Should NBC have aired Cho’s video?
posted at 5:05 pm on April 19, 2007 by Allahpundit
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As the story of the shooting recedes, the story of the story of the shooting emerges to replace it. Fox made a show this morning of its decision not to air any more of Cho’s photos or video. As of this writing, CNN has not followed suit. A forensic psychiatrist who consults for ABC calls NBC’s decision “a social catastrophe” — but meanwhile, video of Cho is still available at ABCNews.com.
With the heat on, NBC issued a statement this afternoon defending itself:
The pain suffered by the Virginia Tech community and indeed the entire country is immeasurable.
Upon receiving the materials from Cho Seung-Hui, NBC News took careful consideration in determining how the information should be distributed. We did not rush the material onto air, but instead consulted with local authorities, who have since publicly acknowledged our appropriate handling of the matter. Beginning this morning, we have limited our usage of the video across NBC News, including MSNBC, to no more than 10 percent of our airtime.
Our Standards and Policies chief reviewed all material before it was released. One of our most experienced correspondents, Pete Williams handled the reporting. We believe it provides some answers to the critical question, “why did this man carry out these awful murders?” The decision to run this video was reached by virtually every news organization in the world, as evidenced by coverage on television, on websites and in newspapers. We have covered this story — and our unique role in it — with extreme sensitivity, underscored by our devoted efforts to remember and honor the victims and heroes of this tragic incident. We are committed to nothing less.
Would you have aired it? It’s a major exclusive about a huge mystery that’s attracted intense public interest. The news networks all aired Osama’s videos after 9/11 as evidence of his motive, notwithstanding what it might do to the victims’ families. They all aired and re-aired video of the planes crashing into the buildings, too. As awful as the Cho tapes must be for the VTech victims’ families, I can’t imagine that watching the towers crumble was any easier for spouses of people who were trapped inside. The counterargument is that 9/11 was a matter of national interest with enormous policy and electoral implications; the public simply had to know as much as possible to respond intelligently to it. There are policy implications to what happened with Cho too (i.e., gun control), of course, but none that will likely be affected by video of him jabbering incoherently about trust-fund babies. Thus, the proper analog is to that O.J. “If I Did It” interview that got cancelled, not to 9/11. If we’re unwilling to let O.J. profit from his crime, however tangibly or intangibly, why let Psy-Cho?
Tough call. I tip slightly in favor of airing it because (a) I hate when the media plays paterfamilias in deciding what is and isn’t “appropriate news” for the public to see, and (b) I was honestly curious. Spruiell’s been grasping for some grander justification, like bringing the power of collective intelligence to bear on the evidence, but I think he’s just dressing up natural curiosity about the psychology of a mass murderer in some nobler utilitarian faux purpose. Which is not to say the media should be showing us crime-scene photos and pornography, etc., pursuant to point (a); obviously the feelings of the victims’ families do matter and just as obviously there are experiences so mortal and private that we recoil instinctively from images that exploit them in the interest of news. As unsatisfying an answer as this may be, I think ultimately it’s just a gut reaction about where to draw the line of decency, and so long as NBC didn’t/doesn’t show any crime scenes, I’m willing to cut them a break.
The one argument I don’t find especially compelling is that they shouldn’t have “rewarded” him by running it. How did they “reward” him by exposing him as a complete, yammering lunatic? If he had had some sort of political message and wanted to get it out this way, a la the Unabomber manifesto, that would be one thing. As it is, the only thing we’ve learned is that the voices in his head weren’t big fans of people who drive Mercedes Benzes. In terms of “rewarding” him with fame, I’m afraid that horse was already out of the barn by the time NBC got the package. Do a Google search for “Ismail Ax” and see how many hits you get. If I recall correctly, there were fewer than 10 results as of Monday afternoon.
Don’t get me wrong, I completely understand the other side of the argument. I even sort of understand Hugh Hewitt’s argument for allowing tort claims for hurtful speech against news organizations, even though I don’t agree with it and think it would be a First Amendment nightmare. I just think where there’s huge public demand for a major story and NBC is sitting on something big, why not supply the information? Tell me in the comments why I’m wrong.
Update: It bears reminding that, according to Brian Williams, they didn’t air the worst of the videos. There was some editorial judgment exercised here.
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And that can be 100% accomplished without showing the actual tape. Post a transcript on a web site.
For many of us objecting, it has NOTHING to do with whether we “want” to see the tape or not (so the infantile suggestions to “Turn off the TV or “change the channel” are worthless), its about whether showing it might encourage all those other folks out there with a chip on their shoulders (and there are a LOT of those folks, just read KOS or DU) to do something spectacular (not necessarily mass murder) in order to have their mugs, their words, their own very special “thoughts” displayed for all the world to see on TV, thereby securing their places in the history of media whoredom.
Fatal on April 19, 2007 at 8:12 PM
The nexus between the news and the news-makers is almost complete. The last step is the development of a 15-minute segment on Today called Sunrise Slaughter, in which the psycho du jour doesn’t a pre-crime sit’n'chat with Meredith and Matt to explain his angst.
SailorDave on April 19, 2007 at 8:23 PM
I agree with Fatal.
It’s not that the information is given, it’s how and in which forum.
