Appellants also argued that they were entitled to summary judgment on the following “no-evidence” 7 grounds, asserting the want of evidence “of the following elements of [Wade’s] defamation cause of action”:
(1) material falsity; and
(2) actual malice.
The second motion for summary judgment was heard by an associate judge who issued an order denying the motion on both its traditional and no-evidence summary judgment grounds. 8 The associate *895 judge’s order also included a statement that “[t]he Court further finds that Plaintiff Wade Brady is not a limited purpose public figure and is, therefore, not required to demonstrate actual malice to prevail on his claims at trial.”
Appellants appealed the associate judge’s decision to the district court, requesting a de novo hearing. 9 In that appeal, appellants complained that the associate judge had erred as a matter of law for the reasons set forth in the second motion for summary judgment, including (1) “failing to properly apply the substantial truth doctrine in determining [appellants’] traditional summary judgment motion with respect to the affirmative defense of truth, and with respect to [appellants’] no-evidence summary judgment motion with respect to material falsity, an essential element of [Wade’s] claim for relief’; (2) “failing to properly apply the limited purpose public figure doctrine” by failing to determine that Wade was a limited purpose public figure; and (8) “failing to apply the constitutional actual malice standard” and failing to determine, as a matter of law, “that actual malice was negated by [appellants] and [Wade] failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the existence of actual malice.” Appellants did not refer to their fourth traditional summary judgment ground that had asserted that a particular statеment in the article regarding the DPS videotape was a matter of opinion and so not actionable.
The district court, after holding a de novo hearing, issued an order affirming the associate judge’s denial of [appellant’s] second motion for summary judgment. 10 The decretal portion of the district court’s order read, in relevant part, 11
After considering [the] issues [as recited in appellants’ motion] raised on appeal de novo, based on the record and oral argument, the Court AFFIRMS the Associate Judge’s Order entered March 7, 2007 with respect to the issues appealed by [appellants] and hereby DENIES [appellants’ second motion for summary judgment] on the issues raised on appeal as follows:
(A) [Appellants] have not sustained their burden of establishing the affirmative defense of substantial truth and therefore their conventional motion on the affirmative defense of substantial truth is DENIED.
(B) [Wade] has raised a question for the trier of fact on the issue of material falsity and, therefore, [appellants’] no evidence motion on this point is DENIED;
(C) The Court holds that [Wade] is not a limited purpose public fig *896 ure as a matter of law and, therefore, is not required to demonstrate actual malice to prevail on his claims; therefore, Defendants’ conventional motion on the issue of negating actual malice and Defendants’ no evidence motion on the issue of actual malice are DENIED as moot[.]
Appellants bring an interlocutory appeal from this order. 12
Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s decision to grant or to deny a motion for summary judgment de novo.
See Tex. Mun. Power Agency v. Pub. Util. Comm’n of Tex.,
A motion for summary judgment must stand or fall on the grounds expressly presented in the motion,
McConnell v. Southside Indep. Sell. Dist.,
Under the traditional summary judgment standard, the movant has the burden to show that no genuine issues of material fact exist and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Nixon v. Mr. Prop. Mgmt. Co., Inc.,
A motion fоr no-evidence summary judgment is essentially a directed verdict granted before trial, to which we apply a legal-sufficiency standard of review.
King Ranch, Inc. v. Chapman,
When a party seeks both a traditional and a no-evidence summary judgment, we first review the trial court’s decision regarding summary judgment under the no-evidence standards of Rule 166a(i); if the non-movant failed to produce more than a scintilla of evidence raising a genuine issue of fact on the challenged elements of his claim, there is no need to analyze whether the movant met his burden on his motion for traditional summary judgment.
Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway,
Fault, Falsity, and Substantial Truth in Libel Cases involving Media Defendants
Generally, to prevail on a cause of action for libel against a media defendant, a plaintiff must prove that the defendant (1) published a statement (2) that was defamatory concerning the plaintiff (3) while acting with actual malice, if the plaintiff was a public official or public figure, or while acting with negligence, if the plaintiff was a private individual, regarding the truth of the statement.
