Rare is there an opportunity to interrupt today’s twenty-four-hour news cycle, fueled by cable television’s incessant need for content and the explosion of Internet websites that promptly apprise us of events across the world. This appeal offers such a moment as we pause to review plaintiff-appellant Leon Levesque’s claim that defendants-appellees Fox News Network, LLC (“Fox”), Steve Doocy, and Brian Kilmeade defamed him during a show on the Fox News Channel (“FNC”). The district court, after considering Levesque’s claims, granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and upon careful review, we affirm.
I.
Because “[t]his action is an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, ... we recite the facts in the light most favorable to [Levesque] as non-movant.”
Fiacco v. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity,
On April 11, 2007, a student at Lewiston Middle School placed a bag containing leftover ham on the cafeteria table where Somali Muslim students were sitting for lunch. The Somali students reported the incident to Bill Brochu, a Lewiston police officer stationed at the school. After an investigation of the incident, the middle school’s assistant principal suspended the offending student for ten school days, a decision in which the principal concurred. The assistant principal classified the incident as “Hate Crime/Bias” in the school’s computer system, and Brochu filed a police report under the direction of his superior officer, characterizing the incident as “Crime: Harassment/Hate Bias.” Levesque was informed of the suspension and endorsed the decision.
The following week, while the Lewiston schools were closed for April vacation, Bonnie Washuk, a reporter for the Lewi-ston Sun Journal, contacted Superintendent Levesque to discuss an article she intended to write about the incident. Published on April 19, 2007, the Washuk article included quotations from both Levesque and Stephen Wessler, the executive director of the Center for the Prevention of Hate Violence (“the Center”) which was working with the Lewiston Middle School to develop an appropriate response to the incident. Washuk quoted Levesque as describing the offending student’s conduct as “a hate incident” and acknowledging, “We’ve got some work to do to turn this around and bring the school community back together ... All our students should feel welcome and safe in our schools.” Wessler described the incident as “extraordinarily hurtful and degrading” and warned that without a response, “more degrading acts will follow, until at some point we’ll end up having violence.” Somali students reflected that the event reminded them of an incident earlier that year when the head of a pig was rolled into a Lewiston mosque during a prayer session that many Somalis attended.
On April 23, four days after the Sun Journal ran Washuk’s article, Nicholas Plagman uploaded a piece he had written about the April 11 incident to Associated *85 Content, a website platform that permits registered users to publish content on topics of their choosing. While the Plagman article purported to describe the incident as a news story, it mischaracterized some facts, such as reporting that the students left a ham sandwich, rather than ham steak, on the cafeteria table. Similarly, where Washuk reported that the Center was working with the school to create a response plan, Plagman described it as “an anti-ham ‘response plan.’ ” Plagman also included fictitious quotations which generally built upon those accurately used in Washuk’s article. For example, according to Plagman, Levesque stated, “We’ve got work to do to turn this around and bring the school community back together again. These children have got to learn that ham is not a toy.” Plagman also quoted Wes-sler as stating, “It’s extraordinarily hurtful and degrading. They probably felt like they were back in Mogadishu starving and being shot at.” Finally, Plagman falsely listed the Associated Press (“AP”) as a source. Because Plagman indicated that his story should be housed under Associated Content’s “humor” and “news” categories, the article was retrievable through Google News, a computer-generated website that aggregates headlines from news sources worldwide.
Around 3:30 a.m. on April 24, a line producer for FNC’s morning news talk show “Fox & Friends” discovered the Plagman article. “Fox & Friends” runs each weekday from 6 a.m. until 9 a.m., its hosts discussing current events, interviewing guests, and reporting the weather. Producers for the show search for compelling stories for the hosts to discuss. The line producer sent the Plagman article to the Fox News Research Department for additional research. An information specialist was able to confirm some of the facts presented in the article including the identities and professional positions of Levesque and Wessler and the existence of the Center, Lewiston Middle School, and the Lewiston Police Department. He also discovered the Washuk article, confirmed that the Lewiston Sun Journal was a legitimate newspaper, and found two articles related to the incident at the Lewiston mosque.
By 4:15 a.m., the Plagman article and research materials were delivered to three of the show’s four co-hosts, including Doo-cy and Kilmeade. Doocy used Google News to conduct additional research and also found the Plagman article, the Wa-shuk article, and a brief article on the Boston Globe’s website which both corroborated the general story of the incident and confirmed that the Center was working with the school on a response plan. The defendants agreed to include the story in that morning’s show.
