eggwards: (bearded Mike)
[personal profile] eggwards
Yahoo! and Reuters validate my whole war as reality-TV perception that I wrote yesterday.

Yahoo! News - Live TV War Coverage Pulls in Viewers Worldwide


Live TV War Cover Pulls in Viewers Worldwide


Sun Mar 23,11:15 PM ET


By Gill Tudor

LONDON (Reuters) - Round-the-clock live television images of the war in Iraq (news - web sites) are mesmerizing viewers across the world, but not all are happy with what they see.


U.S. and British broadcasters such as CNN, Sky and the BBC are pumping out coverage of the U.S.-led invasion, and even media in countries not involved in the conflict have cranked up their programming to feed a surging public appetite for news.



Many viewers are gripped by what one London radio station has called "war porno" -- live television feeds of desert firefights or spectacular fireballs on the Baghdad skyline.



"The 24-hour multi-channel coverage of operations in Iraq is even more surreal than coverage of the Gulf War (news - web sites) in 1991," columnist Darrel Bristow-Bovey wrote in South Africa's Sunday Independent newspaper.



"What's worse, with 10 years of reality TV conditioning...it becomes increasingly difficult not to treat the coverage as another species of entertainment, an unfolding saga with twists and turns and unexpected surprises."



Organizations providing live coverage from Baghdad include Iraqi TV, Reuters, Qatar-based al-Jazeera, Dubai-based al-Arabiya, and a U.S. pool operation.



Bristow-Bovey said the coverage was like watching "Big Brother Iraq" -- a reference to the "Big Brother" reality show that lets viewers gape at contestants confined to a house full of cameras.



Even people who are not usually news addicts have been tuning in for regular updates on a war that has caused deep rifts in the international community.



"Usually I seldom watch CNN or the BBC, mainly because my English is not good enough to understand," Tokyo businesswoman Atsuko Hiranshe said. "But when it comes to minute-to-minute developments in Iraq, my eyes are glued to the TV screen."



"MARINE'S EYE VIEW"



One of the most enduring television images of the 1991 Gulf War was of U.S. cruise missiles swooping down Baghdad streets.



This time, networks are trumpeting their ability to broadcast live satellite images from their "embedded" reporting positions with the U.S. and British forces in Iraq.



Live on CNN, American Stefanie Lyle watched her soldier husband Clay charging through southern Iraq this week on a tank. "I've been taping it," she told the network. "I just can't believe that we're able to see this on TV. It's great."



CNN, Sky and the BBC were all dominated early on Sunday by live, "Marine's-eye-view" footage of fighting between U.S. and Iraqi soldiers around the southern town of Umm Qasr.



The Sky presenter enthused about the "dramatic" images. It was hard to make out much in the expanse of sandy wasteland, except for telegraph poles and a few distant buildings.



"As if he were covering a football match, the British reporter tells viewers back home about the battle this morning from Umm Qasr. No editing, just two hours of live coverage," one German journalist told his own viewers on the ARD network.



Television coverage has also been ramped up in Germany and France, whose governments are opposed to the Iraq war, but the tone there tends to be more downbeat.






 






One German correspondent warned viewers to beware of "disinformation" from Washington, and a German network ran shots of a U.S. tank stuck in the Iraqi sand.

Even in Britain, some criticize what they see as the overly bullish tone of some television reports. "Somehow the people reporting and presenting have too much enthusiasm for it," said British marketing manager Tom Greaves.

SANITISED VIEW OF WAR

Many also doubt the pictures tell the whole story, and say television is presenting a sanitized view of war.

Coverage by some Arab stations, including al-Jazeera, has been far more graphic, showing bloody images of Iraqis killed and injured in air raids.

The U.S. administration was angered by film shot by Iraqi television and provided by al-Jazeera apparently showing American dead and prisoners of war in Baghdad.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said it would be "unfortunate" if television networks carried the pictures. U.S. networks indicated they were treating the footage with caution, but were deciding how to proceed according to their editorial principles.

Gadi Wolfsfeld, professor of political science and communications at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said the upbeat tone of U.S. and British coverage might not last.

"Because of the lack of international consensus on this war, the role of the media may change very quickly and turn against the American government," he said.

"We're not seeing many dead and wounded. If the war goes badly (for the United States and Britain) we'll see a lot more."

U.S. television coverage of the Vietnam war in the 1960s and 1970s, although not real-time as it is today, was a major factor in fueling the anti-war movement in America.

Broadcasters spending millions of dollars on Iraq coverage may find the thirst for news drying up if war drags on.

U.S. network ABC's live, intensive Iraq coverage came second in the Thursday's viewing ratings to the top sitcom "Friends."

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