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Lawyer and wannabee journalist says luge video voyeurism

Was Olympic luger death video just pandering to voyeurism?

By Christine Dobby Toronto Star

Editor – NJN Network has published this video since it believes the public needs to know the truth not just the white-washed IOC version Anger is mounting against IOC in death of luger

By Christine Dobby

Someone is always watching. Whether it’s a security camera, cell phone, cheap digital camera or professional camera crew, major and minor events alike are all documented.

Occasionally, this means people’s deaths are caught on film. Their dying moments, rendered in slow motion, become part of our collective celluloid memory.

But should they? Should media outlets publish these images and distribute them widely for general consumption? 

The death of a Georgian luger, just prior to the opening of the Olympic Games last week, raised these questions anew. The video of Nodar Kumaritashvili’s death was initially broadcast in its entirety before most networks began showing an edited version.

The New York Times published an interesting graphic representation of the fatal run on its website which showed Kumaritashvili’s sled position at various points in the run. The final frame includes a picture of his body hurtling towards a steel pole, milliseconds before impact. Some outlets, like the Vancouver Sun, decided not to post video or still images of the death.

Also in the news this week, the anonymous amateur video, which captured the last moments of Neda Agha-Soltan’s life during the 2009 Iranian election protests, won a George Polk Award for Journalism. And closer to home, the Toronto court presiding over the trial of two men charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a passerby outside the Brass Rail in 2008 released security footage of the moment John O’Keefe was shot and killed. The Globe and Mail, as well as other news organizations, published the video on its website.

There’s an argument to be made that the public has an interest in seeing these images. It has been said that the video of Neda’s death produced heightened awareness of just how serious the situation in Iran was. Similarly, images of Kumaritashvili’s crash tell the story and illustrate the sheer danger of his sport and the track in a way that words alone cannot convey.

But I wonder whether part of my own interest in these photos and videos is not simply grim fascination and voyeurism. Meanwhile, friends and family of the deceased are left to confront the images, often while still in the throes of grief.

Legitimate public interest has to be balanced against good taste and compassion and deciding whether and how to publish is a tough call. One worth thinking about before I’m actually in the position to make it.

Christine Dobby is a former lawyer now studying journalism in Ryerson’s master of journalism program.

3 Comments

  1. mark severin

    well i don’t see any law being broken but should it not be the family asking to have it taken down not the IOC. they just want to make it go away like most bad news. if you take it down make it known it would not be for the ioc but for respect for the family

  2. Whitewash

    Stephen, please ask the IOC to kindly pucker up and kiss your ass. The crash was a terrible and tragic event. The IOC should be held accountable for not only the design flaws, but their poor handling on the whole situation. Keeping the video up may be one way to draw attention to the matter and force the IOC’s accountability.

    Perhaps an edit of the video showing only the first portion of the crash prior to the impact with the beam would quell some of the negativity behind your situation. It would show the root cause without getting into the unfortunate effect.

  3. Daniel

    Nodar Kumaritashvili Luge MORTE 12/2/2010
    21 anos Luge não

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