Monday 31 October 2011

Lecture on Investigative Journalism

Robert Scheer wrote that "what passes for investigative journalism is finding somebody with their pants down - literally or otherwise." It may not be the most profound statement but investigative journalism is all about uncovering truths, unearthing scandals and presenting well-researched and provocative stories to the public. Some of the most controversial and high-impact stories revolve around the trifecta - Money, Sex and Power.

Investigative journalists must be:

  • Intelligent and well-prepared
  • Informed on their topic and versed in the facts of what they are covering 
  • Intuitive - have a gut feeling about when something is not right and what needs to be explored past face value
  • Creative - willing to get inside the story in a participatory or undercover sense
  • Willing to invest time and energy into uncovering and producing a story
The Deeper Meanings and Purpose of Investigative Journalism

  1. Critical and thorough journalism - actively intervene and spend time participating, consulting sources and delving beneath the surface of events. 
  2. Custodians of conscience - based on keeping society in line with accepted morals and values and and exposing any civic vice that is occurring.
  3. To provide a voice for those without one and to hold the powerful to account - form of social justice by representing the 'little guy' or the disenfranchised.
  4. Fourth Estate/ Fourth Branch of Government or Watchdog - represent the interests of the common public and ensure that free information is available to enable the functioning of democracy and to render those institutions and personalities accountable for any breaches in trust or acts of dishonesty. 
To summarise, the four main Principles are:
  • Active Intervention
  • Exposure
  • Public Interest 
  • Fourth Estate/ Watchdog 
Investigative journalists should aim to be sceptical and not cynical - otherwise the job will eat you alive. 

 - it is what the public is interested.

The aim is to cut through the agenda of events and circumstances that are fed to them. John Pilger, an Australian Investigative Journalist believes that "It is not enough for journalists to see themselves as mere messengers without understanding the hidden agendas of the message and myths that surround it."

Some of the Trailblazers within the field who have made a splash and caused serious change include:

W.T. Stead and "The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon" - the
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and "The Watergate Scandal"
Chris Masters, Phil Dickie and Shaun Hoyt and "The Moonlight State"
Julian Assange and "Wikileaks"

Types of Investigative Interaction include:
- Interviews with on-the-record sources and sometimes with anonymous sources such as whistleblowers
- Observations on public, legal and social issues and the effects of government and business practices
- Documents including law suits, legal documents, tax records, briefings, corporate financials and freedom of information material

Threats to the field culminate in the expansion of online news platforms. Less money and time is being given journalists to probe issues and therefore the quality of investigative journalism is diminishing. Many journalists also chain themselves to the computers to do their research instead of wearing down their shoe leather and investigating in person. The advent of pay walls may also pose a problem to investigative journalists as corporate owners may be less willing to assign time and funds to a job that is essentially being performed by citizen journalists for free.

Public Relations is also considered an enemy of investigative journalism was PR selectively uses facts to present certain issues to the public and persuade them into accepting a viewpoint. PR is resistant to exposure, with PR officers advising their clients to dodge questions while they clean up stories.

Thursday 27 October 2011

Annotated Bibliography on the Media, Crime and the Acquittal of Amanda Knox


Tales of the ‘Angel-faced killer’ or ‘Foxy Knoxy’ have captivated audiences on an international scale, with the murder of British exchange student, Meredith Kercher, becoming a media sensation and debated topic within Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States in particular. Amanda Knox was convicted and imprisoned for the death of her roommate in 2007 and following a lengthy appeal process was recently acquitted of the crime on the 3rd of October 2011. The following articles discuss the value and newsworthiness that is attributed to criminal cases, especially when there is a female, sexual element involved. They also explore the impact that public relations has had on influencing the media and the common spectator.

