Task 1A – Analysis of Ethical
& Legal Issues in Documentary/News Report
The documentary I will be talking
about is lawful killing: Mark Duggan and the news report I will be talking
about is disabled people on wheelchairs complaining about lack of sitting spaces
because mums with prams are taking up the spaces. I will explore the ethical
and legal issues about the documentary and TV news report and also compare
them.
Ethical
Issues
Accuracy:
In the documentary ‘Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan’ they had to be accurate all
the time because there were parts based in the court and during court you have
to swear an oath, in other words not lie. This means telling the truth which is
being accurate also. With the news report they would have to be very accurate
with their facts and statistics. They would have interviewed and spoke to many
people about the wheelchair space situation. Such as speaking to pregnant women
who use disabled wheelchair access for their prams, the news reporters would
have also spoke to disabled people who use bus for transport. By gathering all
of that information they then would produce accurate figures, stats and facts. In
the documentary they would have done lots of research such as getting dates, times,
locations and places right. The audience would vaguely know facts such as dates
and locations, so if these things are wrong it would question the viewers and
make them not believe the documentary. In TV news reports and documentaries,
they also must make sure to get the quotes correct, word for word. For example
in the news report, the reporter said “ Mum’s with babies on public transport
feel they are more important than disabled people that use public transport”
Before the reporter making such a huge statement he would have had to do lots
of research, questionnaires, survey and speak to those profiles to gather
relevant information to make that statement.
Balance:
For the Mark Duggan documentary they had to be balanced and fair by talking to
both sides and hearing each side out. If they were to just focus on one side of
the story it wouldn’t be fair to the other side as they wouldn’t get a say.
There was a scene in the middle of the documentary where 3 people each spoke
equally to the audience, these 3 people were a policeman, one of the witnesses
and a family member. Likewise with news report they always got to keep
everything balanced. For example there was a report on the lack of availability
of wheelchair access due to mums with prams using up that space. So the news
reporter had to interview both sides and hear them out equally. In this case
the interviewer would have a conversation with mums with prams and also
disabled people too. One of the mums with prams said “It isn’t unfair, because
that is the only place where us mums can actually place our prams”. The way in
which news showed balance was by letting both sides give their thoughts.
In the
documentary Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan and TV news report they are not allowed
to favour just one side. This is known as impartiality, which is pretty similar
to bias and balance, it is not favouring one side so in the documentary, the
jury couldn’t favour one side more than the other. For example they couldn’t
favour the Police more than Mark Duggan’s family that would be wrong and unfair.
With news reports they also can not favour one side more than the other. For
example in this case if the reporter had his own personal feelings and favoured
the mums with prams more than the disabled peoples this could lots of conflicts
and might result in lots of disabled people being angry at him.
Objectivity
subjectivity:
I do
not feel there was any subjectivity within the documentary because the film
maker was not connected to the killing at all in anyway shape or form. If the
director/film maker had and any personal feelings towards the issue or was
connected to the killing then it would make the whole documentary one sided and
not fair because the film maker could shadow the documentary to the way they want it to be shown. The ethnicity of the director could
potentially have impacted the way the documentary has been shown. Another way
they could involve subjectivity in the documentary is by asking
personal/irrelevant questions to the interviewee. With the news report it is
100% reliable and would never have subjectivity within it. People trust and
believe news because the news reporters do their own research and actually go
out and find out the information. The
word news means real accurate facts/information therefore it would be nearly
impossible for them to make it subjectivity.
Opinion:
Out of all the ethical elements I would say Opinion is one of the most used
element because everyone has their own personal opinion that needs to be heard.
For the Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan, nearly everyone had their own opinion that
had to be heard as it was portrayed on such a fatal topic. For example the
police men that were actually involved in the incident had their opinions which
they stated. The family also had their own opinions on the matter, also a few
witnesses’ had their own opinions on the matter too. In the documentary, in one scene the family of
mark Duggan’s family expressed their opinions of the police. One member said
“The police are racist f*cking pricks!” This is their own view on the subject
which is an opinion. With the news report about the disabled peoples lack of
space for wheelchair access had their opinions, likewise with the mums on the
prams too. In the TV News report, the disabled people also gave their own
opinions many times. For instance at the start of the report, a disabled person
said “Most mums that use the wheelchair access which is meant for disabled
people are very ignorant and selfish” This person gave their own thoughts on
the situation which is their own opinion.
