Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Still looking back at Katrina coverage

(Hat tip: NRO Media Blog.)
Are CNN and Fox covering the same disaster?

Generally, I’ve been pretty impressed with the network news coverage of Katrina provided by both CNN and Fox. Today, the media coverage of this tragedy devolved into the worst of the worst on one network, and the best of the best on the other.

The contrast of the coverage from CNN and Fox watched simultaneously was stark, and disturbing.

CNN: Anchor Kyra Phillips in near meltdown, drilling every person on air demanding that the Department of Homeland Security “call out the military” declaring that the leaders of the community should just admit that their plans were a failure. Breathlessly harping on video that showed two bodies and crowds outside the convention center where help was nowhere to be found. Repeatedly, Phillips drones on about why the military hasn’t been put on the ground, and why hasn’t homeland security simply admitted that the plan has failed, and call out on the “military for help?”

Fox News: Pictures of wave after wave of helicopters bringing injured into a staging area, where others are gathering for busses. Showing three lines in a triage where injured were being seen, treated, receiving assistance, while others were receiving food and being loaded onto busses.

....

First rule for anchors: you don’t know all the facts, your reporter on the scene doesn’t know all the facts, and YOU are not the supreme all knowing voice of reality.

I once had a news reporter, in my news operation, declaring that our local community was flooding and needed to be evacuated, based on a phone call from someone whose basement had suddenly flooded. Both the person calling, and reporter were convinced that a levee in the city had failed and that the downtown was in a torrent flood. The caller lived in a basement apartment. What actually happened was a broken water main right outside the apartment building. The roar of rushing water, with the rapid flow into the basement sure looked like a flood. But neither had appropriate perspective, to make announcements live on air without a little more consideration.

What one reporter sees at one location within 90-THOUSAND SQUARE MILES is not an appropriate reason to declare the Katrina disaster recovery plan a failure and call for a whole new plan. Which is what Ms. Phillips did on air, on more than one occasion.

There will be many people still waiting several days from now, and there will be bodies – many bodies – tragically in New Orleans. But as they relief effort continues, and reporters actually look for the assistance rather than the victims, it will be clear that progress is being made every day.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I use to watch Fox news before Katrina. After the storm I was without electricity for three weeks, so I cannot comment on the coverage in that time. After that though I can tell you that Fox was so hateful and just plain WRONG in its reporting that I don't watch Fox news anymore. It is an eye opener when you are living a national story and see how horrible the media is in its reporting.