After four days of nonstop media coverage, Mike Daisey is still standing his ground and refusing to retreat. In fact, he is taking the counter-offensive, blasting the media for what he sees as their skewed obsession with him.

The New York theater performer became the center of a journalistic firestorm Friday when the public radio program "This American Life" retracted a story that featured parts of Daisey's solo stage show "The Agony and Ecstasy of Steve Jobs," an exploration of Apple's relationship with Chinese factory workers that recently ran at the Public Theater in New York.

"This American Life" retracted the story when it was discovered that certain episodes related in Daisey's stage monologue were fabricated. Moreover, the show accused Daisey of lying to its staff when producers tried to fact-check parts of his account.

On Monday, Daisey criticized journalists on his personal blog, writing that they are losing sight of the real issue at hand. "Especially galling is how many are gleefully eager to dance on my grave expressly so they can return to ignoring everything about the circumstances under which their devices [Apple products] are made," he wrote.