WFAA-TV, Inc. v. McLemore,
The third requirement relates to a showing of fault on the part of the media defendant, which is a constitutional prerequisite for defamation liability.
Id.
As to this requirement, the public plaintiff must prove, by clear and convincing evi
*898
dence, that the media defendant published the statement with “actual malice,” that is, “made -with knowledge of [the statement’s] falsity or with reckless disregard for the truth.”
See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
Both standards of fault — negligence and actual malice — inherently incorporate the notion of falsity.
See Foster,
Whether or not a particular plaintiff is required to prove the falsity of the challenged statement, a defendant may assert truth as a defense to a libel action.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 73.005 (Vernon 2005);
Randall's Food Mkts., Inc. v. Johnson,
However, “literally or substantially true” facts which are “published in such a way that they create a substantially false and defamatory impression by omitting material facts or juxtaposing facts in a misleading way” are actionable as defamation. Id. at 115. Therefore, a defendant who “gets the details right but fails to put them in the proper context and thereby gets the story’s ‘gist’ wrong” may be held liable for defamation. Id. Whether a publication is false depends on “a reasonable person’s perception of the entirety of a publication and not merely on individual statements.” Id.
Conversely, liability is precluded when a defendant “correctly conveys a story’s ‘gist’ or ‘sting’ although erring in the details.”
Id.
This is known as the “substantial truth” doctrine.
Id.
Courts use the “substantial truth” test to determine whether a statement is false.
Masson v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc.,
Analysis
Appellants present seven issues on appeаl. Their first is a broad issue questioning whether the trial court erred in denying appellants’ motion for summary judgment and in not rendering a take-nothing summary judgment against Wade. Although we recognize that such a broad issue is authorized,
13
an appellant must nevertheless also present argument and supporting authorities in support of that issue.
See McCoy v. Rogers,
A. Falsity and substantial truth
In their second issue, appellants assert that there is “no evidence, or insufficient evidence, that the Challenged Statements in the Article are false” and in their third issue, they aver that “the evidence establishes as a matter of law that the Challenged Statements in the Article are *900 not false and are, in fact, substantially true.” 14 Considering such issues in light of the grounds presented in appellant’s second summary judgment motion and them appeal to the district court, and the district court’s ruling on the same, appellants raise in these issues the following legal challenges to the trial court’s ruling:
■ Appellants were entitled to a no-evidence summary judgment because Wade failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the essential element of falsity; and
■ Appellants were entitled to a traditional summary judgment because they showed that no genuine issue of material fact exists and they conclusively negated the essential element of falsity or conclusively established their affirmative defense that the challenged statements in the Article were “substantially true.”
We first note that both parties agree that Wade was required to prove the falsity of the complained-of article, so we assume, without deciding, that falsity is an essential element of Wade’s cause of action.
15
Both parties also refer us to the “substantial truth” doctrine as the basis for making a determination regarding the truth or falsity of the Article, and contend that a determination of “falsity” depends on whether the “gist” of the publication is substantially true or, conversely, whether it creates a substantially false and defamatory impression.
See Turner,
1. The “gist" of the Article
Appellants argue that, even if particular underlying statements in the Article are inaccurate, the “gist” of the Article is nev
*901
ertheless substantially true.
See Masson,
Wade argues that, even if particular underlying statements in the Article are literally true, the “gist” of the Article is false because, through omission of material facts, it creates a substantially false impression.
See Turner,
We construe the Article “as a whole in light of the surrounding circumstances based upon how a person of ordinary intelligence would perceive it.”
See id.
at 114. “Falsity for constitutional purposes depends upon the meaning a reasonable person would attribute to a publication, and not to a technical analysis of each statement.”
