A Matter of Trust.
By Robert Hanashiro, Sports Shooter
An old Chinese proverb goes something like this:
"Fool me once
Shame on you.
Fool me twice
Shame on me."
(Or was it Scotty on the old "Star Trek" series that said this?)
Journalism comes down to one very simple, but important thing. Trust.
Our job as journalists is to educate, enlighten, entertain and inform the public. For us to do this, we must have trust of the people who see our work and those who are the subjects of our stories.
A couple of recent incidents have caused me to think about trust and how perilous a thing it is.
Whenever a journalist becomes the news, instead of just reporting it, it can only mean bad things
usually the further eroding of our credibility and standing with the public. It seems every week there is something on the news gossip website that further tarnishes our reputation and takes another bite out of journalism's credibility.
People must be able to look at our work and trust that it is what it appears to be: An accurate depiction of the story we are telling.
Whether it is manipulating a news situation, taking a quote out of context, combining multiple images to make one or altering the content, it casts doubt on the story we are trying to tell. Can readers expect to trust
us after they just read about another incident of digital manipulation?
Looking at a news photograph, a reader may now have to ask: "Is that photojournalism? Or is that
Photoshop-alism?"
Journalism isn't about winning awards and interpretation shouldn't mean drastically changing the content of a scene to match what you "see" versus what the camera "sees".
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