Posted on 02/23/2006 1:27:22 PM PST by abb
NEW YORK Susan Zirinsky, executive producer of CBS "48 Hours Mystery, has apologized for airing an altered image of the front page of the Columbia (Mo.) Daily Tribune in an episode about a local murder trial that aired Saturday.
The papers managing editor, Jim Robertson, had complained to CBS in an e-mail. Zirinsky said she didnt know the image of the front page covering Ryan Fergusons sentencing had been drastically manipulated.
Ferguson had been convicted last October of killing the newpapers sports editor, Kent Heitholt, whose body was found in the Tribunes parking lot in November 2001.
"It was an egregious oversight for us not to know it," Zirinsky said, according to the Tribune. "It was a graphic, and we dont feel it changed the editorial value of the story, per se."
She did not mention whether CBS would inform viewers on the air or on its Web site.
The CBS show, which raised questions about Fergusons guilt, showed several front pages from the Tribune during its "Dream Killer" program. A graphic of the Tribunes Dec. 5 front page for some reason showed a photograph of Ferguson in a suit and tie at his sentencing. The original photograph showed Ferguson in a bright orange jail uniform.
Zirinsky blamed the fakery on a freelancer hired by CBS, according to the Tribune.
Ferguson, 21, was found guilty of second-degree murder and first-degree robbery in the slaying of Heitholt, who was bludgeoned and strangled. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
(Excerpt) Read more at editorandpublisher.com ...
Zirinsky blamed the fakery on a freelancer hired by CBS
If she knew, she's a lousy newspaper person.
If she didn't know, she's a lousy producer.
You just can't get good help anymore...
'Nuff said.
The swirl they're caught in goes counter clockwise ... the flush handle was pulled several years ago.
Seems strange that his Managing Editor would beef about it, though.
I presume the suit and tie looked better than the orange jump suit.
I see they're still trying to peddle the "fake, but accurate" excuse.
"A graphic of the Tribunes Dec. 5 front page for some reason showed a photograph of Ferguson in a suit and tie at his sentencing."
"For some reason." LOL!! Musta been magic....
Or to put it another way:
SEE BS
Any Columbia residents? I seem to recall the accounts related more evidence than the "dream".
Yup. "Fake, but accurate."
Sheesh.
Article from the aggrieved newspaper with offending picture....
http://www.showmenews.com/2006/Feb/20060223News003.asp
48 Hours apologizes for altered image
By SARA AGNEW of the Tribunes staff
Published Thursday, February 23, 2006
The executive producer of CBS "48 Hours Mystery" has apologized for airing an altered image of the front page of the Tribune in an episode about the murder trial of Ryan Ferguson that aired Saturday night.
CBS aired an altered image of the Tribunes front page for its 48 Hours Mystery. Above is the original Tribune front page. Below is an image from the show.
The producer, Susan Zirinsky, said she didnt know the image of the front page containing the story about Fergusons sentencing had been manipulated until this week after Tribune Managing Editor Jim Robertson complained to CBS in an e-mail.
"It was an egregious oversight for us not to know it," Zirinsky said. "It was a graphic, and we dont feel it changed the editorial value of the story, per se."
Bob Steele, a senior ethics faculty member at the Poynter Institute, a premier journalism training center in Florida, said CBS executives should apologize to viewers and use the networks Web site to explain what went wrong and accept responsibility for an ethical failure.
"What they did wrong was twofold," he said. "One, they altered reality by changing a piece of documentary journalism.
"Secondly, they deceived their viewers because they left them with the impression that what they showed was a truthful representation of what the newspaper showed."
The TV newsmagazine showed several front pages from the Tribune during its hourlong program "Dream Killer," about the trial of Ferguson, found guilty in October of killing Tribune Sports Editor Kent Heitholt.
During the show, which raised the question of whether Ferguson was wrongly convicted, a graphic of the Tribunes Dec. 5 front page showed a photograph of Ferguson that was different from what actually appeared in the Tribune. The original photograph showed Ferguson in a jail uniform as he appeared at his sentencing. In "Dream Killer," Ferguson was shown in a suit and tie.
Zirinsky said the graphic has been changed in the master tape of the program to accurately reflect the Tribunes front page. A freelancer hired by CBS for the first time was responsible for the alteration, Zirinsky said.
"We feel we are doing the right thing," she said. "We have apologized to the editor."
Steele, of the Poynter Institute, said CBS can explain what went wrong in terms of the action of its freelancer but said that doesnt absolve the network of its responsibility.
"CBS retains the responsibility of what they put on the air, including how" its news "is gathered and how it is produced," he said.
Ferguson, 21, was found guilty Oct. 21 of second-degree murder and first-degree robbery in the slaying of Heitholt, whose bludgeoned and strangled body was found in the early hours of Nov. 1, 2001, in a parking lot next to the Tribune. Ferguson and Chuck Erickson were arrested March 10, 2004, after witnesses told police Erickson had spoken of the crime to a friend. Erickson later told police that he and Ferguson killed Heitholt.
Erickson, who was a pivotal witness in the Ferguson trial, told jurors he repressed his memory of the crime for two years until news articles jogged his recollection.
Erickson declined interviews with "48 Hours" reporters, who focused most of their coverage on the trial and interviews with the Ferguson family and friends.
Bill Ferguson said his family has received hundreds of e-mails and many phone calls since the story aired. "I thought" the show "was very fair and well-presented," he said.
Boone County Prosecuting Attorney Kevin Crane said hes heard complaints from other people who were at the trial that the "48 Hours" episode was slanted in favor of Ferguson. While he said he thought producers went out of their way to portray Ferguson as an innocent victim, he said the show was more balanced than he expected. "The fact is: They did put enough of Chuck on the stand and juxtaposed that with interviews" with Ferguson "in prison and on the stand so that you could gauge the credibility of both guys," he said. "They showed enough of Chuck to show how he came across to the jury."
Kali Heitholt said she was disappointed the program didnt show more about her father and who he was. "We think that he was lost in the story," she said in an e-mail. "It saddens us that 48 Hours didnt end up being a vehicle for people to see the life of such an extraordinary and lovely person."
Reach Sara Agnew at (573) 815-1717 or sagnew@tribmail.com.
How about this little tidbit?!?!?!?
"Zirinsky said the graphic has been changed in the master tape of the program to accurately reflect the Tribunes front page."
Trying to erase history....
Hey, they only get caught a couple of times.
CBS aired an altered image of the Tribunes front page for its 48 Hours Mystery. Above is the original Tribune front page. Below is an image from the show.
Hmmmm....Looks like Bender 2's work. Maybe we should ping him....
I don't know about this story in particular, but such freelancers are often locals who have covered the story from the beginning and hope it will be their ticket to national exposure in print or broadcast. Instead, the best they get is an offer to buy their research. They may not be happy campers, giving them a motive to be less than 100% accurate.
How did they alter the picture...put horns on the guy or something? After all, such minor changes are only editorial and don't change the facts.
Did you do this thing? - With apologies for stealing the dialogue from "Clear and Present Danger"
The altered picture reinforces their story template - the guy is innocent. If CBS used the pic of him in a prison jumpsuit, it wouldn't fit the story they were trying to sell
Better?
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