New Times, Inc. v. Isaacks,
We first observe that the heading of the Article is “Deputy Brady’s tape collecting called ‘Roadside Suppression.’ ” The target of the Article is Chief Brady and the subject of the Article, albeit with many extraneous details and digressions, is the alleged demand by Chief Brady for deputies to turn over certain audiotapes and the propriety of such alleged action. To the extent that the Article addresses Wade’s incidents with the law, the emphasis is on Wade’s father’s reaction to those incidents, and not on Wade. Construing the Article as a whole, in light of the surrounding circumstances and based upon how a person of ordinary intelligence would рerceive it, we conclude that the gist of the Article is that Chief Brady, in an effort to help his son, Wade, abused his official position by intervening on his son’s behalf in an effort to “suppress” evidence, specifically, by intimidating and coercing the deputies who issued Wade a ticket and illegally demanding and requiring them to turn over to him audiotapes related to the incident. Although many details regarding Wade’s encounters with law enforcement appear in the Article, the “gist” of the Article is not Wade’s alleged misdeeds; Wade is a secondary character, portrayed as the beneficiary of his father’s purportedly improper actions, whose dealings with the law provided the catalyst for his father’s alleged misconduct. 16
2. Did Wade meet his burden in the no-evidence summary judgment proceeding to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the essential element of falsity?
In order to avoid a no-evidence summary judgment on the issue of falsity, Wade was required to present more than a scintilla of evidence to raise a genuine
*902
issue of material fact as to whether the “gist” of the Article was false, that is, whether the “gist” created a “substantiаlly false and defamatory impression.”
Forbes,
Contrary to appellants’ assertions, the facts underlying the “gist” of the Article are not uncontested. Wade’s summary judgment evidence included affidavits from all three deputies who were involved in issuing the ticket to Wade, in which the deputies specifically deny the claims of intimidation and coercion on the part of Chief Brady that underlie the “gist” of the Article. There was also deposition evidence from the deputies before the trial court (attached to appellant’s motion for summary judgment) and an affidavit from the Fort Bend County Attorney that contradict various assertions in the Article— and the impression that they convey — regarding the Chief Brady’s alleged demands for the audiotapes, the propriety of any demands and the legal scope of the expunction order, and the means and reasons for the deputies’ compliance with the expunction order. The deputies’ affidavits and deposition excerpts, along with the transcript of an audiotape referenced in the article, also provide evidence that Chief Brady specifically told the deputies — at one of the meetings that the Article dubs a “Roadside Suppression Hearing” — that writing the MIP ticket was “not a problem,” that they should proceed forward with Wade’s case and “do the whole thing,” and that a jury trial on the ticket would be a good learning experience for Wade, whom Chief Deputy Brady had recently caught drinking. 17 The Article omits any reference to this portion of the audiotape that directly contravenes the Article’s “gist” that Chief Deputy Brady was trying to “suppress” evidence for Wade’s benefit and intimidate or coerce the deputies regarding the ticket given to Wade.
This evidence would allow reasonable and fair-minded people to differ in their conclusions as to whether Chief Brady abused his official position by intimidating and coercing the deputies in an improper effort to “suppress” evidence in order to help Wade. Accordingly, we hold that Wade presented more thаn a scintilla of evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the “gist” of the Article was false, and therefore appellants were not entitled to a no-evidence summary judgment on the essential element of falsity.
See Forbes,
3. Did appellants meet their traditional summary judgment burden to show that no genuine issue of material fact exists and to conclusively negate the essential element of falsity or conclusively establish their affirmative defense that the challenged statements in the Article were “substantially true”?
As we have held that Wade raised a genuine issue of material fact on the essential element of falsity, it necessarily follows that appellants did not establish that “there was no genuine issue of material fact” and conclusively negate the essential element of falsity so as to be entitled to a traditional summary judgment on that ground.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Sci Spectrum,
*903
Appellants nevertheless argue that they were entitled to summary judgment because they conclusively established the Article’s substantial truth by showing that its gist is not more damaging to Wade’s reputation in the mind of the average reader than the truth.
See McIlvain,
We conclude that appellants did not meet their burden to (1) establish that no genuine issue of material fact exists and (2) to either conclusively negate falsity or conclusively establish the substantial truth of the Article.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Sci. Spectrum,
We overrule appellants’ second and third issues.
