|
TBS 10: "Covering the
Coverage" of the Iraq War
Never before in the history
of warfare has the coverage-and in particular the transnational television coverage-attracted
as much attention and fierce debate as that of the recent conflict in Iraq. The
impact of television journalism on that coverage, far out of proportion to the
actual number of television journalists in relation to all journalists (print
and still photo) participating, is reflected in the way the issues posed by television
journalism have dominated the discourse.
Issue 10 of the Adham
Center's Transnational Broadcasting Studies Journal, the Middle East's only on-line
publication dedicated to the study of satellite television, went on-line April
17, 2003, taking "Covering the Coverage" - the media, and the media's own reaction
to the media-as its main theme.
Informal reports by Maggie
Zanger (of AUC's Journalism and Mass Communications department) and Chris Gray
of the BBC bring alive the day-to-day experience of the professional journalist
in Northern Iraq, while BBC veteran John Simpson's report immediately following
the friendly-fire bombing in which his translator was killed reminds the reader
of the very real dangers to which journalists were exposed.
TBS senior editor S. Abdallah
Schleifer went to the heart of US military, and Arab satellite, communications
in the Gulf and talked both to the official spokespeople and the CEOs and/or News
Directors, such as Muhammad Jasim al Ali, Ibrahim Helal (Al Jazeera), Ahmed al
Ali and Nart Bouran (Abu Dhabi TV), and Salah Negm (Al Arabiya), as well as APTN's
Ian Ritchie. Technical and logistical sides of reporting the war receive attention
as well, with pieces on "New Compression Technologies" (by David Cass) and their
role in war-time reporting and how Video Cairo Sat, one of the region's main service
providers, coped with the special demands (by Noha El-Hennawi).
TBS 10 also looks at how
the media have dealt with the war in a number of countries and from a number of
viewpoints. Brian McNair reports on what British viewers saw, in "The Iraq War
As Seen In Britain: UK Satellite Coverage." Coverage from the Arab World has been
viewed as both impacting on and reflecting the concerns of those most immediately
affected by the war, but neither the coverage itself not the response to it was
monolithic. Four articles each provide a part of the larger picture of the highly
diversified Arab media. Hussein Amin reviews some of the responses of viewers
in the region in "Watching the War in the Arab World," while Abbas Al Tonsi's
"Impressions Of An Arab Viewer On The Satellite Coverage Of The So-Called 'War
On Iraq'"' delivers a mordant judgment on both the performance of the Arab channels
and the environment in which they operate. In "A Palestinian Perspective on Satellite
Television Coverage of the Iraq War," In'am El-Obeidi contextualizes and dissects
the peculiar intensity with which viewers on the West Bank and in Gaza receive
news of the war, and Janet Fine's "Al Jazeera Winning TV Credibility War" looks
at the ratings wars among the Arab channels.
The Western and Arab media
were not, however, the only ones watching how events transpired in Iraq. Dilruba
Catalbas's "Divided and Confused: The Reporting of the First Two Weeks of the
War in Iraq on Turkish Television Channels" and Christine Ogan's "Big Turkish
Media and the War" assess the response of the relatively new satellite channels
in a country intimately involved, though not on the front line. India, though
not itself a party to the war, India stands to win or lose much from it; Janet
Fine documents how the distant drama has impacted on the development of the media
in "Covering the Iraq War in India."
TBS 10 also provides a
provisional archive of the media's own reactions to the coverage in "Media on
Media," which offers 26 articles from the world's press in which journalists analyze,
praise, and attack the war coverage of their fellows. Before these, however, in
"Moral Dilemmas of the Press," TBS places two pieces that highlight the potential
cost to ordinary people of the media's actions. "'Friendly Fire?'- the Peter Arnett
Affair" provides Peter Arnett's and NBC's own accounts of an incident that exposed
and tested the "red lines" of Western journalism. "Credo of a Crouching Couch
Potato," by TBS managing editor Humphrey Davies provides a highly personal reaction
to the unending flood of coverage.
Warning: fopen(/home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/cache/35a4c370b8d4926a9202c13ce15df0ef) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 128
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 129
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 130
Warning: fopen(/home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/cache/08cb6b41c72b35d6e232f2733439b3d7) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 128
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 129
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 130
Warning: fopen(/home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/cache/c3cd6a5d4c12cc9e2d126107b91ead9b) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 128
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 129
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/noelense/public_html/kpd-online.info/exchange/ex_func.php on line 130
TBS 10 does not neglect
other things that were going on in the rest of the TV satellite world this spring.
In Issues and Developments, Bella Thomas questions the received wisdom on "cultural
hegemony" when she discusses "What the World's Poor Watch on TV." Monal Zeidan
reports on changes at a major actor in the regional market in "New Moves for Showtime,"
while Janet Fine notes an anniversary in "Globalization of Indian Satellite TV
Marks 25 Years," and Chris Forrester discusses the latest development in entertainment-related
gadgetry in "Could SatMode Be Satellite's 'Killer App?'. Patrick Stoddart describes
News World's effort to train a new generation of journalists for the challenges
ahead in "News World-the Next Generation." Those challenges were at the forefront
of two important panel discussions held in 2002, for which TBS 10 provides transcripts,
one under the aegis again of News World ("News World Dublin - Countdown to Conflict")-a
piece that makes especially interesting reading now that the war has been fought
and reported-and the other organized by NewsXchange ("New Media Realities in the
Middle East") and dealing with that other conflict, in Palestine, which has done
so much to prepare the media for Iraq. TBS 10's Conference Report covers an event
that saw many preliminary skirmishes in the battle for media autonomy that was
later to be played out in earnest in Iraq ("News World Dublin, November 2002 by
Janet Key").
Despite all this sturm
und drang, TBS is still able to find room for Academic Papers that can stand back
and look at some aspects of the broader context. Christa Salamandra provides an
ethnography of "London's Arab Media and the Construction of Arabness." Dilruba
Catalbas examines the interactions of Turkish and US satellite broadcasters in
"'Glocalization'" - a Case History: Commercial Partnerships and Cooperation between
Turkish and American Satellite Broadcasters" and Mohammed el-Nawawy and Leo A.
Gher discuss Al Jazeera's potential role in the building of bridges between East
and West in "Al Jazeera: Bridging the East-West Gap through Public Discourse and
Media Diplomacy."
TBS 10 - the Spring-Summer
issue, at www.tbsjournal.com
|