Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Libel Case

While I was searching for something to write about for this assignment, I found an interesting libel case that was dropped. The case was against author John McPhee of The New Yorker magazine.

The suit was filed against "The Ransom of Russian Art," a 1994 book by McPhee on Russian dissident art. The book contained opinions of other people about the a fire that caused the mysterious death of a Russian painter, Yevgeny Rukhin. Ilya D. Levin who was quoted in the book naming a friend of the artist who could have contributed to Rukhin's death. Levin sued for libel.

However, the case was dismissed because the quotes that McPhee used were the opinions of others and therefore protected by New York's state law. People involved with the case called the ruling "very disturbing." The judge in the case believed that the "book deserved the protection given to expressions of opinion." Using the opinions of someone without getting prior permission is the same thing as plagiarizing, in my opinion. Even though someone make's their opinion public doesn't mean that anyone can publish it.

I believe the decsion in this case wasn't fair to the people who were misrepresented. If you publish someone elses beliefs you better have their permission. Perhaps if the case didn't involve a contorversial killing things might have been different.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Narrated Slideshow

In my search to find a narrated slideshow, I landed at the AP website.  I found a very captivating slideshow on the realities of the War in Iraq.  The civilians living in a world of destruction are rarely thought about.  However, this slideshow shines light on the hardships that Iraqi widows face day in and day out.
The images shown throughout the slideshow demonstrate the sadness these women feel.  The narration adds further information and the captions really show exactly what is going on. All the images are very real and envoke a sense of reality.
I think the best part of the slideshow is that you hear a story.  Even though the story doesn't relate directly to the photos, you can still tell the severity of the issue.  The only aspect I didn't like was the background noise in the narration; if you listen closely you can hear people talking and phones ringing.
Overall, this is a very powerful slideshow.  It really got me thinking about why we are in Iraq in the first place ruining all these people's lives.
Check it out: http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_international/iraq_widows/index.html