B. Actual malice and Wade’s status as a limited purpose public figure
In their fourth and fifth issues, appellants assert that they established as a matter of law that Wade is a limited purpose figure required to prove that the Article was published with actual malice, and that there was “no evidence, or insufficient evidence,” of actual malice before the court on summary judgment. In their related sixth issue, appellants argue that they established, as a matter of law, that the Article was published without actual malice. Considering such issues in light of the grounds presented in appellant’s second summary judgment motion and their appeal to the district court, and the district court’s ruling on the same, appellants raise in these issues the following legal challenges to the trial court’s ruling:
■ Appellants established as a matter of law that Wade was a limited purpose public figure and thus the trial court erred in declaring otherwise and ruling that actual malice was not an essential element of Wade’s cause of action; and
*904 ■ because Wade was a limited purpose public figure and was therefore required to prove actual malice as an essential element of his cause of action, appellants were entitled to a no-evidence summary judgment because Wade failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact on the essential element of actual malice; and
■ because Wade was a limited purpose public figure and was therefore required to prove actual malice as an essential element of his cause of action, appellants were entitled to a traditional summary judgment because they showed that no genuine issue of material fact exists and they conclusively negated the essential element of actual malice.
Public figures suing a media defendant for defamation must prove that the defendant published the statement with “actual malice.”
18
See Gertz,
There are two classes of “public figures”: (1) general-purpose public figures, who are individuals who “achieve such pervasive fame or notоriety that [they] become[ ] public figure[s] for all purposes and in all contexts;” and (2) limited-purpose public figures, who are persons who “thrust themselves to the forefront of particular public controversies in order to influence the resolution of the issues involved .... inviting attention and comment,” who “inject[ ] [themselves] or [are] drawn into a particular public controversy .... assuming] special prominence in the resolution of public questions,” “thrusting [themselves] into the vortex of [a] public issue ... [or] engaging] the public’s attention in an attempt to influence its outcome.” Ger
tz,
To determine whether a person is a limited-purpose public figure, Texas courts apply a three-part test:
(1) the controversy at issue must be public both in the sense that people are discussing it and people other than the immediate participants in the controversy are likely to feel the impact of its resolution;
(2) the plaintiff must have more than a trivial or tangential role in the controversy; and
*905 (3) the alleged defamation must be germane to the plaintiffs partiсipation in the controversy.
McLemore,
To determine whether a public controversy existed and its scope, a court must examine “whether persons actually were discussing some specific question.”
McLemore,
To determine whether an individual had more than a trivial or tangential role in the controversy, a court should consider: (1) whether the plaintiff actively sought publicity surrounding the controversy; (2) whether the plaintiff had access to the media; and (3) whether the plaintiff voluntarily engaged in activities that necessarily involved the risk of increased exposure and injury to reputation.
McLemore,
A person does not become a public figure merely because he is “discussed” repeatedly by a media defendant or because his actions become a matter of controversy as a result of the media defendant’s actions.
See Hutchinson v. Proxmire,
Reviewing the evidence at summary judgment in the required light — taking the evidence that is favorable to Wade as true, indulging every inference in his favor, and resolving any doubts in his favor — we conclude that appellants did not establish as a matter of law that Wade is a limited-purpose public figure.
Firstly, the evidence does not suppоrt a finding that there was any “public controversy,” involving “people discussing a real question,” “the resolution of which was likely to impact persons other than those involved in the controversy.” Appellants cite to their own prior opinion columns in the
Star
in which they “grouched and groaned” about Chief Brady, but the mere fact that appellants (and no other press) chose to write and publish opinion columns about Chief Brady is merely evidence of appellants’ “concern,” not a “public” discussion of a “real question.” Likewise, the fact that “Chief Deputy Brady ... knew that his actions ... would be controversial
*906
and likely the subject of public interest,” and that he and the deputies made audiotapes, is not evidence that a controversy already existed in which the “public” was “actually discussing a specific question.”