Sacco, V.F. (1995). Media Constructions of Crime. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 539(1), 141-154. doi. 10.1177/0002716295539001011

The author of the article is a Professor of Sociology at Queen’s University and has published a plethora of articles and books pertaining to the study of criminal events. With a strong background in criminology and urban sociology, Sacco is particularly interested in the public perception of crime and the sensational publicity afforded to certain cases. ‘Media Constructions of Crime’ addresses the concept of news values and how crime constitutes a large part of media reportage and discussion. Sacco argues that the perspective of the police is often privileged and glorified in order to illustrate their effectiveness to audiences. The dramatization of crimes involving atypical circumstances or a celebrity element is also addressed, where the media distinguishes clear villains from victims in order to present a compelling narrative to audiences. The article is well researched with reference to other elite criminology and media journals and uses infamous case studies such as the Menendez Brothers’ shotgun murders, the O.J. Simpson trial and Lorena Bobbit incident, in order to exemplify its arguments. Sacco also comments on the shifting interest and evolving definition of appropriateness within the media landscape, as highly sexualized and controversial crimes that would not traditionally have been covered become front page and headline material.

Burleigh, Nina. (2011, October 5). Amanda Knox: Fascination With ‘The Evil Female’. CNN International Edition.   

Author, journalist and contributing editor to Salon.com and Elle Magazine, Nina Burleigh is a respected writer who also acts as an adjunct professor at Columbia University. Having written the non-fiction novel The Fatal Gift of Beauty: The Italian Trials of Amanda Knox, Burleigh is uniquely qualified to comment on the acquittal of Amanda Knox and offer informed opinions on the treatment and perception of the case within the media. The article was published online by CNN International, which is one of the largest and most reputable news organizations within the world. CNN International covers a wider variety of issues ranging from current affairs to the arts, politics and business. Burleigh’s article is an opinionative piece that criticizes the prosecution and public’s vilification of the female while ignoring the male criminal element. The online story adopts a unique angle that focuses on the persecution of Knox rather than on the actual acquittal, arguing that the Italian mindset is predisposed towards a negative and mistrustful view of beautiful women. Sacco’s arguments about the sensational and celebrity status attributed to crimes involving a sexualized aspect or a compelling perpetrator are relevant to Burleigh’s article, as both authors argue that many other crucial facets of a criminal case are neglected as a result of the media’s desire to focus on what they deem the most valuable and newsworthy element.

Pisa, Nick. (2011, October 3). Guilty: Amanda Knox Looks Stunned as Appeal Against Her Murder Conviction is Rejected. Mail Online.

Pisa’s article is a remarkable example of journalistic misconduct, as it publishes a false outcome of the Amanda Knox trial in its efforts to be ahead of other competing news outlets. The headline reads ‘Guilty,’ with the story offering a fake description of a distraught Knox surrounded by her weeping friends and family. The level of fabrication is astounding, with the article containing fake quotes from the prosecution and stating that Knox and Sollecito were taken back to their respective prisons and were due to undergo suicide watch and routine psychological evaluations. The portions of the article that refer to the circumstances of the murder and the subsequent investigation and prosecution are accurate, implying that research has been performed and that the predicted guilty verdict was simply overlaid on top of the piece. The article appeared on the website Mail Online or dailymail.co.uk that is owned by the United Kingdom newspaper the Daily Mail. Despite its popularity, the online news-site is extremely tabloid-like and is not to be trusted without outside corroboration or a subsequent follow-up report. The article exemplifies the competitive nature of journalism and how news ethics that are hinged upon the truth are often sacrificed in an effort to be the first to break the story.

Sawyer, Diane. (2011, October 3). Amanda Knox Acquitted, Innocent and Set Free. ABC News (Television broadcast).

Hosted by veteran news-anchor Diane Sawyer, the ABC News Special Report is a breaking news edition of the Amanda Knox Acquittal. The report contains live footage of the judge’s verdict, capturing the flood of emotions that ensue after Amanda Knox and Raffaelo Sollecito have been cleared of the murder. Interviews with on-scene correspondents, Elizabeth Vargas and Josh Elliott, are featured towards the end of the segment, summarizing the reasons for the appeal’s success and proffering a first-hand account of the verdict and the public’s reactions. The creation of a special report to address the appeal demonstrates the centrality of the Amanda Knox case within the American media, with the ABC team promising full details on their website and in their World News nightly report. The news report demonstrates a unique reversal of the victim and villain roles referred to by Sacco, with the reporters’ commentary empathizing with the persecuted Knox and describing the hostile responses aimed at the Italian prosecutor Giuliano Mignini, who spearheaded the witch-hunt against Knox.  The ABC special edition is very well rounded, using live footage, ongoing host and on-site reporter commentary, identifying broader issues, such as the fact that the Italian justice system was also being tried by the public, and concluding on a sensitive note by reminding viewers to remember the victim and her family.


