Anyone could have told you in 2017 that convicted felon Michael Avenatti was bad news. The media just cannot help themselves.

Avenatti, an attorney, represented an adult entertainer who alleged sleazy, criminal behavior by President Trump. Avenatti also talked a big game about “resisting” the White House. That was enough to catapult him from relative obscurity to stardom, his face plastered everywhere by the news and entertainment industries.

On Friday, the celebrity lawyer was found guilty of trying to extort Nike. This is obviously not great for Avenatti, who faces additional charges of tax, wire, and bank fraud in California and fraud and aggravated identity theft charges in New York. You know who else looks bad after Friday’s ruling? Every idiot journalist, television host, and news commentator who ignored the red flags surrounding Avenatti, elevating him to the point where there was semi-serious chatter about him launching a 2020 presidential bid.

CNN news anchor Don Lemon, left, and Stormy Daniels' attorney Michael Avenatti pose together at The Hollywood Reporter's annual 35 Most Powerful People in Media event at The Pool on Thursday, April 12, 2018, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

The people who treated Avenatti as a credible, serious individual deserve all the ridicule and scorn they get, and then some. The attention and praise the news and entertainment industries heaped on the then-lawyer for a porn star far outweighed the news value of the lawsuits he championed, which alleged Trump paid off adult performer Stormy Daniels to keep an illicit affair between the two of them a secret.

But what do you expect from the same people who built up the infamously unreliable author Michael Wolff only to have him self-immolate with ludicrous, lurid claims about U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley? News anchors and commentators who had previously downplayed the factual errors in Wolff’s book, Fire and Fury, with amended versions of “fake but accurate” were left with the embarrassment of trying to disavow the very person they had turned into a national star.

The Avenatti case is a lot like the Wolff episode. If you have something salacious and negative to say about Trump, then all the standards go out the window. It may be great television for the anti-Trump “resistance” faithful, but it is poisonous to the credibility of the organizations that promote this stuff, especially when it involves the elevation of individuals who are obviously untrustworthy.

Jonathan Capehart, from left, Michael Avenatti and Kathy Griffin participate in the "How To Beat Trump: Kathy Griffin Interviews Michael Avenatti" panel at Politicon at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Saturday, Oct. 20, 2018, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Willy Sanjuan/Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP)

Like Wolff before his implosion, Avenatti was ubiquitous in American media. CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, and NBC hosted the disgraced attorney for a combined 147 television interviews between March 7 and May 15, 2018. That is an average of two interviews per day. This is to say nothing of Avenatti’s many other appearances at the height of his media-promoted stardom, including at the 2018 White House Correspondents' Association dinner and the MTV Video Music Awards.

Stormy Daniels' attorney, Michael Avenatti, left, talks to the media outside court in Los Angeles Friday, Apr. 20, 2018. (Photo by Damian Dovarganes/AP)

By the way, after all the hype, all the interviews and late-night appearances, both of Daniels’ lawsuits were dismissed in federal court in 2019. Daniels, who alleges now that Avenatti stole nearly $300,000 from her, was ordered by a judge to pay $300,000 in Trump's legal fees. It is hard to lose a case much worse than that.

Anyone could have told you, back when Avenatti first appeared on the “resistance” scene, that he was a sleazy tangle of lies, corruption, and faux bravado. Anyone, that is, except for members of the press, always credulous where those hostile toward Trump are involved.