See McLemore,
Moreover, even assuming the existence of a “public controversy” regarding the alleged “roadside suppression hearings” and Chief Brady’s actions relative to the expunction order, appellants have not proven, as a matter of law, that Wade was a limited-public figure as to this particular controversy. Appellants argue that the fact that Wade “is the son of the Chief Deputy” causes him to be “the subject of public scrutiny” and that his various interactions with the law such as being hаndcuffed a week after the MIP stop by the DPS trooper, his calling of his father when someone stole his cell phone almost two years prior to the MIP stop (when Wade was apparently 16 years old), and his coming home “crying” to his father after the MIP stop, therefore constituted voluntary engagement in activities that “necessarily involved the risk of increased exposure and injury to reputation.” Appellants also mention Wade’s defense of himself at the trial on the MIP ticket and his subsequent petition for an expunction. Appellants assert that, as a result of these actions, Wade became a limited-purpose public figure.
However, the mere fact that Wade’s father is a public official and, thus, that Wade’s behavior might be more “newsworthy” than a teenager whose father was not a public official, does not mean that any alleged misbehavior in which he might have engaged made Wade a limited-purpose public figure with respect to the particular controversy at issue in this litigation. “A libel defendant must show more than mere newsworthiness to justify application of the demanding burden of [actual malice].”
Wolston,
The evidence at summary judgment does not support a finding that Wade “thrust [himself] to the forefront” of that “particular public controversfy] in order to
*907
influence the resolution of the issues involved .... [i]nvit[ing] attention and comment,” or “inject[ed] himself or [was] drawn into [that] particular public controversy .... assuming] special prominence in the resolution of public questions,” or “thrust himself into the vortex of [a] public issue ... [or] engage[d] the public’s attention in an attempt to influence its outcome.”
Gertz,
Appellants invite us to create a new category of limited-purpose public figures in Texas — an “involuntary” limited-purpose public figure, who becomes a public figure “when his or her conduct is related in an integral and meaningful way to the conduct of a public official” — and cite to a decision from an intermediate Tennessee appeals court for support of this proposition.
See Lewis v. NewsChannel 5 Network, L.P.,
Having held that Wade was not a limited-purpose public figure, we reject appellants’ contention that Wade was required to prove actual malice as an essential element of his cause of action. 20 We there *908 fore need not address whether Wade presented evidence of actual malice in order to defeat a summary judgment. We hold that appellants were not entitled to either a no-evidence or a traditional summary judgment on the ground that Wade was required to present evidence of actual malice because he was a limited purpose public figure and failed to do so, or on the basis that, because he was a limited purpose public figure, Wade’s cause of аction failed because appellants negated the essential element of actual malice as a matter of law.
We overrule issues four, five, and six.
C. Non-actionable opinion
In their seventh issue, appellants assert that a particular statement in the Article — namely, “In the DPS videotape viewed by the Star and then later obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Wade Brady was so unruly and intoxicated that the Trooper had to handcuff him and place him in the backseat of the police car for safety” — was an assertion of opinion, not of fact, and therefore, not actionable as defamation.
See
Bentley,
We overrule appellants’ seventh issue.
*909 D. Appellants’ Malooly issue
Having overruled all of appellants’s specific complaints regarding the denial of summary judgment, we overrule appellants’ first issue broadly complaining of the denial of summary judgment.
Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s denial of appellants’ no-evidence and traditional motions for summary judgment and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (Vernon 2008) (authorizing interlocutory appeal from denial of motion for summary judgment "that is based in whole or in part upon a claim against or defense by a member of the electronic or print media, acting in such capacity, or a person whose communication appears in or is published by the electronic or print media, arising under the free speech or free press clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, or Article I, Section 8, of the Texas Constitution, or Chapter 73”);
Belo Corp. v. Publicaciones Paso Del Norte, S.A. De C.V.,
. Wade was later acquitted of the charge and an expunction order entered.
