The plaintiffs, Robert L. and Karen C. Pritsker (Pritskers) and Karenkir, Inc., claim that they were defamed and damaged by certain statements made by the defendant David Brudnoy during the broadcast of a program on the radio station owned and operated by the defendant WHDH Corporation (WHDH). After a judge in the Superior Court denied both parties’ motions for summary judgment, the defendants petitioned a single justice of the Appeals Court for authorization to appeal the denial under *777 G. L. c. 231, § 118, first par. The single justice granted the defendants’ application and the defendants entered the appeal in the Appeals Court. We transferred the case here on our own motion. We now reverse the order of the Superior Court judge and order that judgments enter for the defendants.
The essential facts are not in dispute. In 1976, the Pritskers operated “dodin-bouffant” (the lower case is consistent with the name used in the record), a gourmet French restaurant owned by Karenkir, Inc., a corporation which was, in turn, wholly owned by the Pritskers. Brudnoy is a well known critic and radio talk show host. In 1976, he was employed by WHDH as the host of “Nightline,” a nightly program which followed the familiar listener “call-in” or “two-way” format. On his program on September 10, 1976, Brudnoy and two guests from the restaurant industry discussed restaurants in the Boston area. This was the only major topic of the program. Shortly after the final segment of the program began, Brudnoy and his guests resumed their discussion of the custom of tipping which they had begun during the previous hour. Brudnoy criticized the European practice of some restaurants of adding the gratuity to the bill which Brudnoy opined interfered with the diner’s right to communicate his or her pleasure or displeasure with the service. Brudnoy mentioned two restaurants by name, one of which was dodin-bouffant. When a guest attempted to “rise to the defense” of dodin-bouffant, Brudnoy acknowledged that the “[fjood is fine . . . superb . . . absolutely.” When the guest then commented on how well the restaurant’s service staff coordinated a meal, Brudnoy replied: “They have gotten better. They have gotten better and better. It’s just as I’ve said in all fairness. I praise the book, . . . the restaurant in my book. 3 The manage . . . the people who own the place are unconscionably rude and vulgar people. And the attitude that they communicate is awful. But the food is fine. And it kills me to say this because I *778 would like to be able to dump on their restaurant. I keep going there hoping it will decline and it doesn’t. The food is fine, the people who run it are PIGS.” 4 Brudnoy admits that his remarks were intended to refer to the Pritskers.
In three recent cases we have defined the contours of an action of defamation.
Cole
v.
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.,
“It is the function of the court to determine whether an expression of opinion is capable of bearing a defamatory meaning because it may reasonably be understood to imply the assertion of undisclosed facts that justify the expressed opinion about the plaintiff or his conduct . . . .” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 566 comment c (1977). In making this determination we look to the entire context of the communication. See
Cole
v.
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.,
Brudnoy was a recognized restaurant critic and his guests were experienced in the restaurant field. Brudnoy’s comments arose during the course of a two-hour discussion about restaurants. With such participants engaged in such a discussion, the listener could expect the topic to go beyond simply the quality of food served and include consideration of such things as service and atmosphere. Indeed, the listener could expect to hear critical evaluation of all aspects of dining at the various restaurants under discussion. Further, the listener might expect that any opinions offered by Brudnoy or his guests about a particular restaurant would be based upon the totality of the speaker’s observations of and experiences with the restaurant. Finally, the listener could expect that Brudnoy and his guests would invoke some hyperbolic or rhetorical language both in their praise and in their criticism of the restaurants. 5
*780 Within this framework, we look to the three underlying facts which Brudnoy disclosed. The first is that he disliked dodin-bouffant’s practice of adding the gratuity to the bill; the second is that he had reviewed the restaurant in his book; and the third is that he had visited the restaurant on a number of occasions looking for reasons to criticize it. With these facts revealed within the general context described above, we think that the average listener would assume that Brudnoy’s comments were based only on his observations of conditions at the restaurant, such as its service, decor, and atmosphere, and would regard his comments simply as his opinion of conditions which he, as a professional restaurant critic, found unsatisfactory or distasteful and which he reasonably attributed to the owners of the restaurant. 6 As such, Brudnoy’s comments would represent pure opinion, based on partly disclosed and partly assumed facts, and would not be actionable.
The case of
Myers
v.
Boston Magazine Co.,
The specific context of Brudnoy’s comments further supports our view that his remarks were based on assumed facts and did not imply the existence of undisclosed defamatory facts. The topic of conversation immediately preceding the challenged comments was the custom of tipping. The name “dodin-bouffant” arose because it was one of two local restaurants that added the gratuity to the bill. Brudnoy stated, “I praise their restaurants because the cuisine is right: the attitude stinks. And the reason the attitude stinks is that . . . they tell you that you are to tip ... .” The thrust of the rest of his comments was directed at his dislike of this practice. It was not until the guest mounted his defense of dodin-bouffant by praising its food and service staff that Brudnoy responded with the statements challenged here. Although this was surely not the kind of “public debate” we spoke of in
National Ass’n of Gov’t Employees, Inc.
v.
