Archive for August, 2006



07
Aug

Reuters Drops the Ball

Merely days after CU expressed reservations about the accuracy media coverage in the Middle East, a new controversy has erupted:

Reuters, the global news and information agency, told a freelance Lebanese photographer on Sunday it would not use any more of his pictures after he doctored an image of the aftermath of an Israeli air strike on Beirut.
The photograph by Adnan Hajj, which was published on news websites on Saturday, showed thick black smoke rising above buildings in the Lebanese capital after an Israeli air raid in the war with the Shiite Islamic group Hezbollah, now in its fourth week.
“The photographer has denied deliberately attempting to manipulate the image, saying that he was trying to remove dust marks and that he made mistakes due to the bad lighting conditions he was working under,” said Moira Whittle, the head of public relations for Reuters.

Granted Ms Whittle has a job to do, but she really needs to learn the difference between removing dust marks and cloning. The former involves the removal of “specks” on a digital photographs, and cannot possibly result in the disparity of colors shown below. By contrast, cloning involves copying a portion of a photograph to another part of the photograph. When done well the picture looks seamless and unaltered. Poor cloning results in an apparent texture pattern, which is clearly visible in the smoke patterns of this photo.

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A possible original photograph (Source: LGF)

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Beirut Photograph, as Published by Reuters

Reuters has lost any media source’s most important asset – credibility. Already, pundits are questioning the validity of Reuters’ Qana photographs and no doubt other photographs from Hajj are under scrutiny.

The original charge of photo manipulation was made by Charles Johnson of the popular Pro-Israeli blog Little Green Footballs. For his effort, Johnson was threatened via email and the email was IP traced to none other than Reuters. Current speculation is that Inayat Bunglawala, Media Secretary of the Muslim Council of Britain, may have been involved in creating the threat. Meanwhile, more charges of doctored and staged photos are being levied by the hour.

The discovery of the doctored photos and forced admission of error by Reuters represents a huge victory for the blogosphere; by forcing a large media conglomerate to admit error and correct its ways, the independent online media has established itself as a semi-reliable check and balance on news disseminated by the mainstream media.

The loser in this skirmish is obvious. Hajj is clearly the instigator of the controversy, but clearly the blame belongs with the editing staff at Reuters. With a topic as divisive and high-stakes as the conflict in the Middle East, the news agency should be going over every piece of information it receives with a fine-toothed comb. Reuters could easily argue that LGF and other blogs attacking this story are partisan and no more interested in accuracy than Hajj, and they might be right; however, Reuters is supposed to differentiate itself from blogs (for which there is no minimum bar of journalistic integrity) with original, accurate and verified content. By not adhering to such standards, Reuters gives the public no reason to trust their reports any more than those of any idealist with a Blogspot account.

Also, Reuters, fire your PR department. That was a terrible excuse.

06
Aug

Caribana 2006 Jump Up Pt 2

Click on Pictures to Enlarge
As promised here are some more shots from Caribana 2006

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I didn’t attend the Irie Festival so there isn’t much else to say about the Caribana happenings. Looking at some other blogs, Americans were impressed with Toronto’s cleanliness and friendliness. People also seemed to be happy with the organization of the event, which is no surprise since it is being run by the same association that ran Caribana during its only profitable year to date.

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Of course there were the usual trolls who used Caribana to vent their grievances with black people. I’ll spare you the lecture about tolerance and point out that Trinidad, the mother nation of the carnival, is nearly half South Asian. Moreover the steel pan bands are made up of many groups including local Caucasians, while people jumping up appeared to range from 16 to their late 60’s and appeared to cover every major ethnic group in Toronto (at one point I saw a Muslim lady covered head to toe pushing a stroller alongside a float).

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Continue reading ‘Caribana 2006 Jump Up Pt 2′

05
Aug

Caribana 2006 - Jump Up!

Click on Pictures to Enlarge

Toronto Caribbean Carnival? No, everyone -from the carnival emcees to the media- still calls it Caribana. The main parade for North America’s largest Caribbean festival took place at Exhibition Place today and it was one hell of a party.

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The weather could not have been more agreeable – sunny, not terribly humid (thanks to thunderstorms a few days prior) and a cool Lake Ontario breeze that flowed over heated revelers. That said, heat exhaustion and heat stroke were a very real risk (at one point my group scrambled to find a bottle of water for an elderly reveler who was on the verge of fainting) and so liquids were in great supply. For the most part the water was free, handed out by the bands … but of course there were enterprising minds who were willing to sell much colder water for a dollar.

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Spectators had the choice of paying $15 to get into the preferred grounds (lined along the interior of the parade route, next to the major CNE buildings) or could otherwise jockey with the masses on the strip of land next to the harbor for a view of the action. A few clever individuals from the “free” side breached the security fence and got right into the parade action, dancing with the band participants and getting some choice photo/video.
Continue reading ‘Caribana 2006 - Jump Up!’

