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May 13, 2008 Est 1999 Scotland's award-winning independent newspaper
Sensationalist stories, willing consumers
Columnist of the year Ian Bell on giving offence

IF YOU believe the many who complained, the most shocking advert on British television last year involved a grisly visual pun and the word "hooked". Hundreds were appalled, and voiced their disgust to the Advertising Standards Authority. Scenes of actors being hauled around like gasping fish were too graphic, too horribly difficult to watch. "Gratuitous" was used and, as ever, misused.

Few of us enjoy being upset, or having others upset. It's not what we expect in a civilised society. Yet what was the purpose of this piece of base media manipulation? The idea, blatantly, was to deter people from the stupid habit of smoking. Imagine the gall.

So what truly offends a large and vociferous number of us? Actors pretending to be caught on big pretend hooks, or the knowledge of what happens to those who succumb to cancer of the lungs? Is it shocking to witness smart-alec telly folk at their worst, or would a couple of true stories about the activities of the tobacco industry - ruthless, dishonest and murderous - bother us even slightly?

And that was the only thing some people could find to worry about? Nothing else on TV caught their eyes last year, even momentarily?

When I began in this business I worked for a respectable daily that took an old-fashioned pride in its standards. There were strict rules designed to prevent causing offence. One was simple: no bodies. It was thought unnecessary ever to show corpses. Most papers still stick by this rule, most of the time. Does it add to anyone's understanding of a car crash to run a photograph of the body of someone's dead husband or daughter?

What is the judgement, however, when it becomes known that supposedly Christian militias have massacred the inhabitants of two Palestinian refugee camps, and when it is alleged that Israel's Ariel Sharon has played a role in the atrocities? Still "no bodies"? Or is the polite avoidance of the bloody facts akin to fabrication? Let's just say that there was a debate, and this junior hack was over-ruled.

When the media get it in the neck, the punishment is often deserved. Many things go on that I wouldn't attempt to defend. But two factors deserve some consideration. One could be put like this: sometimes the audience can be blamed for the performance.

There would be no trash TV if no-one watched. There would be no unspeakable (if that's your opinion) tabloid behaviour if no-one bought the papers. The asinine radio shock-jock would argue that he says cruel or hurtful things the better to cultivate a relationship with his loyal fans. He would not be entirely wrong.

I'm not the first journalist - and I won't be the last - to notice that the people who complain loudest about "the media" seem to spend a lot of time viewing, listening and reading. Funny, that. Funnier still is the fact that you rarely come across people who boast about buying the Daily Star, yet the title still sells sufficiently well to count as a profitable little operation.

The second factor too often overlooked has to do with the relationship between producers and consumers. Think of the most common yet rarely examined media word: story. This means that narratives are selected and shaped, because an audience has certain expectations. There are assumptions as to what makes a "good" story. And a good story is often a horrible story. The consumers, the audience, seem to be keen on those.

HERE comes the twist. Very often, the actual importance of the facts at issue have no bearing on a story's success. In certain moods I would be prepared to write about the catastrophe that is Afghanistan on a daily basis. The deaths, maimings and emotional injuries touching families the length of Britain would alone supply enough words. No-one has told me I cannot write about such things. But when does the greatest part of the British public really sit up and take notice? Only when there is a prince in the staged snaps.

The media are not all-powerful, entirely out of control, or instruments of a press baron's whims. Not always, at any rate. They have other masters. Those enjoy, above all, a good story. They demand their entertainment.

Kate and Gerry McCann thought they could ride this mangy tiger. They thought they knew how to keep the world's attention focused on one little girl's disappearance when the world forgets so many lost children. The couple pinned their hopes on a "media campaign". They paid, in my opinion, a high price for that decision.

Last week, marking the year that has elapsed since their daughter's disappearance, the McCanns all but admitted that their hopes of inspiring a global search have almost gone. They have endured 12 months in which pity and astonishing spite have alternated. They have won a legal case against the Express Newspapers group for its efforts to turn a succession of the public's "theories" into credible tales.

In this shaped narrative, this folk story, the McCanns have been assigned roles, cast into parts, and given a moral meaning that has precious little to do with any known reality. That sells papers. That gets papers bought. The very fact that I have even mentioned the couple by name will ensure me more attention - and I speak from experience - than anything I will ever say about Afghanistan.

I could say that the fantastic media reaction to the unspeakable crimes of Josef Fritzl has itself been deeply disturbing. Can I explain anything this individual is said to have done? No. Can I wonder aloud why the horror causes us to stir, collectively, when we know (or should know) that men such as this, and acts such as his, are in fact mercifully rare in our world? Yes.

Still, none of that would matter. I've mentioned Fritzl. It's enough. It's the big story. The satellite trucks have invaded a small Austrian town. The pieces-to-camera are going out continuously. No paper will allow a byline that fails to include the name Amstetten. And then, of course, there will follow the items in the media on the behaviour of the media. Just like this one, in fact.

It is possible, however, that not all such pieces will tend towards the same conclusions. We'll see. Perhaps someone else will point out the similarities between the production and consumption of media tales and another branch of the entertainment industry. This too is odd. This too has a vast audience that somehow also fails to exist. Ask anyone if they "use" pornography, or if they approve of the abuse on which that trade depends. You will invariably receive a firm, offended denial.

Decent people would simultaneously deny wanting or needing to know exactly what Fritzl did, to whom, and when. Most will be strangely well-informed, however. Most will somehow have caught a glimpse of the gee-whizz computerised graphics on the TV news showing the precise details of the monster's elaborately-constructed lair.

Few will confess to a real, hypnotised interest. Those who do will not be able to tell you why stories of depravity ensnare their attention. None will bother to pretend that knowing all about Fritzl aids his victims or explains his actions.

