January 23, 2005
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Cargo worker Tami Silicio was fired from her job after taking this photo of flag-draped coffins in Kuwait. The photo ran first in The Seattle Times, then worldwide. Pentagon policy
had kept the media from photographing caskets of U.S. soldiers. AP photo
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Graphic images: Too much?
Readers, journalists weigh in on the power of photographs and what images are inappropriate for publication
By RYAN PITTS
Spokane Spokesman-Review
Newspaper readers and journalists agree that a complete news report cant ignore the disturbing sides of life, but readers are generally more conservative about when and where
graphic photographs should be published.
Responding to an online survey, both groups said that challenging images sometimes describe reality in a way that words cant. Although few thought the public should be shielded from ugly
truths, they all ran into similar concerns when deciding whether specific pictures should run.
Readers and journalists alike struggled to balance compassion and family privacy with a broader need for information. They saw value in unflinching descriptions of wartime brutality, but no one
wanted to become a tool for terrorist propaganda.
Some of the shared values werent abstract at all: How do I explain this picture to my kids?
Opinions were collected by The Associated Press Managing Editors National Credibility Roundtables Project, which involved more than 2,400 readers and 400 journalists who viewed five photographs,
then decided where (or whether) the images should be published. Subjects included tsunami victims, American soldiers and violence in the war in Iraq. In most cases, a majority believed the
pictures ought to be published somewhere in the newspaper, if not on the front page.
"Report the news as it happens and dont try to soft-pedal everything," said Wally Rayl of Cheyenne, Wyo. "How can people react appropriately to any given situation if they
dont have all the facts; or if the facts are altered because someone thinks life is too graphic for us to deal with? ... Not being able to face reality is a major problem in our society
today."
Most respondents described gut feelings telling them when that reality was too gruesome for publication. Many journalists invoked the so-called "cereal test," newsroom slang for a
simple question: Would I want my family to see this photo at the breakfast table tomorrow morning?
This concept was especially important in determining whether pictures belonged on the front page, where readers may not have a choice about seeing them.
"There seems to be a complicated mix of information that makes a photo uncomfortable or even offensive," said Kelly McBride, ethics group leader at journalisms Poynter Institute.
"Dead bodies are one thing bloated, decaying bodies are another."
As readers and journalists judged an images potential to cross that philosophical line, they showed a similar set of morals and fears. So why were media workers consistently more likely to
publish the photos?
"Its probably safe to say that journalists as a group are more likely to ground their moral decisions in duty," McBride said in an e-mail interview. "They believe it is their
duty to inform. In the wider public arena, a greater portion of people are going to ground their moral decisions in care. That means they would be concerned about harming the people in the
photos, as well as the audience who might view the photo."
But controversy cant become an excuse to avoid graphic images, she said. Sometimes fundamental journalism doesnt happen without them.
"Its impossible to tell a story of death and destruction on the scale of the tsunami without showing some pictures that include death and destruction," McBride said, which leaves
newsrooms obliged to consider decisions carefully.
Photo 1: Tsunami victims
The APMEs online survey showed five photos that had been discussed in newsrooms and households across the country. In each case, some media outlets chose to run the image, and some chose
not to. Confronted first with the image of a grieving mother among children killed by the Asian tsunami, survey respondents wrote of awkward feelings; they felt as if they were intruding on a
sacred moment.
"If your child were killed in some horrific manner, would you rush a reporter to get a picture of your wifes reaction?" asked Red Thomas, a reader from Mesa, Ariz. "If not,
why does this woman deserve less dignity?"
Most viewers were also extremely hesitant to show the bodies of dead children. A significant minority of journalists and readers about a quarter of both groups refused to run the
picture. For them, it was just too personal. Many journalists also cited newsroom policies that specifically prohibit publishing photos of dead bodies.