Wednesday 26 October 2011

Photo of the Week

After watching page 1 which captures a year behind the scenes of what is arguable the world's most prestigious paper The New York Times, I thought I would include the following photograph taken by Irish photographer Seams Murphy. The image depicts the wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who is facing heavy legal and political ramifications for exposing thousands of classified United States secrets and documents online for public perusal. Julian Assange and repercussions of his actions have become a massive media phenomenon and the photo evokes the impression of a man who is under intense public and governmental scrutiny and who is the subject of persistent spotlight and inquiry. The blue glow cast over his face heightens the spectacle of the man and the story he embodies, holding the stoic Assange under its eerie and probing gaze. 

Photo: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in London


Sunday 23 October 2011

The Walking Dead Invade Brisbane

Last week Bruce mentioned one bloggers obsession with all thing zombie so I thought I would include one zombie themed entry as well. Over 8000 zombies were seen roaming across the Brisbane CBD district this Sunday in an effort to raise money and awareness for the Brain foundation. The annual zombie walk which began in 2004 with only 300 participants is rapidly gaining in popularity and continues to grow larger each successive year. Today's zombie walk blitzed the reigning world record held by the US city of Pittsburgh and their 4093 participants, with Brain Foundation officials declaring that they stopped counting at 8000. 


photo

American Troops are Finally Coming home

American President Barak Obama announced last Friday that all US troops will be withdrawn from Iraq by the end of the Christmas holidays. The war in Iraq has been an obsession of the media since its outset nine years ago and this news has been long awaited by many American soldiers and their families. However, Obama's announcement has generated significant criticism and argument, especially by the Republicans, who have been supportive of the war and had hoped American would establish a permanent foothold in the unstable country. Obama's chief republican rival, Governor Mitt Romney, went as far to response that "The unavoidable question is whether this decision is the result of a naked political calculation or simply sheer ineptitude in negotiations with the Iraqi government." It is likely that Obama will continue to be both praised and assailed for his decision and whether the withdrawal will be carried out by the end of December as promised. 


Wednesday 19 October 2011

Photo of the Week

I came across this photograph in a catalogue of World Press Photo Awards from 2006 and I thought that the aerial angle and almost visible vibrations of the shot were simply superb. The photograph depicts a rodeo bullring with a matador and the image resonated with scenes of bullfights Ernest Hemingway wrote about in his novel The Sun Also Rises. The novel was the first time I paid attention to the popularity and artistry of the spanish traditional sport and was able to see the power and grace behind the brutality of bullfighting. The image below is well balanced and almost abstract in appearance with a flaring of red in opposite corners and the horse and rider splayed outwards in an impossible fashion. The line of white lifts the picture to give it more dimension, adding gravity, movement and tension to the powerful scene. 


Saturday 15 October 2011

World's First Double Amputee Transplant Successful

I found the following article by Lauren Keiper very interesting as I have a fascination with medical breakthroughs and accomplishments and think that they deserve to go reported. Medicine allows man to emulate the gods and the successful transplantation of two hands to a quadruple amputee is an impressive story:


BOSTON (Reuters) - A 65-year-old quadruple amputee has received two new hands in a rare double transplant operation, Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital said on Friday.
Richard Mangino got the two hands last week in a 12-hour transplant procedure by a team of more than 40 doctors, nurses and other medical staff, the hospital said.
Mangino said he's adjusting to the new hands gradually and said now he won't have to "perform a miracle" every day to do simple things like make coffee and get dressed.
Speaking at a news conference seated in a wheel chair with his arms and hands propped on stack of pillows, Mangino said he prayed for the ability to touch his grandsons' faces, stroke their hair and teach them to throw a ball
Mangino, from Revere, Massachusetts, lost his arms below the elbows and legs below the knees after contracting sepsis, a bloodstream infection, in 2002.
The complicated surgery included transplanting skin, tendons, muscles, ligaments, bones and blood vessels on both forearms and hands, the hospital said.
Doctors said Mangino independently moved fingers just days after surgery and called the results a "resounding success."
His recovery will take many months and doctors expect him to regain sense of touch in six to nine months with ongoing therapy to help him learn to grasp and pick things up.
The double-hand transplant is the second performed by Brigham and Women's, a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School.
In May, a team performed a full face transplant and its first double-hand transplant on Charla Nash, a Connecticut woman who was mauled by a chimpanzee in 2009.
The hospital said the hand transplant was successful, but the hands did not thrive after complications from pneumonia and were removed.
There are a few other programs around the country that perform hand transplants.
The first hand transplant was performed in France in 1998, and the first in the United States was completed a year later.
Doctors said about a dozen hand transplants have been done in the U.S. and believe just four of those have been bilateral.



Lecture on News Values

News values within journalism operate within a similar sphere to the principles of agenda setting. They refer to the degree of prominence that media outlets give to certain stories and the attention that is paid to them by audiences. It is hard to establish the cause and effect - whether it is the audience's interests that drive the type of stories covered by the media or whether it is the media that dictates which stories that viewers should be interested in.  News values depend on:
  1. Impact - News that is interesting and that has the ability to grab attention.
  2. Audience Identification - News that is interesting and relevant to the world. Audiences should be able to relate to what is happening and desire to know more about what is being shown.
  3. Pragmatics - Principles such as ethics, facticity, practical current affairs and everyday concerns are an important component of news values.
  4. Influence of the Source - The credibility of the source is important and journalism's relationship with public relations is also a relevant factor. PR can spin stories, control access to information and protect and shield clients. Sometimes this can happen at the expense of the truth and it is important not to be blind to this.  
Values are concerned with NEWSWORTHINESS and they differ from region to region and country to country. There are common threads of interest though, common tag lines that have become synonymous with news values include:
  • If it Bleeds it Leads! - murder, shootings, accidents, trauma...the world is obsessed with the dark and twisted.
  • If it's Local it Leads - people care about what is near and relevant to them. They care about what affects them.
A sense of news values should be intrinsic to journalists, as having the ability to identify what is newsworthy and what is interesting to the public is an incredibly useful quality. Good instincts can go a long way. 

Howard Evans (Editor of the Sunday Times from 1967 to 1981) believed that "A sense of news values is the first quality of editors - they are the human sieves of the torrent of news, even more important even than the ability to write or a command of language."

Many news corporations and journalists have attempted to establish common factors and news agendas within the media. The aim is to discover what news is worthy of a headline and what will garner the most attention. 

There are an infinite number of possible news values and these values are not universal. They differ within certain localities and countries and each they are subjective - different people will have different opinions over what is are the most prominent values.  

News values can include negativity, proximity, recency, currency, continuity, personality, predictability, elite nations or people, celebrity, exclusivity, magnitude, drama, visual attractiveness, entertainment, importance, controversy, unusualness and the emotional. 

Galtung and Ruge developed the following 3 Hypotheses that establish what is newsworthy and what is not (the hypotheses are essentially common sense):
  1. The ADDITIVITY hypothesis that the more factors an event satisfies, the higher the probability that it becomes news.
  2. The COMPLEMENTARITY hypothesis that the factors will tend to exclude each other.
  3. The EXCLUSION hypothesis that events that satisfy none or very few factors will not become news. 
Some of the threats that complicate the perception of newsworthiness include the commercialisation of media and social life (too many platforms to keep track of and too much useless information), public relations (obscuring and subverting the truth) and how ideals of journalism that aim to address hard-hitting and serious issues are sacrificed for tabloidy trash.  

