The Snuff Film Network: Fox News Airs Live Suicide Of Carjacking Suspect

Faux PasToday during the broadcast of Shepard Smith’s Studio B, Fox News cut to a live police car chase in Arizona. This is typical fare for Fox News who frequently break into programming for this sort of crime drama. Never mind that there is nothing particularly newsworthy about it. Ordinarily it involves some low-level violation that would only be of interest to the residents of the locality where it occurred.

However, today the situation had much more tragic consequences. The suspect drove into field, abandoned the car, and ran down a dirt road to a clearing where he pulled out a gun shot himself in the head. Fox News aired the entire tragedy live.

After the shooting, Shepard Smith was heard ordering his crew to cut away, but it was too late. He seemed to be genuinely disturbed, and his subsequent apology was no doubt sincere. The network also issued an official apology.

However, there is a bigger issue here that Fox isn’t addressing. Why do they cover these car chases at all? There is no news value, particularly to a national audience, for a local crime. Suspects in these affairs are often seen exploiting their new-found celebrity. And the interest to the viewer is confined to its morbid nature.

What does Fox News expect to happen when they broadcast these chases? They know that the conclusions can be dramatic and disturbing. They follow fleeing suspects as they run through busy intersections and narrowly miss pedestrians. They interrupt more important news coverage as they devote hours to watching a car snake through the city.

Let’s face it, the only reason these chases are covered is for ratings. And the more dramatic the chase, the higher the ratings. Anyone who doesn’t believe that Fox harbors some desire that the car smash into a truck or a crowded bus stop, or flies off a bridge, is simply naive. Their resources are expensive. Helicopters, cameras, studios, producers, anchors, and crews, as well as the airtime and pre-empted commercials, are not given lightly to stories without some justification. They don’t spend hours tracking a vehicle from the air with the hope that the driver just decides to pull over and lay down on the ground. A shootout with police makes much better television.

So despite Smith’s regrets, it is hard to forgive Fox for subjecting their viewers to this. It was the inevitable outcome of their sensationalistic editorial philosophy. They simply cannot absolve themselves of any responsibility and then go back to broadcasting the next police pursuit as if nothing happened.

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6 thoughts on “The Snuff Film Network: Fox News Airs Live Suicide Of Carjacking Suspect

  1. I guess when Colonel Nguyen Ng?c Loan executed A Viet Cong soldier in front of AP photographer Eddie Adams and NBC television cameraman Vo Suu in 1968 and then the photograph and footage were broadcast worldwide on every News station the next evening, meaning it wasnt being broadcast live but was on tape, that was OK Because it was ABC NBC and CBS. Adams won a 1969 Pulitzer Prize for his photograph. And now people whine because of a mistake….What a bunch of hypocrites.

    • So, what’s the political implications of this suicide?

      Anyone?

    • I was only 3yrs old when the Vietnam incident happened. That was war and had world and national relevance. You trying to compare the Fox News live broadcast of a suicide. This was clearly a local news story.How would a car chase in Arizona be relevant to people in Ohio?

  2. Really? You equate reporting something outrageous and newsworthy with this incident?

  3. The political and social implications of the the Vietnamese Colonel’s actions were PRECISELY why it was made public and later won an award. It had relevance to the entire world. A very tragic but decidedly local event has no such significance. FOX NEWS personalities were stridently among the media critics when a fraction of a second of Janet Jackson’s nipple was shown, seemingly recognizing the gratuitousness of the display in the first place. Live by the critical sword, die by it. Mark is not the hypocrite here.

  4. “If you have two guys on stage and one guy says ‘I have a solution to the Middle East problem,’ and the other guy falls into the orchestra pit, who do you think is going to be on the evening news?” -Roger Ailes

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