Cue Jesse LaGreca. With his quintessential American Joe Average look, he takes most folks by surprise, most certainly the Fox News reporter who approaches him. In the impromptu interview, unaired by Fox, LaGreca schools the man and powers through, knocking it out of the park. He calls out the leading questions right away, and notes that if there's one thing the news—"the propaganda machine in the media"—doesn't wish to report on, it's itself. That maybe it's time to have some participatory democracy that "isn't funded by news cameras."

A reporter shows up expecting to report on the world and discovers this story is, at least in part, about themselves. The denial is quick: "We’re here giving you an opportunity on the record […] to put any message you want out there, to give you fair coverage […] So, there is an exception in the case, because you wouldn’t be able to get your message out there without us."

He snaps back: "Certainly. Take for instance when Glenn Beck […] called the president a person who hates white people and white culture. That was a low moment in Americans' history and you guys kind of had a big part in it. So I'm glad you're coming around and kind of paying attention to the [rest of the country] as opposed to the far right fringe who would just prefer to destroy the middle class entirely. […] People would like to see a little bit more economic justice, or social justice, you know, Jesus stuff, as far as feeding the poor, healthcare for the sick. […] I find it really entertaining that people like to hold the bill of rights up while they're screaming at gay soldiers, but they can't wrap their heads around the fact that a for-profit health care system doesn't work. […] If we want the president to do more, let's talk to him on a level that works instead of asking for his birth certificate, […]"

Shots fired, critical hit, no chance of recovery. It's no surprise it was left on the cutting room floor, and no surprise it would leak and shoot to fame as being too extreme for Fox news. Predictable headlines asked if he was the The Smartest Man on Wall Street and explained that Jesse LaGreca Continues to Destroy Media Bias of Occupy Wall Street. All reporters eagerly falling over themselves to demonstrate how they were willing to give anyone a voice.

This was an angle LaGreca himself brought up on air: "The reality is that I’m the only working class person you’re going to see on Sunday news… political news… maybe ever. And I think that is very indicative of the failures of our media to report on the news that matter most importantly…" The host immediately cuts in, "We are trying our best, Jesse."

However when asked if there was a political demand that could sum up Occupy, something to "make this about," he takes a curious turn:

"I think the entire movement is about economic justice. I mean to me – and I’m not speaking on behalf of Occupy Wall Street, I’m just giving my personal opinion – I think it’s a matter of economic rights, and I think it’s a matter of social rights, and social justice. And to the people who would take offense to the word “social” being placed before the word “justice,” I’d invite them to re-read the Constitution."

Ok. I went through the trouble and enacted the labor to educate myself. The United States Constitution makes no references to anything social with regards to justice. Those who wrote it seemed to think that merely "establishing Justice" was plenty enough. It does not rank citizens by privilege, does not define powers in relation to oppression and makes no allusions to punching up. That's what social justice is nowadays, right? Or did he mean the "Jesus stuff"? I'm no constitutional lawyer, feel free to correct me.

More awkwardly, on the subject of taking their cues from other protests, in Greece and Europe and elsewhere, LaGreca claimed "we didn’t take our cue leading off of anybody really."