 


Tuesday 11 October 2011

Photo of the Week

In last week's lecture we addressed the field of investigative journalism and the need for such reporters to get into the thick of it and put the legwork in. It is not enough to just sit behind a computer or at a phone and do your research without leaving your desk. New forms of technology have enabled this laziness and it is certainly possible to write a good story without going into the field, but the great stories require that extra mile. The following photograph was taken by journal photographer Bill Gallagher and won the pulitzer prize. It depicts democratic presidential candidate and Illinois Governor Adlai E. Stevenson, as well as Michigan Governor G. Mennen Williams. Adlai Stevenson's shoes are the focus, worn and weathered, holes forming on the soles, they are evidence of hard work and effort by the candidate himself - not just his political team or staff. 


I also found the following photo of Barak Obama which is clearly an homage to the Adlai Stevenson Photograph and can be seen to embody the same sentiment.


Sunday 9 October 2011

Is the End Approaching for the Simpsons?

It might just be a marketing or salary negotiation ploy but rumours are surfacing that Simpsons may finally be coming to a close. The hugely successful show holds the record for the longest running television series and is a core stable of many television networks who use reruns as valuable fillers. Fox is considering cancelling the show unless the voice talents behind the loveable characters, including Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, Nancy Cartwright, Yeardly Smith, Hank Azaria and Harry Shearer, each agree to take a 45% pay cut with their current salaries totalling roughly 8 million dollars each a year. If the show were to end, Fox would still retain massive profits and income from selling old episodes and from merchandising and syndication, suggesting that the show has run its course and its value now lies in back-end profits.



Thursday 6 October 2011

Factual Story Submission


TURNING DISABILITY INTO POSSIBILITY

The perception of beauty has never been a universal notion. Be it blonde or brunette, slender or voluptuous, pint-sized or Amazonian…we each have differing opinions on what we consider beautiful and desirous. These opinions are not constant either, as our ideas of beauty are reconfigured on a day-to-day basis in accordance with new trends and fashions. So we change. We change our hair, our clothes, our height, treating our bodies like four-limbed canvases to paint and drape with colour. So what happens when the canvas itself is reconfigured and the human body no longer resembles the form that we have always known? With the loss of an arm or a leg does our capacity for beauty diminish or does it simply mean that it is time to re-access our traditional views and see possibilities instead of limitations?

Mullins' wooden legs designed by McQueen
Thirty-five year old Aimee Mullins is woman who poses the ultimate challenge to conventional ideas of what is sexy and beautiful in a body. The blonde bombshell has featured in films, walked fashion runways and posed for magazine covers around the world, with each public accolade for beauty accomplished on one of her many pairs of prosthetic legs. Born with fibular hemimelia or missing fibula bones, both of Mullins’ legs were amputated below the knee when she was one year old. Rejecting the idea of disability or deformity, Mullins has turned her condition into a chance to transform the human body into art and transcend human boundaries of design and form. Her legs have become wearable sculptures, embracing the poetry and art of design and abandoning the need to replicate humanness. Legendary fashion designer Alexander McQueen designed a pair of beautifully crafted wooden legs for Mullins to walk on in his 1999 London Fashion Show. Made from solid ash, the prosthetics were intricately carved with grapevines and magnolias, creating a pair of enviable legs that epitomized artistry of the human body and pushed the boundaries of functional fashion.

Mullins actively embraces her body’s capacity to change and transform, boasting of her ability to be five different heights. Alternating between a comfortable five-foot-eight to a breathtaking six-foot-one, Mullins is able to defy the limitations of a normal individual to far greater effect than a pair of high-heels. To the untrained eye, her gorgeous silicone pins appear as flawlessly finished legs, drawing attention from crowds not because they are fake, but because they are stunning. One friend of Mullins went as far to exclaim “But Aimee, that’s so unfair,” when she noticed Mullins’ radically increased height during a night out, which is not your typical reaction when speaking to someone who has lost both her legs.

