by geForce » Thu Feb 18, 2010 12:25 pm
I think CTV's bottom line is ratings and money. Yes, they achieve ratings and money through news, and yes, they hold true to the fact their news is as unbiased as they possibly can. However, they don't claim to be emotionally sensitive or responsible to any of the parties involved.
The fact is, any news that they report is demand generated. People WANT to see the video footage of the crash, so they give the people what they want. You can't imagine how many people have googled or searched youtube to try to find a video footage of the crash. They're trying to capitalize on that because that's the type of news that people want to see.
On the other hand, they rescinded the video due to political pressure from the IOC and probably the Canadian government. They have exclusive Canadian broadcast rights for the Olympics, so they're probably really trying to walk on eggshells here in order to not incur any Olympic coverage bans in the future.
Seriously though, how many times have we seen people die on TV? Like, a comparable video would be the Robert Dziekanski death by taser video. How many times did that show on TV?
On a related note.. the local Chinese TV station broadcasted the luge crash video last night. That was pretty risky of them, since I'm pretty sure CTV didn't give them any rights to do so.