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  • Broadcasters Struggle to Make Sense of a Disaster

    New York Times
    Dec 28 2004

    Broadcasters Struggle to Make Sense of a Disaster
    By DAVID CARR

    Published: December 28, 2004


    An earthquake that sent walls of water tumbling inland through South
    and Southeast Asia left television news networks sifting through
    thousands of images sent from around the region as they struggled to
    make sense of the largest earthquake in 40 years.

    The massive scope of the disaster touched on more than six different
    countries, many of which have the kind of technological
    infrastructure that allowed vivid imagery to be transmitted before
    the dimensions of the disaster were actually known.

    Video compression technology, fed by digital cameras and enabled by
    satellite and videophones, along with laptops with uplink
    capabilities, meant that people all over the world saw the deadly
    aftermath of the earthquake just hours after it ended. And by
    yesterday morning, real-time video footage of the tidal wave striking
    the shores, much of it taken by tourists on or near the beaches in
    Thailand began showing up on network broadcasts.

    Because of the ubiquity of the footage, there was little competition
    for good pictures, with the television operations of both Reuters and
    The Associated Press finding themselves awash in video feeds from the
    region.

    "Like many natural disasters, there was not anything live actually to
    begin with," said Sandy MacIntyre, director of news at APTN, the
    video arm of The Associated Press in London. "But now, a day after,
    some of the most vivid images, the ones of the waves hitting the
    beaches, were filmed by the people most affected."

    Still, Mr. MacIntyre said, "this has been one of the most
    geographically and logistically challenging stories to cover in a
    generation because of the sheer scale of it." He added, "When I was
    woken and told of what happened, I got the atlas open and I looked at
    the mass of the Indian Ocean rim and realized what a big story we
    were looking at."

    Robert Muir, the acting news editor of Reuters Television in
    Washington, said there had been no scarcity of video imagery. "It is
    not as if there was a single plane crash where someone had exclusive
    footage," he said. "This was happening many places at once, and we
    found many people who were willing to part with video just so the
    story could be told."

    It is a far cry from the 1988 earthquake in northern Armenia where
    tens of thousands of people also died; it took more than two days for
    images of the devastation to emerge.

    Bill Wheatley, vice president of NBC News, said that at that time the
    network had to charter a 300-seat Soviet aircraft because it was the
    only one available to get images of the Armenian disaster back to
    Moscow so they could be transmitted.

    "It's amazing how much things have changed," he said. "We now have
    the ability to feed our pictures from virtually anywhere. In fact,
    the ability to feed pictures sometimes outpaces the ability to get
    extensive editorial information to go with them, although in the
    instance of this story, the pictures almost speak for themselves."

    Yesterday the airwaves were full of pictures of the aftermath, but
    stringers in the area are now finding bystanders who shot video of
    the disaster and lived to tell the tale.

    "We knew right away that we needed to get to the beaches of Thailand
    because that's where the tourists were," said Chuck Lustig, director
    of foreign news for ABC, who immediately dispatched the network's
    Hong Kong correspondent to the Thailand.

    John Paxson, London bureau chief of CBS News, sent two crews, one
    from Beijing and one from Tokyo, as soon as he got word of the
    disaster.

    "One of our producers sat down and began looking at the many, many
    images from so many different places and said, 'I don't know where to
    start,' " Mr. Paxson said. "This isn't a race for pictures, this is
    an attempt to tell a massive story."

    As recently as 1998, when there was a huge tsunami that landed on the
    coast of Papua New Guinea, the networks found themselves scrambling
    to get pictures out of the disaster area, in part because the wave
    landed in a technologically underdeveloped place.

    "We didn't get pictures from that until days later, because it was
    such a primitive area," said David Rhodes, director of news gathering
    at Fox News in New York. "This has been nothing like that. There is a
    lot to work with and a lot to try and make sense of."

    Bob Calo, an associate professor at the graduate school of journalism
    at the University of California, Berkeley, said that there had been
    something of a reversal in the news-gathering process. "If you think
    back, news gatherers would get the story and then commission a
    photographer to go and get the pictures," he said. "Now we have
    flipped it around to where reporters are chasing the pictures, trying
    to create some context for what viewers are seeing."

    Mr. Paxson of CBS said that it was axiomatic that most of the
    coverage was coming from areas that had been hit the least hard.

    "The story now moves to what happened in places that are more remote
    and less connected, places like the Andaman and Nicobar Islands," he
    said. "No one really knows what we are going to find out there."
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