Some
time has passed since the bombing of the Boston Marathon on April 15.
There is a suspect in custody (in hospital) — Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19
— and he has formally been charged in the atrocity.
The
city of Boston is already moving on, although many of the 180 wounded
will need extensive medical assistance and therapy in their recovery.
I can only imagine how difficult it will be for them to move on.
But
that's what the world does. In that light, it's fair now to look back
at how the world first learned about the bombing, and how millions —
perhaps even billions — of people followed the story as it
unfolded.
The
picture of that is not flattering to the global news media. In the
non-stop coverage of what transpired after the two explosions went
off near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three and
injuring 180, media we all rely on for factual coverage and
thoughtful analysis provided little of either.
Network
TV coverage was 24-hours-a-day. But because of the way information
surfaces in an unfolding story, what we mostly got was 30-minute
coverage, repeated 48 times a day.
The
public appetite for news was so widespread, and the
competition to be the first bearer of news was so strong, a lot of
information was presented that was just plain wrong.
On
April 17, CNN reported there had been an arrest of a suspect. It
wasn't true. Social media picked up the fuzzy photos FBI released of the two
suspects, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and his older brother Tamerlan and
identified others as being the suspects — which was reported on mainstream
network news. One person identified that way may not even exist.
Experts
were called in to provide perspective (and to fill air time), but in
the absence of facts, there can be little of it.
One
commentator, Matthew Kupfer, made an interesting
observation on his blog Registan.
CNN
at one point reported they had discovered Dzhohar Tsarnaev had posted
a Tweet way back last August. It said: “boston marathon isn’t a
good place to smoke tho.” CNN's announcer read this as “breaking
news” and then, looking into the camera for emphasis declared: “It
may mean something. It may mean nothing. We don’t know.”
Neither
will anyone else, but it filled time. Probably more than once.
One
could add more examples of plain bad coverage, but here's my main beef
with the media in this.
While
the universe was revolving around Boston, there was another explosion
in the U.S. In the small town of West, Texas, an anhydrous ammonia
plant exploded and burned on April 17.
It
destroyed a five-block radius of the town, including a seniors
residence. Fourteen people died, including 10 who were first
responders to the scene. Some 2,800 people were displaced.
Talk
about a town on lockdown. Only now are some of the people being
allowed home. But there is a 7 p.m. curfew, no vehicles larger than a
pickup are allowed in the area and only people 18 and over can go
back there (assuming they still have a home).
One
CBC Radio report that I heard quoted a man shivering in the morning
chill with his aging mother. They had only the clothes they wore when
they fled; they had lost everything else.
The
man said something like: “Well, we're kind of cold right now, so
we'll have to get some clothes and start over.”
That
was the drop line to the story. The announcer quickly took us back to
Boston where . . . nothing new had happened in the last 30 minutes.
I
was dumbfounded by that. As news coverage, that was shameful.
Here
in Red Deer, you will very seldom read a news story about a house
fire, without mention of some sort of community effort to support the
people affected. That kind of thing engages even as the ashes cool.
On
our national news network, we were left with the mental image of a
man and his aging mother standing in the cold, with nothing along with probably more than 1,000 others. So we
could hear the same expert on terrorism or whatever repeat the same
uninformed comments we heard 30 minutes ago, about people who were
known only by a name and a fuzzy FBI surveillance photo.
I
am part of the global system that produces this. I have been
reporter, photographer, editor and designer of the media that brings
you the news. I am also a consumer who left the TV on all day
(something I almost never do), and I listened to the same pap
repeating all day long, for reasons I cannot now fully explain.
Looking
back, it looks like a colossal waste of time. Not a great result for
a global media effort around two globally-important news stories.
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