Still, 67 percent of journalists and 56 percent of readers said the photo belonged in the paper. Many said theyd run the image precisely because it forced Americans to identify with faraway
tragedy. Statistical descriptions of widespread devastation are impressive and incomprehensible at the same time, but a mothers anguish hits home.
"I believe the only way to make something as vast as this tragedy understandable is to reduce it to single, human images," said David Offer, a journalist from Augusta, Maine.
Many were also moved by the photos potential to call Americans to action.
"While heart-wrenching, the image is an important one to communicate the catastrophe, and to personalize it," said Ed Roussell of Medford. "I wouldnt put it on the front page
... but the photo should be used, especially to move individuals to reflect (and hug their own children tighter) and to help philanthropically, and otherwise."
Photo 2: Street execution of Iraqi election workers
A set of three photographs captured one of the more alarming scenes to play out in Baghdad in recent weeks: the executions of two Iraqi election workers by terrorists in broad daylight in the
middle of a street. Three-quarters of the journalists and nearly two-thirds of the readers would have published one of the photos in print. (The Mail Tribune ran the photo on Page 5A in its Dec.
20 edition.)
Their reasons werent complicated. Ask Danny Schoenbaechler, a reader from Bowling Green, Ky.: "This picture shows just how rough Iraq is and just how awful the terrorists are."
Many others noted the way this image displayed the brazenness of the insurgency. Others were impressed by the heroism of everyday Iraqis. "I think its a powerful aid to stories
explaining the terrible risks taken by Iraqis trying to rebuild their country," said Patrick Springer, a journalist from Fargo, N.D.
Springer was among many who were reminded of Eddie Adams Pulitzer Prize-winning photo from the Vietnam War, an iconic image of a South Vietnamese police chief executing a Viet Cong suspect
in 1968. Kristyna Wentz-Graff, a journalist from Appleton, Wis., saw the same parallel.
"Its images like this ... that make change," she said. "This is crazy, people being executed in the streets. These type of images prompt people to care and have opinions
about events that are worlds away."
Some respondents said technical issues might keep them from playing the photo on the front page; its difficult to tell whats going on without the aid of a caption. Others said
theyd run the photo, but wanted to be sure there would be enough context in print to tell its story. Then others said theres no excuse ever for showing a person in the
process of being killed. But the most significant worry was over the photos possible side effects: By publicizing the Baghdad executions, are we giving the terrorists exactly what they
want?
"These murderers obviously adore the limelight conducting their crimes in broad daylight in front of numerous observers," said Melissa Chinn, a reader from Pine City, Minn.
"Dont allow them further satisfaction."
Journalists described the same fears, but most decided that providing an accurate description of terrorist tactics and the danger in Baghdad outweighed them.
Photo 3: Wounded American soldier
This image, which shows medics attending to a soldier who later died from his injuries, brought competing concerns into stark relief. Is honoring the heroic efforts of American troops important
enough to sacrifice the privacy of a wounded family?
Respondents on both sides found an answer in the same place: the wedding ring on the dying soldiers hand.
"The compassion of the soldier giving CPR and the teamsmanship of those trying to save his life honors our military," said Rose Barnett, a reader from Jacksonville, Fla. "I see the
fellow has a wedding band. Im sure it was hard on his wife and family, but giving tribute I think gives honor. ... This doesnt tell me we shouldnt be there; this tells me that
this was a brave and kind man to lay his life down for the freedom of others. God rest his soul."
Amid regular reports of death and destruction, the opportunity to show members of our military working to save a life became an important justification for using this image. Seventy-four percent
of journalists and 59 percent of readers would have printed it.
"The photo speaks not just about a dying soldier but also to the comrades in arms that are trying to save his life," said Jim Slosiarek, a journalist in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. "I
think not publishing this photo does a great disservice to their efforts."
But plenty of respondents said family needs overwhelm any good the photo might do. Thirty percent of readers and 21 percent of journalists would have avoided it altogether.