Central Broadcasting Corp.,
As to the Pritskers’ contention that Brudnoy’s comments imply the existence of undisclosed, defamatory facts, what we said in
Cole
v.
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.,
For the above reasons, we conclude that Brudnoy and WHDH were entitled to summary judgment and we therefore reverse the order of the Superior Court denying summary judgment and order that judgment be entered for the defendants.
So ordered.
Notes
Brudnoy is the author of a book of restaurant reviews.
In his answer to the complaint, Brudnoy admitted that he had “never formally met the [Pritskers].” In his deposition, which was submitted to the judge in support of the motion for summary judgment, Brudnoy stated that he did not know the Pritskers by sight but that he knew their names and had been informed that the people who owned the restaurant also operated it.
Such hyperbole and rhetoric were used in the discussion. Brudnoy used the word “superb” to describe the food at dodin-bouffant and one of his guests called it a “superb restaurant” and gave its service staff an “A + ” for its coordination of meals. When discussing the two restaurants that added the gratuity to the bill, Brudnoy had said earlier, “It bothers me enormously. I praise their restaurants because the cuisine is right: the attitude stinks. And the reason the attitude stinks is that they tell you *780 whether or not you — they tell you that you are to tip by putting it into your bill. I want to be able to tip. I want to tip more if the service is good, and I want to tip nothing if the service is lousy . . . .” In speaking specifically of dodin-bouffant, Brudnoy noted, “The first time I was there they didn’t [add the tip]. And then they got this horrible idea. It’s done in Europe. But the Europeans, of course, also have socialism. And we don’t have to imitate them.”
Brudnoy’s earlier, unchallenged comment that “the attitude stinks,” his use of the pronoun “they” when referring to individual restaurants, and his use of colloquial words such as “stinks,” “lousy,” and “horrible” are indications that Brudnoy was attributing the unpleasant conditions he found at restaurants to the operators in less than flattering terms.
The plaintiffs attempt to distinguish
Myers
v.
Boston Magazine Co.,
We reject the Pritskers’ assertion that Brudnoy’s use of the term “pigs” implied that “the Pritskers and their restaurant were unhygienic and unsanitary and were infested with cockroaches or other vermin.” Brudnoy had characterized the food served at dodin-bouffant as superb. It would be unreasonable for a listener to assume that a restaurant critic would employ such an encomium if he had knowledge that the food was prepared in unsanitary conditions without, at least, qualifying his praise. In context, it is evident that Brudnoy was instead contrasting the superior quality of food served with the “attitude” of the owners expressed in the restaurant’s conditions. We note that, in their depositions, the Pritskers indicate that they did not understand the word “pigs” as a reference to poor hygiene. Mr. Pritsker stated that he understood the word to mean that he was [n]ot dirty, [but] rude and vulgar.” Mrs. Pritsker stated that she did not believe Brudnoy meant that she ran a dirty restaurant but instead she understood “pigs” as a word “used to describe someone who[ ] the writer believes is offensive, awful.”
Although Brudnoy did not know the Pritskers personally, he knew of them and had indirectly had some correspondence with them. After Brudnoy’s unfavorable review of their restaurant appeared in a locally published magazine in February, 1975, the Pritskers wrote a letter to the editor of the magazine, “[f]or [the] readers who have been offered only Mr. Brudnoy’s outrageous non-truths about our restaurant,” in which they cited a number of favorable reviews by other critics. The letter was not without negative comments directed personally at Brudnoy. Brudnoy responded to the letter in the same issue and concluded by saying: “[T]he Pritskers do protest too much, methinks. A course of action more promising than shrieking at the bearer of sad tidings would be some corrective surgery on the unpleasant warts, boils, and wens affecting Dodin-Bouffont. Bon chance, mes chers.”
In December, 1975, roughly nine months before the broadcast, Brudnoy published a second review of dodin-bouffant in the same magazine. He mentioned “the howls of D-B’s outraged owners and their aggrieved friends” after his previous review and noted that the restaurant “cavalierly adds a fifteen percent service charge (an ill-advised custom . . .).” However, Brudnoy stated that “[e] very thing that had annoyed me before had vanished,” and the review was otherwise quite favorable." There was no personal reference to the Pritskers other than that quoted above. If Brudnoy had developed a personal animosity towards the Pritskers as a result of these exchanges, this would not make his comments on the radio broadcast actionable, even if he had intended them as personal attacks. “[Although the person making the communication intends it to convey a defamatory meaning, there is no defamation if the recipient does not so understand it.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 563 comment b (1977). Here, we have concluded that the average listener could not have reasonably understood Brudnoy’s comments as being directed towards the Pritskers personally.