Here’s a new exit question: if the media is not as influential as many of us are suggesting, explain this:
unamused on April 19, 2007 at 8:25 PM
Make that does a pre-crime sit’n'chat…
SailorDave on April 19, 2007 at 8:27 PM
Do I think they should have aired it? Probably not. Was it going to get out there, anyway? Yes. People have a morbid curiosity. We have an innate need to understand a person’s motives. That’s why those plays that he wrote have been floating around since the killings — it provides a look into his mind, as badly written as they are.
Regardless of whether it was going to be released by NBC or someone else, it was going to get out there sooner or later.
ScoopPC11 on April 19, 2007 at 8:48 PM
Transcript doesn’t do it. I am interested in his mannerisms and demeanor as well. If I ever encounter a person like this in my life, I don’t want to look back on my interactions with that person with the regret of not having realized how close to the edge they were without my realizing it.
I do agree, however, that it doesn’t necessarily belong on network news. That’s why I said they should just put it out there on the internet for people to make the free choice of whether or not they want to see it. My point is simply that I want to make that choice for myself–not let the MSM make that choice for me.
As for setting off the nutjobs, I reiterate that the nutjobs who are going to go off will one day explode with or without Cho’s manifesto being available to the public. Cho’s manifesto might, however, shed some light on this kind of personality/mental illness so that concerned citizens might be armed with information that will encourage them to try harder to get help for the next nutjob before it’s too late.
The passengers who refused to fly with the six imams who were behaving suspiciously were armed with information about the kind of behavior Islamic terrorists engage in before an attack. So they defended themselves by reporting the behavior to the appropriate authorities. They were only able to do that because they had useful information–that particular pattern of behavior had been highly publicized by the MSM following 9/11 and subsequent terrorist attacks and attempted attacks. It wasn’t “glorifying” the terrorists to profile them repeatedly on the news–it was providing useful information to the public. More information is almost always good. That’s all I’m saying.
aero on April 19, 2007 at 8:55 PM
There’s a lot of things they shouldn’t have done.
But it’s all about ratings.
Real news doesn’t sell. Sensationalism sells.
.
NBC should have never canceled Star Trek back in 69.
Kini on April 19, 2007 at 9:27 PM
Let me think aloud – Imus was vulgar – and unacceptable- the Manifesto – well well – lest we forget – they had the scoop and so what if it upsets the families. The idiots could have kept the tapes quiet, waited 2-3 weeks then blamed it on the Postal Service!!!
iam7545 on April 19, 2007 at 10:09 PM
P.S. Every other news station is airing parts of the video as well. NBC just did it first.
(information, not commentary)
Nonfactor on April 19, 2007 at 10:34 PM
NBC should NOT have aired the psy-Cho video. Furthermore, AllahPundit should not have posted this thread. In fact, no one that works for an internet blog site or for the MSM should post a thread like this one. “Why?”, you say? Because they all make their living off of the dissemination of information (whether it be by internet blog site or by cable TV). Allowing them to vote or espouse their opinion on the matter is clearly a conflict of interest. Of course, they’re NOT going to like me posting a comment like this. But then, if I am banned from HotAir for pointing this out, it will only serve to vindicate me and/or lend an air of truth to this comment, won’t it?
(Please don’t ban me.)
CyberCipher on April 19, 2007 at 10:43 PM
Come on, allah!
Did you read the “social catastrophe” article on ABC? I thought the psych was right on the mark. It did validate Cho’s hideous act. NBC should retract the vid and take Keith Olbermann off the air as penance.
And I thought it was a magazine of bullets, not a clip.
Otherwise, I still bow to you as the allah, the all-seeing.
JJ.1 on April 19, 2007 at 10:47 PM
“Would you have aired it?”
No.
NBC gave this cockroach what he wanted most: immortality.
georgej on April 19, 2007 at 11:53 PM
Hmm. It’s okay to air Cho’s rants but NOT okay to show the islamofascists killing 3,000 Americans on 9/11. NBC is simply not credible.
Mojave Mark on April 20, 2007 at 1:02 AM
They could have at least waited until after the victims’ funerals. There is not enough balance between airing the victims and the heroes in this massacre, and the perpetrator thereof. Only brief clips of the victims, at the end of segments on Cho.
Bill Bennett said on H&C tonight “I wish Mr. Librescu would have carried one of those Romanian pistols”. He also lauded him, the counselor who was killed, and the lady in charge of the VT English department profusely.
Entelechy on April 20, 2007 at 2:05 AM
Without reading all the comments here yet…
I think it should have been aired, but not over and over again as the media is wont to do to gain ratings.
It needed to be shown to show to many what the face of evil looks like.
Many recognize evil without needing additional information, but in this case, it was needed.
A couple of days ago, I was listening to a local talk radio station (conservative) in which they were taking calls about whether Marquette University (Milwaukee) should have rung a bell in rememberance of the 32 shot, or the 33 (including the killer) who are dead.
It shocked me at how many called in and said they were not in a position to judge, and that the bell should have been rung 33 times, including the killer.
This was before the videos and pictures were shown.
This fool violated one of the 10 Commandments at least 32 times. They are Commandments, not guidelines, which suggests a basis for judgement, so it was shocking to hear how many thought they could not find it within themselves to judge Cho.
I wonder what they think now that the videos and pictures have been shown.
91Veteran on April 20, 2007 at 3:18 AM
I’m sure I’ve violated the 10 Commandments at least 32 times. I’m sure a lot of my friends have as well. Your point?
If they ring it 33 times it shows that a loss of a life is still a loss of a life, regardless of how many times he violated the 10 Commandments.
Nonfactor on April 20, 2007 at 12:40 PM
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