During the three-hour cablecast, the defendants repeatedly raised and discussed the April 11 incident, frequently ridiculing Levesque, ascribing the handling of the incident largely to him. They reported as true several of the fabricated quotations that Plagman attributed to Levesque including the “ham is not a toy” statement and also cited Levesque for the phony statement comparing the incident to Mogadishu, a comment that had been falsely attributed to Wessler in the Plagman article. Throughout the cablecast, the hosts repeated these two falsified quotations and used the incident as the basis for the “Question of the Day,” inviting viewers to call or email the show to share their thoughts. Doocy and Kilmeade at times made statements that arguably called into question the veracity of the story. For example, Doocy on a number of occasions stated, “I am not making this up,” once asserting that “I’ve looked it up on a couple of different websites up there from local papers,” and at various times, Kil- *86 meade stated “I hope we’re not being duped,” “I thought this was a joke,” and “I thought this was almost from The Onion. 1 I didn’t think that was actually true.” The show’s producers attempted to contact Levesque for comment, leaving a message at his office around 8 a.m., two hours into the cablecast. Levesque did not return the calls.
Some time after the cablecast, Levesque contacted FNC to complain about the show’s inaccuracies. 2 On May 16, 2007, “Fox & Friends” issued a retraction and apology, agreeing that various statements attributed to Levesque were fictitious and noting that had the show realized the Plag-man article was not legitimate, it would not have repeated the fabricated statements.
The following month, Levesque filed a complaint asserting libel, libel per se, false light invasion of privacy, and punitive damages, claiming that five statements made by the defendants during the cablecast were defamatory. 3 First, he took issue with the defendants’ claim that he classified the incident as a hate crime. He next objected to the defendants’ references to an “anti-ham response plan.” Third, Levesque asserted that the repeated mentions of “a ham sandwich” were defamatory. Fourth, he challenged the statement “Leon Levesque-he says, ‘These children have got to learn that ham is not a toy.’ ” Finally, Levesque disputed the defendants’ assertion that “the superintendent ... says it’s akin to making these kids feel like they’re being shot at back in Mogadishu and being starved to death.”
The defendants moved for summary judgment, contending that the statements were not defamatory and alternatively, that Levesque, who stipulated that he was a public official, could not show that the defendants acted with actual malice in making them. The district court held that the statements were protected on multiple grounds.
Levesque v. Doocy,
II.
Summary judgment is proper where the record shows “no genuine issue as to any material fact [such] that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see Hahn v. Sargent,
Although we view the record in the light most favorable to the non-movant,
Hahn,
Under Maine common law, a plaintiff alleging defamation must show a false and defamatory statement published without privilege to a third party resulting in harm to the plaintiff.
Lester v. Powers,
This actual malice standard can have “profound consequences” on the outcome of a defamation case,
Mandel v. Boston Phoenix, Inc.,
*88 Squarely within this legal framework, we first examine the challenged statements to determine whether the district court erred in holding some non-actionable and others potentially defamatory. Because with one caveat we ultimately agree with the district court’s findings, we next consider whether the defendants acted with actual malice when making the defamatory statements. 5
A. Defamatory in Nature
The district court held that a jury could find defamatory the defendants’ attribution to Levesque of two false and absurd quotations — “ham is not a toy” and “it’s akin to making these kids feel like they’re being shot at back in Mogadishu and being starved to death” — along with repeated references to a “ham sandwich” which included a recreation of the incident. The court found that the defendants’ statements that Levesque and the Lewiston Middle School considered the incident to be a potential “hate crime” and the use of the term “anti-ham response plan” were not defamatory, concluding that the former was substantially true and the latter was rhetorical hyperbole.
A communication is defamatory if it is provable as false,
Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co.,
We dispense first with those comments which the district court found non-actionable. A substantially true statement does not provide adequate basis for a defamation claim under Maine law.
Veilleux,
We also agree that the defendants’ references to an “anti-ham response plan” were not defamatory. Statements that contain “imaginative expression” or “rhetorical hyperbole” are protected.
Veilleux,
We turn next to those statements which the trial court found defamatory in nature, the defendants’ repeated references to a ham sandwich and two fabricated statements attributed to Levesque. While the district court found that the defendants’ mischaracterization of the ham placed on the Somali students’ table presented a jury question as to whether the remarks were defamatory in nature, we think it is a close question whether the references to a ham sandwich would have a different effect on the mind of a listener than an accurate report about a leftover ham steak.
See Masson,
We concur with the district court that a jury reasonably could conclude that the two fabricated statements attributed to Levesque were defamatory. The Supreme Court has observed
[i]n general, quotation marks around a passage indicate to the reader that the passage reproduces the speaker’s words verbatim. They inform the reader that he or she is reading the statement of the speaker, not a paraphrase or other indirect interpretation by an author. By providing this information, quotations add authority to the statement and credibility to the author’s work. Quotations allow the reader to form his or her own conclusions and to assess the conclusions of the author, instead of relying entirely upon the author’s characterization of her subject ... [T]he attribution may result in injury to reputation because the manner of expression or even the fact that the statement was made indicates a negative personal trait or an attitude the speaker does not hold.
