Katrina For Finding And Framing Essay

PAGES
3
WORDS
895
Cite

Developing a critical eye for the media also demands culling information from multiple sources and not believing everything stated by the media. The media is not an authority; the media consults authority figures to gather sellable data. For "They Shoot Helicopters, Don't They?"

1. Matt Welch cites general "communication breakdown" and an "information vacuum" as main culprits in the misinformation leaked about Katrina (p. 13). However, Welch places the blame squarely on reporters for not having enough skepticism of the oral sources they acquire information during a natural disaster. Rumors spread readily during a disaster also because of a breakdown in telecommunications infrastructure. What Welch refers to as a:rumor mill" seems to be the source of much of the media's coverage (p. 13).

2. The kinds of rumors and stories spread by reporters and enhanced by sensationalist media coverage suggest that various lenses are used to view reality. One of those perceptual lenses is that lawlessness and chaos characterize American life. Reporters covering New Orleans during the Katrina disaster expected that people were shooting at rescue helicopters, looting indiscriminately, and generally acting hostile to government workers. Although some of the rumors helped to mobilize assistance to the region out of sympathy, the situation...

...

The perceptual lenses through which reporters view their subjects are often heavily smeared with false evidence.
3. Watching the Katrina disaster unfold on the news, I heard about all the stories that Welch refers to in "They Shoot Helicopters, Don't They?" In addition to the title reference, I also heard about the looting, and many people still believe that New Orleans is a disaster zone because the media coverage was so intense. I did not believe most of the rumors but I did believe that the city had descended into a sort of chaos. I had thought that the Oprah comment was a purposeful exaggeration because of the anger felt at seeing so many homeless people, the poor who were unable to leave the city before the disaster. Welch disproves many of the stories but I still believe that some were true: that even if the media exaggerated or distorted evidence that some individuals were hostile because of the frustration of not being able to save their homes from destruction. However, I also felt empathy for the scores of aid workers who were being harshly criticized by the news media. The FEMA and other disaster workers were doing their best to offer help and they received no appreciation, only criticism.

Cite this Document:

"Katrina For Finding And Framing" (2008, October 13) Retrieved April 16, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/katrina-for-finding-and-framing-27653

"Katrina For Finding And Framing" 13 October 2008. Web.16 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/katrina-for-finding-and-framing-27653>

"Katrina For Finding And Framing", 13 October 2008, Accessed.16 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/katrina-for-finding-and-framing-27653

Related Documents
Addiction Is a Disease
PAGES 5 WORDS 1708

Addiction as a Disease: Addiction is a term that has traditionally been used to refer to psychiatric syndrome that is caused by illicit drug use. Actually, addition is the only psychiatric condition whose symptoms are regarded as an illegal activity. In most cases, this term is described on the basis of drug use, which is the main focus of many research and treatment programs. Generally, drug addiction has significant negative effects

Applied Operations This work intends to examine what business has learned from the disasters that occurred on September 11, 2001, and during Hurricane Katrina and how these events changed the way that business managers should plan for business continuity. Hurricane Katina -- Lessons Learned Hurricane Katrina is stated to have been the first Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale Category 5 hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season and was of such force that left approximately

57). Coker's article (published in a very conservative magazine in England) "reflected unease among some of his colleagues" about that new course at LSEP. Moreover, Coker disputes that fact that there is a female alternative to male behavior and Coker insists that "Whether they love or hate humanity, feminists seem unable to look it in the face" (Smith quoting Coker, p. 58). If feminists are right about the female nature being

Following the introduction, the report discusses framing issues, including international policy. The social and international context of global climate change is given a great deal of emphasis in this section. The relationship between climate change and sustainable development are also discussed in the framing concepts section of this report. This concept is important in order to deal with climate change because sustainable development models are what most of the development