11903.fb2
[...]
When the report was shown on "60 Minutes," CBS reporter Steve Kroft said that the mule
had "no problem" slipping past British customs with the heroin in his stomach.
"Another pound of heroin was on the British streets," the "60 Minutes" report said.
But the Guardian, which says it found the "mule," reports that he actually swallowed
Certs mints, not drugs. It says the flight to London took place six months later, and
was paid for by the filmmaker. And it says the "mule" was actually turned back at
Heathrow because he had a counterfeit passport, and thus never entered Britain.
[...]
The documentary included a highly dramatized segment in which reporters under armed
guard were taken to a remote location for an interview with a figure described as a
high-ranking member of the Cali drug cartel. "60 Minutes" reported de Beaufort had to
travel blindfolded for two days by car to reach the scene of this secret rendezvous.
The Guardian [...] said the secret location was actually the producer's hotel room in
Colombia.
[...]
The British government's watchdog group, the Independent Television Commission, has
launched a study of its own. Unlike the United States, where government has no power
to police the content of news reporting, there are official regulations here requiring
that TV news demonstrate "a respect for truth."
CBS has not undertaken an investigation of its own, but will report to its viewers on
the results of the British investigations [...].
HOME DISINFORMATION 60 MINUTES 1254 hits since 20Oct98
Buzz Bissinger Vanity Fair Sep 1998 Old Liars, young liar
Trouble was, he made things up - sources, quotes, whole stories - in a
breathtaking web of deception that emerged as the most sustained fraud in modern
journalism.
The topic of lying in the media is of central importance on the Ukrainian Archive
because of the frequency with which the media uses the opportunity of reporting on
the Slavic world in general, and on Ukraine in particular, to instead calumniate
them. Three prominent examples are Jerzy Kosinski's career as Jewish-Holocaust
fabulist and Grand Calumniator of Poland, TIME magazine's wallowing girl photograph
of 22Feb93, and Morley Safer's 60 Minutes story The Ugly Face of Freedom, broadcast
over the CBS network on 23Oct94.
From such examples as the above, however, it is difficult to estimate the prevalence
of misinformation and disinformation in the media. It may be the case that
distortion and calumniation are limited to a few topics such as the Slavic world or
Ukraine, and that otherwise the media are responsible, professional, and accurate.
The value of studying the case of Stephen Glass, however, is that it suggests
otherwise - that perhaps the media operate under next to no oversight, that they are
rarely held accountable, and that only egregious lying over a protracted interval
eventually risks discovery and exposure. Had Stephen Glass been just a little less
of a liar, had he more often tempered his lies, more often redirected them from the
powerful to the powerless, he would today not only still be working as a reporter,
but winning prizes. Thus, the example of Stephen Glass serves to demonstrate the
viability of the hypothesis that misinformation and disinformation in the media is
widespread, and that the three examples mentioned above, and the many more documented
throughout the Ukrainian Archive, may not be exceptional deviations at all, but
rather the tip of an iceberg in an industry which is largely unregulated, which is