Masson,
B. Actual Malice
A public official advancing a defamation claim must show “that the [challenged] statement was made with a high degree of awareness of ... probable falsity.”
Bose Corp.,
Because direct evidence of actual malice is rare, it may be proved through inference,
Bose Corp.,
Levesque contends that the defendants’ failure to corroborate the fabricated quotes from the Plagman article coupled with incredulous statements during the cablecast (e.g., “I hope we’re not being duped,” and “I thought this was a joke”) establish that the defendants acted with reckless disregard for the truth. He notes that Fox rushed to broadcast the two-week-old sto
*91
ry even though it was not breaking news.
See Curtis Pub. Co. v. Butts,
In preparing for the cablecast, the defendants authenticated the April 11 incident and various facts reported in the Plagman article through reputable sources.
Compare Tavoulareas v. Piro,
During discovery, the defendants and other Fox employees consistently stated that they believed the Plagman article was
*92
reliable, both because it cited the AP
11
and because they corroborated many of the article’s facts with other sources.
Cf. Connaughton,
To rebut these assertions, Levesque emphasizes Doocy and Kilmeade’s statements during the cablecast expressing incredulity as evidence that the defendants harbored doubts about the veracity of the quotes. In certain contexts, a statement like “I hope we’re not being duped” likely would raise a genuine issue of material fact on the question of actual malice.
See Hunt,
Beyond noting the ridiculous quality of the fabricated quotations and Doocy and Kilmeade’s statements of incredulity during the cablecast, Levesque offered no additional evidence, let alone any of “convincing clarity,”
New York Times Co.,
The actual malice standard, adopted to ensure a vibrant media check on official action, requires more of Levesque to survive summary judgment. Certainly, as we noted above, “it exacts a ... high price from the victims of defamatory falsehood. Plainly many deserving plaintiffs, including some intentionally subjected to injury, will be unable to surmount the barrier of the
New York Times
test.”
Gertz,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Notes
. The Onion is a satirical newspaper that publishes parodies of real news stories. It publishes a print version and has an website.
. After the April 11 incident, Levesque began receiving derogatory and threatening emails and phone calls from persons who learned about the incident and the student's suspension. Levesque submitted seventy-five emails to the district court; sixty-nine were written after the “Fox & Friends” cablecast. Several were written during the hours that the cablecast ran, and while the defendants suggest that no email specifically mentioned Fox, at least one does.
.In the action below, Levesque challenged six statements by the defendants. On appeal, he has elected to press his claims with respect to only five. Therefore, we omit reference to the statement which Levesque does not raise on appeal.
. We are not unmindful of this circuit's recent defamation decision in
Noonan v. Staples, Inc.,
. Levesque also appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the false light invasion of privacy claim. Because this claim “is simply a restatement of his defamation claim under a different heading,"
Brown v. Hearst Corp.,
. Alternatively, this statement could be characterized as substantially true.
See Veilleux,
. Similarly, a jury reasonably could conclude that the statements met the "highly offensive to a reasonable person” element of the Maine false light cause of action.
Veilleux,
. In addition to those statements which we have found potentially defamatory for summary judgment purposes, the Plagman article falsely cited Levesque as staling "[a]ll our students should feel welcome in our schools, knowing that they are safe from attacks with ham, bacon, porkchops, or any other delicious meat that comes from pigs.” The defendants did not repeat this fabricated statement, and on appeal, Levesque has not argued that it provides further support for a finding of defamation.
. Nonetheless, the “Fox & Friends” show was more timely than the defamatory articles in
Hunt,
published in 1978 about the plaintiffs possible involvement in the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Jr.,
.We acknowledge that the case law which instructs our inquiry does not include situations in which defendants relied on Internet sources, a more recent but undoubtedly commonplace practice today. While publishers should employ greater caution with those Internet websites that do not go through the vetting process of traditional news media, reliance in part on an Internet posting does not necessarily change our legal analysis.
See Zeran v. Diamond Broad., Inc.,
. None of the Fox employees were familiar with Associated Content when they discovered the Plagman article, but they consistently indicated that they found relevant its citation to the AP. In fact, several, including Doocy, stated that they believed the Plagman article actually was an AP piece. In his deposition, Levesque's expert recognized the AP's reputation for reliability and noted that it was one of two sources he regularly used. Still, we agree with the expert that "[t]he discrepancy [between an Associated Content piece and an AP piece] should [have] been spotted.” But where, as here, the plaintiff has failed to adduce additional evidence of a defendant’s subjective recklessness, this oversight establishes only negligence, not actual malice.
. We also observe that Doocy and Kil-meade’s statements of incredulity often accompanied their largely accurate summaiy of the April 11 incident and were not directed toward the challenged statements attributed to Levesque.
. Because Levesque cannot show actual malice for his defamation claim, the district court also was correct in granting summary judgment on the false light claim.
Howard,
