How much grief is enough? How much privacy do the survivors and victims of disasters deserve? How close is too close to film grieving children, traumatised relatives and the dead and injured?
They’re the questions I began asking myself yesterday as I clicked on some of the major Australian news sites and was bombarded with a huge image of two teenagers who had just learned that their beloved mother had died in Christchurch’s CTV building.
It was a shocking photograph, in every sense of the word and I was uncomfortable to see it. It felt intrusive, gratuitous and voyeuristic. Having read the caption and realised what I was looking at, I immediately clicked away in a reflex attempt to give those distressed people the privacy they hadn’t been afforded by the media.
I don’t buy newspapers anymore during the week so when I was out and about yesterday, I was equally shocked to see those same photos on the front of tabloid and broadsheet newspapers, local and national.
And for what purpose? So I could learn that people had died? Knew that already. So I could learn that the family members of the victims were devastated beyond measure? Knew that too. My first impression was that it was an awful type of grief porn – using the most private, miserable and traumatic moments in people’s lives to make pictures.
I thought about it more during the day and it seems like I wasn’t the only one who had that reaction. Editor of the ABC opinion website The Drum, Jonathon Greene wrote a column yesterday about the role of the media in covering catastrophes like the floods, cyclone and now the earthquake and questioning the need for rolling coverage and exploitative images. Many journalists and news directors fired back and it is a really interesting debate to watch unfold.