"I feel really strongly about this picture as I have a military son," said Kathryn Martin, a reader from North Chili, N.Y. "I DO NOT want to see his dead body in the newspaper and
have it run for years and years to catch me unawares any time there is a retrospective about the war."
Andrew Kuppers, a journalist in Lakeland, Fla., said his paper received plenty of complaints after running this image on the front page. "Our decision was based on the sheer power of the
moment, an act of heroism on the part of the medic," he said. "Most of our own guidelines would point us away from such a photo, but we went with it anyway, probably because everyone
involved in the decision agreed it was one of the most powerful photos of the year from Iraq. ... Its worth noting that the main thing everyone noticed whether they agreed or
disagreed with running the photo was the soldiers wedding band."
Photo 4: Flag-draped coffins
Since 1991, Pentagon policy has kept the media from photographing the caskets of American soldiers killed overseas. The ban became big news in 2004, when cargo worker Tami Silicio took a picture
of flag-draped coffins in Kuwait, and it appeared in The Seattle Times.
Silicio was fired over the photo, but by then it had already run worldwide. A Freedom of Information Act request by Russ Kick of The Memory Hole Web site later gave the public access to photos of
military caskets at Dover Air Force Base.
Journalists and readers overwhelmingly agreed that images like these need to be seen. If we are willing to go to war, we cant flinch at showing its cost. Eighty-three percent of readers and
98 percent of journalists would have printed photos of the flag-draped coffins.
"This impersonal image of the horrors of war is a proper reminder of the sacrifice involved in going after our enemies," said Robert Pabst, a reader from Winter Haven, Fla. "It
helps us appreciate and support benefits for the wonderful people who are giving their all to protect us from those who would kill us all if they could."
Maureen Wallenfang, a journalist from Appleton, Wis., said the solemnity observed in these images is one of their most moving aspects. "These coffins contain our sons, daughters, spouses,
parents, friends and neighbors. The image is powerful for two reasons: It not only emphasizes the human price of war, but it also shows, I believe, the remains being treated with respect and
dignity on the final journey home."
The Pentagon says its policy protects grieving families, but survey respondents found that responsibility fulfilled by the difficulty of identifying the war dead.
"As a veteran myself, I dont think that the United States citizenry should be shielded from the actual horror affecting its military on a daily basis," said Dan Webster, a
reporter from Spokane, Wash.
Photo 5: Beheading of American captive
Terrorists captured American citizen Nick Berg in May 2004, then released a videotape of his beheading. Details of the killing have been largely left to the publics imagination, because few
media outlets ran more than a picture of Berg seated below his hooded killers.
Even that may have been too chilling: 47 percent of journalists and 55 percent of readers said they wanted nothing to do with any of the images at all. Of those who would have published a photo,
nearly all were extremely careful to say theyd never consider anything beyond Berg at the feet of his captors. If theres a line where graphic pictures go from important to
inappropriate, beheadings are clearly on the other side of it.
"Its horrible and we need to know that its happening, but watching someone plead for his life and then die a violent death isnt accomplishing anything," said Kylie
Polzin, a reader from Goose Creek, S.C.
As they did with the street executions in Baghdad, respondents wondered whose purposes are being served by running photos of Nick Bergs beheading.
Michael Segers, a reader from Lakeland, Fla., asked: "Does the photo work more FOR the captors (they want this image out) or AGAINST them (showing how awful they are)?"
Journalists repeatedly referred to the video as terrorist propaganda. "I also have some concerns about helping the terrorist agenda or endangering civilians by showing this type of
image," said Sanne Specht, a reporter at the Mail Tribune. "I think its a journalists job to faithfully disclose the reality of any situation. But this one troubles me
greatly."
McBride, of the Poynter Institute, said the source of the video should make this decision an easy one.
"In the same way that running a slick PR photo provided by a corporation undermines your journalistic independence, so does running photos provided by terrorists," she said. "You
further their agenda. The only way you could justify such a decision is to say that public good somehow outweighs the compromise. I have yet to see a case where it does."