It's a story. Both a "good" story and, simultaneously, a truly awful story. It does not differ much, not in any important way, from porn. It is, in the actual meaning, sensational.

But few of them look away, or stop up their ears. Just possibly, that may be one of the reasons - though certainly not the only reason - why a creature such as Josef Fritzl can come into existence.

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Posted by: Anita, Chicago on 10:55pm Sat 3 May 08
Implying that Fritzl's crimes occurred in part because some folks like (or give in to) sensationalism is ridiculously illogical! The man HID everything for 24 years. I doubt he was thinking, "This will make an incredible story someday!" Some criminals do think that, but nothing indicates Friztl did.
Posted by: Morag, Peeblesshire on 12:45am Sun 4 May 08

Mmmmm, apart from his former lodger saying that Fritzl said to him that this house will be famous some day, I suppose.

Posted by: Clare, lanarkshire on 1:29am Sun 4 May 08
Ian, don't take this personally, but it still doesn't excuse crap journalism.
Posted by: Scott2006, Outside Glasgow on 6:05am Sun 4 May 08
Ian, you have 1500 words or so to describe the type of journalism that relies on 'sound-bite' equivalence where TV news has an immediacy and also a frighteningly short attention span. 2 minutes at most to say anything to do with the latest outrage. Give it ten minutes more and the fluffy puppy stories come along to soothe the collective furrowed brow.
News print requires punch in its opening paragraph. After that - it almost writes itself as journos are a pack animal after all.
Sensationalism will continue for a while, years really - the future in which all IDs are stored and controlled by government agencies could bring about a new period of puritan extremism playing to the gallery of Mail and Express readers.
Or we suffer from sensationalism overload and all go off to read the Sunday Post.
Good use of words and imagery can get around the current fascinations and either try to realise a particular view or propagandise a position - quality will out, in the end.
Posted by: Mike, Edinburgh on 8:35am Sun 4 May 08
Well theres the challenge Ian.

I dont like the idea that our young Scots are out there in Afghanistan and Iraq trying to force our form of democracy down their throats.

I certainly think that there has been a conspiracy to dumb down coverage. The right wing Governments dont want a Vietnam on their hands. As someone who lived through that period, i can testify that it did more to end the war than any other thing.

Why were there so many attempts to vilify the striking Oil workers in Grangemouth. They couldnt have tried any harder to state they were standing up for not only themselves but also for future employees. In any other society it could have been described as a noble cause.

The herald could take the lead, open discussions that bring out the facts, not the Government Spin. I dont know if you watched Brian Taylors interview of Gordon Brown when he was up here. Brians mouth was very Brown from kissing his arse. Does it remain the fact that the Scottish Media is a closed shop that doesnt dare criticise each other. If not where does the competition come from. Us Cybernats?. I would hope that is not the level of desperation we have come down to. Take a leaf out of experience of some of the great reporters of the past and put the point to your boss that you would clean up any opposition that still remains in Scotland.The likes of the Daily Retard or the Son should in my opinion be given an ultimatum to improve their act if they wish to trade in a future Scotland. Murdoch should be removed from Control of the British Media. He is one of the biggest threats to the democratic process. Citizen Kane must have been his favourite reading.
Posted by: Celtic Lion, Roar on 12:29pm Sun 4 May 08
You're over-simplifying it Ian. Unless you believe in mass psychological behaviour spread by unknown means then it would be reasonable to assume that the media has an equal (perhaps larger) role to play in shaping society as society has in shaping the media. These are so combined in how they evolve together it seems naive to discuss one without the discussing the other.

Today we can add shared communications such as this forum where ideas are evolved, shared, adopted or destroyed. Thankfully this form of media has so far taken on a life of its own (or more accurately, our own).
Posted by: Celtic Lion, Roar on 12:30pm Sun 4 May 08
You're over-simplifying it Ian. Unless you believe in mass psychological behaviour spread by unknown means then it would be reasonable to assume that the media has an equal (perhaps larger) role to play in shaping society as society has in shaping the media. These are so combined in how they evolve together it seems naive to discuss one without the discussing the other.

Today we can add shared communications such as this forum where ideas are evolved, shared, adopted or destroyed. Thankfully this form of media has so far taken on a life of its own (or more accurately, our own).
Posted by: wheez 123, Buffalo NY USA on 9:02pm Sun 4 May 08
It's interesting to me that you mention "decent people" not wanting to know anything about what Fritzl did.

Isn't that one of the main reasons that his crimes were allowed to continue unchecked?"Decent People?" I mean,neigbours are coming forward to say they knew Elisabeth was being abused before the dungeon was ever constructed. This story isn't being sensationalized,Ian.


You can't sensationalize a grotesque **** version of a Grimm's fairy tale. Things like "American Idol" are. I know the difference.
Posted by: Bernadette Pugh, Glasgow on 9:58pm Sun 4 May 08
The Bishops'Conference of Scotland today issued a letter for the 42nd World Communications Day, to be read at Masses on the 3rd and 4 May. I was also favourably impressed by Ian Bell's excellent article (p34). Both documents refer to the relationship between the provider and consumer of information. In Pentecostal Spirit I trust that this shared unity of focus may lead to fruitful dialogue, rather than division between secular and profane in the world we all inhabit.
Posted by: Christine, Eau Claire, Wisconsin on 1:03am Mon 5 May 08
Stories like this are the dark origins of fairy tales. They have always drawn interest in hearing them again and again. Yes, it does sell papers. Hundreds of years after their deaths we still know the name Grimm and Andersen. What type of society would we be if this story did not draw our prolonged fascinated interest? It is likely that the victims of this situation will be allowed to disappear. This situation is not the same as the ongoing incomprehensible interest in the child of Anna Nicole Smith. Your article seems to suggest that it is.
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