04
Aug

More Information, More Sources, Less Clarity

“Believe none of what you hear and half of what you see.”
-Benjamin Franklin

Jack of Jack’s Newswatch takes a moment to ponder the media’s objectivity concerning the recent Israeli attack on Qana:

Lately I’ve been trying to focus on the situation in Israel and the misleading press reports that are being constantly pumped out by CNN, Reuters, AP and many others. I truly wonder whose side they’re on and I would “just betcha” that if the homes or families of any of these “honest” reporters were threatened in the manner that Israeli citizens are now being threatened we’d soon get an entirely different picture of the situation.

I should point out now that that I have reasonable cause to believe (and do believe) that news outlets deliberately fail to tell the motoring public all that is known about a news event for reasons which are highly suspect (and completely unexplainable). A good “for instance” is the important information developed by very hardworking bloggers on the situation in Qana. I’ve been following it for days because I am also aware of the situation in the Palestinian territories wherein a criminal organization made up an entirely false story and claimed a massacre that never happened.

The label “objective” can be very difficult to ponder, much less award to a single news source. On one hand I have tremendous respect for the BBC and CNN as international news organizations that have done much to keep remote areas of the world informed on current events. Their attempts to be balanced and objective will always be criticized by partisan groups like Honest Reporting because such groups are more interested in spreading their political causes than honestly evaluating “facts”.

On the other hand, BBC and other news networks have been caught in some very embarassing SNAFU moments, such as the “massacre” in Jenin that turned out to be completely overstated. Also, I remember watching commentary from Eric Margolis and CBC reporters as the US first attacked Iraq post-9/11. Margolis stated it was likely that 10000 Iraqis were killed after the first bombings, while a CBC reporter implored the viewers to remember that Iraqi citizens personally did nothing to George W Bush or America. “What does that have to do with the story?” I thought to myself. Moreover, how did Margolis come up with the estimates (which were grossly overstated)? Quite often, MSM organizations both show organizational bias and try to be the first organization to get the dramatic story. The result is a body of news controlled by elitist conglomerates that can be far from objective.

Alternatively, the blogosphere offers an unprecedented opporunity for readers to get information direct from individuals involved in conflict. Blogs like Live From an Israeli Bunker allow viewers to get a first-hand, uncensored account of events that occur in hotspots like Israel. Political aggregators and blog commentators can summarize and editorialize this information, creating a parallel news media that has equal or greater value to many readers than do the CNN’s and BBC’s of the world. However, independent media has always been a wild west in that there are no rules for what can be posted or standards on fact checking. Earlier this year, the New York Times got in hot water for publishing classified information and still risk legal action as a result (not to mention scorn from the military that was imperiled as a result of the information leak). As bloggers and other independent media -whom now play on a level cyberspace field with the big media outlets- struggle to differentiate themselves in the sea of recycled factoids, we could see a lot more “exclusives” that have been stolen, prematurely-declassified or simply made up.

Only the underlying danger remains constant - consumers prefer to read what they’d like to hear. As such, “due dilligence” tends to be exercised only when one doesn’t like the tone of the message. For this reason, it would be a mistake for readers to become comfortable with any one news source or family of news sources. The increased selection and channels for news has, ironically, made objective analysis more difficult.

02
Aug

The Disproportionate Palestinian Response to Condi

The political left and those genuinely opposed to the oppression of indigenous peoples by so-called “civilized” nations were quick to adopt Palestinians as a client group. After all, who wouldn’t be moved by images of large Israeli tanks rolling menacingly towards little Palestinian children?

It’s a romantic story on paper, but it belies the hatred in the hearts of many Palestinians – hatred that is not all directed towards Israel. The Jerusalem post reports on the visceral Arab reaction to recent visits by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice

Calling on Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah to bomb Tel Aviv, many protesters also chanted slogans against Rice and the US. “O Condaleezza, you are a condara [shoe],” shouted a group of Fatah activists. An elderly woman yelled: “Shame on you, Condaleezza, your parents were slaves for the whites!”

Playing the fellow victim card is questionable, but at least one can always count on the Palestinians to blatantly spell out their position:

“The Palestinians hate her because of her arrogance and because of the policy she represents,” said a veteran Palestinian newspaper editor. “Moreover, many Palestinians are angry with her because they think that all black people should be on their side.”

And you thought the Democrat Party took black support for granted. People simply refuse to recognize is that assuming someone will take a specific political position just because of his/her ethnic background is just as prejudicial as any ethnic slur. Political philosophies are more so defined by upbringing, economic beginnings, indoctrination and of course personal convictions. Having worked with George H.W. Bush, former California Governor Pete Wilson and former secretary of state James Baker among others, it should be no major surprise that the right-leaning Rice would tend to favor the pro-western state of Israel over its anti-Western Islamacist foes.

Speaking of ethnic slurs, the Palestinian media’s portrayal of Condi would make Don Raye proud. Observe these two cartoons mocking Dr Rice’s public hope for the birth of a new middle east:


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Editorial Cartoon: Al-Hayat Al-Jadeeda (via Palestinian Media Watch)

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Editorial Cartoon: Al-Quds

Keep these cartoons and quotes in mind the next time you see Pro-Palestinian protesters chanting “Zionism is Racism”.

Update: Booker Rising linked to this post and a lively discussion is taking place. I strongly encourage you to look at the discussion (and the site in general). Special thanks to Shay for the link.




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