

Is Seeing Believing?
Examples from Newspapers
See accompanying story: Lying
with pictures
A QUESTION OF TRUTH:
Photojournalism And Visual Ethics
Miami Spanish-language newspaper admits
altering photos
|
A combo of pictures created on July 10, 2008, shows (L) a handout image released by Iranian daily Jamejam online edition on July 10, 2008, showing three missiles rising into the air while a fourth remains in the launcher on the ground during a test-firing in an undisclosed location in the Iranian desert on July 9, 2008, and (R) the same image released by the news website and public relations arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Sepah News, on July 9, 2008, apparently digitally altered to replace the grounded missile and launcher with a fourth successfully launched missile rising into the air and a smoke cloud on the ground. |
![]() ![]() Source: AOL |
Fox News has sunk to a new low. On Wednesday July 2, 2008, the network displayed photos that its editors had doctored of two New York Times employees--reporter Jacques Steinberg, and editor Steven Radcliffe. Media Matters has graciously provided us with the before-and-after evidence showing that Fox purposefully yellowed Steinberg's teeth, widened his nose and chin, and photo-shopped his ears stick out further. |
![]() |
In Ohio, A News Photograph Is Digitally Altered Full story here Closer look here |
|
![]() published photo |
Photo before alterations |
Original photo![]() |
Altered Photo![]() |
See original story with USA apology
http://www.usatoday.com/news/
washington/2005-10-19-rice-congress_x.htm see also Photo Ethics Elude USA Today http://newsbusters.org/node/2490
|
![]() |
Daily Mirror Admits Photos Were Manipulated (May 2004) |

Newspaper apologizes
for altered photo
July 2003
|
|
LA
Times Admits Its War Photographer |
|
|
New York Post changes UN
delegate's heads into animals |
![]() |
December
2000: In this single frame of a live
video broadcast, the CBS emblem was
digitally inserted during the New Year's
Eve broadcast to conceal the NBC emblem
on display in the background. The
technology used is the same as what's
been widely employed during the
broadcast of sporting events to display
advertisements on billboards.
Credit: Hany Farid, Dartmouth College Source: CNet |
![]() |
In 1994, shortly before the
much-anticipated women's figure skating competition at the Olympics,
New York NEWSDAY published on its cover a photo composite. The image
showed ice skating rivals Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding -- at the
time embroiled in controversy following an attack on Kerrigan by an
associate of Harding's husband -- appearing to practice together. On
the bottom of the image, the headline read, "Tonya, Nancy to
meet at practice." The caption -- in smaller type -- read:
"Tonya Harding, left, and Nancy Kerrigan, appear to skate
together in this New York Newsday composite illustration. Tomorrow,
they'll really take to the ice together."
Read "What's Fair In Changing Photos?" by Mitchell Stephens |
![]() |
NOT SO FAST: A good example of 'Don't believe everything you read' is President Truman holding up the Chicago Daily Tribune for Nov. 3, 1948. An inexperienced staff had called the election too soon. The edition was recalled - without total success. AP PHOTO/FILE |