Mullins' pair of "glass legs"
It is no secret that most individuals would shy away from someone who is missing a limb or whose body deviates from the expected form. People will often either avert their gaze or overcompensate by maintaining fixed eye contact, looking anywhere but at the obviously absent limb. With new innovations in science and design, such an expectation is inverted, as onlookers are instead encouraged to not only look and stare, but to admire. Art and science are no longer mutually exclusive spheres and the normally devastating disruption to the human form can open up new arenas for design and creation. In Mullins’ own words, “Poetry matters. Poetry is what elevates the banal and neglected object to a realm of art. It can transform the thing that might have made people fearful into something that invites them to look”. In addition to her hand carved wooden legs, Mullins has in her collection a pair of woven carbon fiber legs modeled after a cheetah, legs that look as if they are comprised of glass or pure crystal, but were actually fashioned from optically clear polyurethane (bowling ball material) and even a pair of unusual prosthetics cast in soil and interwoven with plant root systems. Many of the prosthetics were worn by Mullins when she appeared in the highly acclaimed 2003 film Cremaster 3 by contemporary artist Matthew Barney.  

With the future potential of science and art, the traditionally assigned labels of ‘disabled’ and ‘limited’ are replaced with terms such as ‘super-abled’ and ‘uncharted potential’. Advancements in bioengineering and robotics may reach a level of performance and function that surpass human capability, validating the themes and storylines of many science fiction films. Through the fusion of art, design and science, traumatic changes to the human body can now become a basis for innovation, establishing new platforms for beauty, creativity and function that transcend traditional notions and collective social opinions.

What do you think: Is this body beautiful?
Photograph of Aimee Mullins




Wednesday 5 October 2011

Steve Jobs Passes but his Legacy Remains

At just 56 years of age, extraordinary tech genius and visionary Steve Jobs, has passed away after losing his battle with cancer.  The co-founder of Apple Computer has had an incredible impact on the way the world uses and interacts with technology, with his brand recognised for its superior quality and capabilities, from personal computing, digital music and mobile technology. I was already looking forward to reading the biography of the influential figure that is coming out in time for Christmas and I am sure I won't be the only one in line for it.


Monday 3 October 2011

Photo of the Week

This photograph captures both a breath-taking and tragic moment during a fire in a Boston Apartment. Photographer Stanley Forman was able to capture the exact moment that the balcony collapsed and the mother and child were sent plummeting towards the ground. Unfortunately the woman died upon impact however her daughter did survive the traumatic event. Forman was awarded the 1975 World Press Prize for the image. To me, the picture appears suspended in time and I can construct an entire narrative of the event in my head. In some ways it does not seem real and I have to remind myself that the photograph is not staged or edited. These are real people and the poor girl has what has to be one of the worst moments in her life forever preserved. 


Amanda Knox Conviction Overturned on Appeal

I can't believe that the appeal has actually worked after what essentially mounted to four years of campaigning and PR work on Amanda Knox's behalf. The Italian media had crucified Knox and branded her a remorseless, sex-crazed drug addict during her trial and there is no doubt that they are outraged at the judge's verdict. Knox and her former boyfriend Raffaele Sollcecito were officially cleared of all murder charges and were immediately released from prison. The sentence was overturned due to the findings of independent forensic investigators who cast heavy doubt on DNA evidence collected by the Italian police. The Italian legal system has one more chance to appeal the acquittal verdict, however Knox is free to return to the United States in the meantime.

I don't doubt that Amanda Knox will have a chance to make up her legal fees and then some, if she were to agree to an exclusive interview once she has returned to the U.S.

A video of the delivery of the verdict is included below:

Sunday 2 October 2011

Children Struck by Train

I mention this news story because it bears similarities to the previous post regarding the three children killed in their driveways. A three-year old boy and a four-year old girl were hit by a Ballarat-bound passenger train on Old Western Highway at approximately 11.20 am this morning. Both children suffered serious injuries and were flown to the Royal Children's Hospital. The article mentions that they were believed to have been playing on a nearby property when the accident occurred and my first reaction was - where the hell were their parents? Who lets a three-year old and a four-year run off alone with train tracks close by? But after more information was given about the accident and the area I realise that this wasn't necessarily a case of negligence. Some railways run right behind some houses and young children can be creative escape artists. It only takes a minute or two for something to go wrong and the unfortunate events of this morning are a testament to that.