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But given what day it is, I feel it's appropriate to bring up a very good point from Instapundit...
THE PRESS WANTS TO SHOW BODIES from Katrina. It didn't want to show bodies, or jumpers, on 9/11, for fear that doing so would inflame the public.
I can only conclude that this time around, the press thinks it's a good thing to inflame the public. What could the difference be?
...and Ed Driscoll...
I wonder if next time Hugh Hewitt has someone high up at CNN on his show, he could ask them, "In light of your decision to show the bodies of Katrina victims, do you think it was a mistake for networks like yourself to hide the images of victims of Saddam Hussein or 9/11? Really? Well, why didn't you at least show the latter on its fourth anniversary?"
Which is tomorrow, incidentally.
...and from the news media itself.
"The question is, are we informing or titillating and causing unnecessary grief?" ABC News chief David Westin told the New York Times just days after the Sept. 11 attack. Explaining why his network decided not to show any pictures of people leaping to their deaths at the World Trade Center, he said, "Our responsibility is to inform the American public of what's going on, and, in going the next step, is it necessary to show people plunging to their death?"
THE PRESS WANTS TO SHOW BODIES from Katrina. It didn't want to show bodies, or jumpers, on 9/11, for fear that doing so would inflame the public.
I can only conclude that this time around, the press thinks it's a good thing to inflame the public. What could the difference be?
...and Ed Driscoll...
I wonder if next time Hugh Hewitt has someone high up at CNN on his show, he could ask them, "In light of your decision to show the bodies of Katrina victims, do you think it was a mistake for networks like yourself to hide the images of victims of Saddam Hussein or 9/11? Really? Well, why didn't you at least show the latter on its fourth anniversary?"
Which is tomorrow, incidentally.
...and from the news media itself.
"The question is, are we informing or titillating and causing unnecessary grief?" ABC News chief David Westin told the New York Times just days after the Sept. 11 attack. Explaining why his network decided not to show any pictures of people leaping to their deaths at the World Trade Center, he said, "Our responsibility is to inform the American public of what's going on, and, in going the next step, is it necessary to show people plunging to their death?"
no subject
Date: 2005-09-11 07:37 pm (UTC)Thinking of the people during 9/11 who were jumping always fills me with a bit of anger. I can't stop associating that with the insensitive comments I heard from my peers that day...
Eh, sorry, no insightful observations or comments here.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-11 11:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2005-09-12 03:31 am (UTC)Except you can't really call anything they do politically biased, because it all hinges on what kind of ratings they think they're going to get.
no subject
Date: 2005-09-12 04:18 pm (UTC)Personally, I think that dead bodies are an intensely personal thing and shouldn't be shown in any circumstances, but this is just my opinion. I think the point can be made without sensationalizing it.