Bias:
Bias is being one sided or favouring one side more than the other. To some extent, I would say the documentary
was biased because they focused more on the police than the actual family. I
feel like the viewers would have wanted to hear more of the family’s side
rather than the police. After the documentary many people actually ranted on
social media about the Lawful Killing of Mark Duggan. Lots of people even
tweeted on twitter, one person said “The documentary wasn’t shown right. The
filmmaker showed it in their own way which isn’t right. It was basically just
90 minutes of the police chatting bollocks” It wasn’t just this one person that
felt this way, thousands and thousands of other people also felt this way as there
were so many tweets about this matter. This just shows and justifies how bias
this documentary actually is. For the news report a few disabled people thought
the report was biased and made them feel “in the wrong” some disabled people
said. So some would actually say the report was a bit biased in some way,
whereas others would say it was not bias at all. It depends on the angle you
look at the report on. As well as bias being an ethical issue, bias is also a
legal issue. This is because when it comes to legal elements you cannot be one
sided or just listen to one side of the story. Especially when you’re in court
you definitely cannot be one sided. The
TV news report was not biased because they interviewed the mums with the baby
prams and also the disabled people. They interviewed them both equally and
asked the same questions to both sides.
Contract
with viewer: Viewers would like to take something from that documentary, in
most cases they would want to gather the truth from it. If they can’t get this
from the documentary this would obviously upset them as they are not getting
the truth. Which again could cause conflict and rage. As a viewer watching a TV
news report I except they would generally want to gather the truth from the
report and its reliability.
In
documentaries before they start, they often display some kind of contract/pact
for example they may state that the documentary is based on real facts therefor
everything in the documentary is factual and is real. This is what was in the opening sequence of
Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan “The event is fictionally real and is what
happened, the people in this documentary are acting out what happened, they
were not involved in the incident”. This is very typical in documentaries as the
filmmakers/producers are obliged to make a pact with the viewers, sort of an
agreement with the viewers basically saying that everything in the documentary
are based on real facts and true events etc. I feel like if every single
documentary didn’t do this then the viewers wouldn’t believe what happens in
the documentary nor would they watch it. As well as that, it also gives them
reassurance in to believing the documentary. When it comes to news report it is
a bit different because they don’t really show/say a disclaimer before the
report. This doesn’t stop people from watching TV News report because although
they don’t exclaim that what they are saying is true or based on real events,
people still watch news because they know it’s coming from top experts that are
working in that field. As well as news coming from top experts, news reporters
also tend to bring in eye-witnesses most of time. The eye-witnesses have seen
whatever it is happen, therefor it is automatically 100% reliable and real because
they have seen it with their own naked eyes. Those are the ways they deliver
the information/reports to the viewers which is real and true without actually
disputing a disclaimer contract. Although documentaries and TV news reports are
different because one visually shows a contract in the opening sequence and the
other doesn’t show a contract at all, they share one similarity. This is they
are both telling the truth, just in different ways and forms.
Legal
Issues
As
well as a documentary having Ethical elements, most times it would also have
legal issues such as representation, access, privacy and bias.
Representation:
In the documentary Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan, the way in which people were
represented was in an unfair way. This was because they made out that the
Police were the innocent guys when in fact they really wasn’t. The film
producer could have made both sides represented both equally and fairly. The police in the documentary were
represented as the good guys as if they did a good cause. Some viewers disagree
in which the police were represented. TV news reporters are often represented
in an intelligent way because they are experts in that field. So people will
believe them no matter what they say
Access:
With any TV shows / Documentaries, the programme makers may have to negotiate
and sign contracts and release forms relating to who, when and where they can
film. Likewise with TV news reporter they would also need to sign contracts
too. For the TV News report they would have to plan their interview properly in
order for their interview to be successful. In this case, they would have
planned questions to ask the disabled people and also questions to ask the mums
with baby prams. One of the questions they asked were “Why do you feel you mums
need to use the wheelchair spaces more than the disabled people?” As you can
see this type of question is more informal and made the answer more into a
conversation rather than an actual interview. The documentary is more technical
and more formal, I would say because they had many detailed and well in-depth
interviews. Pre questions would have been written down for the documentary to
be asked in the interview which makes this an arranged interview. The sort of
questions they asked in this documentary were “What did you exactly see when
Mark Duggan died?” the interviewer would ask this directly to the interviewee.
This is a good improvement on your initial draft Victor. The detail in some of your points is very good (e.g. privacy). Currently a Merit, but if you can replicate this structure throughout you will be onto a D1 grade.
ReplyDelete- Proofread: correct punctuation, missed out words, shortened words (i.e. you're), sentence structure
- Balance your analysis between news and documentary. Spend the same amount of time on each and make sure it is clear
- Take out any "I feel this" or "I think this" etc. Use statements instead, so that it is formalised. E.g. "The filmmakers might have used a contract to gain access" or "the documentary uses conventions such as... which sets up the contract with the viewer"
- In your small intro to legal issues, take away bias. You have already explained both sides to it in ethical issues, and if you're not going to also talk about it under legal then its redundant