.Libel is
a defamation expressed in written or other graphic form that tends to blacken the memory of the dead or that tends to injure a living person's reputation and thereby expose the person to public hatred, contempt or ridicule, or financial injury or to impeach any person’s honesty, integrity, virtue, or reputation or to publish the natural defects of anyone and thereby expose the person to public hatred, ridicule, or financial injury.
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 73.001 (Vernon 2005).
.A statement that is libel per se is so obviously hurtful that it does not require proof of injury in order to be actionable.
Columbia Valley Reg. Med. Ctr. v. Bannert,
.The trial court granted the summary judgment as to the following statement in the article:
The trooper attempted to perform field sobriety tests on Cullen Brady, the driver, but Cullen was uncooperative.
Appellants did not appeal the court’s partial denial of their first motion for summary judgment.
. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c).
. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i).
. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 54.1001 (Vernon 2005) (allowing certain courts to appoint associate judges in Fort Bend County); id. § 54.1009(a) (providing for referral of certain civil matters to associate judge); id. *895 § 54.1011 (establishing duties and powers of associate judge).
. See id. § 54.1018 (allowing for appeal of associate judge’s "report” to referring court, and further allowing trial de novo in referring court upon that appeal).
. See id. § 54.1019(a) ("[I]n the case of an appeal under [Government Code] Section 54.1018, after the [referring] сourt has decided the appeal, the court may adopt, modify, correct, reject, or reverse the associate judge's report or may recommit it for further information, as the court determines to be proper and necessary in each case.”); see also id. § 54.1020 ("The finding and recommendations become the decree or judgment of the court when adopted and approved by an order of the judge.”).
.The district court's order also addressed appellants' complaint regarding a ruling by the associate judge on a matter that was not raised in the notice of appeal to the district court. The district court ruled that right to de novo review of that matter was waived. No complaint is made on appeal of the district judge’s ruling on that matter.
. Appellants filed two appeals in this Court related to the denial of their motion for summary judgment. The first appeal was from the order of the associate judge and it was assigned appellate cause number 01-07-00307-CV. The second appeal was from the order of the district court affirming associate judge’s order and it was assigned appellate cause number 01-07-00520-CV. Wе consolidated the two appeals into cause number 01-07-00520-CV. Because the associate judge’s order did not become an order of the court until it was affirmed by the district court judge, see id. § 54.1020, it is the district court order that we review on appeal.
.
See Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier,
. Appellants also argue that Wade failed to establish that the challenged statements were defamatory, but this argument was not raised as a ground for summary judgment in appellants' second motion for summary judgment and so we cannot consider it.
See Travis v. City of Mesquite,
. In his brief on appeal, Wade did not assert that he had no burden to prove falsity, but simply argued that he had raised a fact issue as to the falsity of the article. At oral argument, Wade specifically conceded to this Court that he had the burden to prove falsity. Moreover, as we have earlier noted, the plaintiff bears the burden to prove falsity in a defamation suit against a media defendant when the suit involves an issue of public concern.
See Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
. We do not address whether, and, if so, to what extent, the Article was “of and concerning” Wade. Appellants first raised this question on appeal in their reply brief. We need not determine whether the question was timely raised on appeal, however, because appellants did not raise such a complaint to the trial court as a basis for summary judgment in the second summary judgment motion whose denial is at issue in this case.
See Travis,
. Chief Deputy Brady also discussed his frustrations with his sons, his concerns about their possible drinking, and his efforts to supervise them.
. At trial, a public figure must prove actual malice by "clear and convincing” evidence, but this level of proof is not required at the summary judgment stage.
Huckabee v. Time Warner Entm’t Co., L.P.,
.
See Am. Broad. Co., Inc. v. Gill,
. Appellants did not assert to the trial court that Wade was required to prove actual malice in order to recover any presumed or punitive damages because the defamatory statement involved a matter of public concern,
see Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
. See footnote 12.
. We. note that a defamatory , statement must be sufficiently factual to be susceptible of being proved objectively true or false, as contrasted from a purely subjective assertion.
See Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co.,
