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It's our job

By Sean Berry | View Archive November 20th, 2008, 4:35 pm

Journalists don't cover stories about tragedies because of a misguided whim, or some devious desire to chase ambulances.

We cover them because that's our job. And it's part of the job because the public has an insatiable desire to know what's going on.

It's a good desire, too; it's in the public interest for people to know what's happening.

The more they know, the better they're able to make informed decisions in everyday life.

A horrible tragedy happened in Tathra on Tuesday night, claiming the lives of two young kids and their dad. Understandably, the local community is in mourning, and the wider community's in shock.

Many wanted to know how it happened and why it happened, who the victims were and what they looked like.

Millions would have turned on their TVs, switched on their radios or opened newspapers.

They learned about a young family and the heroic, but ultimately unsucessful, attempts to rescue them.

Maybe they learned about an appeal to raise money for the grieving widow. And possibly, they looked at the pictures of those two little boys and wept.

The pictures and the stories were pieced together by journalists: asking questions and knocking on doors. Cameramen, photographers and road crews would all have helped put the stories together.

And yes, someone probably knocked on the door of the family, they were probably told to leave, and they probably did.

Sometimes victims' families want to talk. Sometimes they want the world to know how much their loved ones meant to them, how special they were. Sometimes they want similar tragedies to be avoided in the future. Sometimes they just need someone to talk too.

Often they don't. The family may want to be left in peace; they may resent the intrusion in their life.

The only way to find out is if someone asks. It's a fine line that many journalists walk every week, and none that I know of enjoys.

After a day of reporting the tragedy, three television reporters were apparently assaulted last night. My colleague Sarah Cumming was verbally abused. Dan Sutton from Ten and Denham Hitchcock from Nine were allegedly physically attacked.

Sarah's a diminutive woman, hardly deserving of threats from an intimidating group of men. Denham and Dan are nice guys too, and far from threatening. They didn't deserve to be hit.

None of them was working: they were in a pub having a bite to eat and a drink. I've heard it suggested journalists should have stayed away from the pub. This is Australia, that sort of talk shouldn't hold sway in this country.

Neither should suggestions that they had it coming.

There are a few professions where violence and agression are the norm, boxing and rugby league come to mind, but collecting and reporting on the facts, however tragic, aren't.

This attack wasn't justified, and it feels like just plain thuggery.

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Comments

  1. sangstarchild View Profile

    I say a lot of journalist are a little or very ignorant when it comes to reporting the facts. For example I have yet to see a journo reporting on why NASA continues to brash the moon surface. Why dont journo reports on cylinder objects in the Saturn rings?

    Oct 30 08:15 am
  2. sangstarchild View Profile

    The most effective way to stop new boats arriving is to have corporal punishment for the people that are in charge of the boat. One way is to use the pilot's of the boat as live targets, the other is to give the pilot's 20 lashes for each day that their cargo are kept in Australian waters.

    Oct 30 10:12 am
  3. mrob4449 View Profile

    hear this berry you dick i couldn't give a rat's ass whether it is your job! i do NOT have an insatiable desire to be told anything at all, especially by some hack journo like you!

    Nov 11 05:26 pm
  4. surfersgreens View Profile

    Sean Berry pushes the great media lie, pathetically condescending to readers, virtually blaming us for the degree to which the media invades privacy and the level journalists stoop to to give us all the unnecessary but gruesome details. Our democracy has police, coroners, courts and parliaments to do the real investigative work. Journalists are meant to cover the news by reporting on the investigations and findings of our trusted institutions. Leave it at that.

    Nov 16 06:53 pm
  5. ciorstaidh_l View Profile

    The media no longer presents the objective facts of "the news." What we see nowadays is sensationalism, and in this case the invasion of privacy of ordinary people in pain and grief.

    Nov 21 05:41 pm

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