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北京“纸箱馅包子”被查实为虚假报道

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发表于 2007-7-18 23:06:36 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
7月8日,北京电视台生活频道《透明度》栏目播出了《纸做的包子》报道后,引起社会广泛关注。市工商、食品安全部门对此报道高度重视,迅速组织执法人员,每天对北京早点市场进行彻底检查,均没有发现早点市场存在“纸箱馅包子”。市公安部门介入后组成专案组全力核查,于7月16日初步查明事实真相。 经查,今年6月中旬,北京电视台生活频道《透明度》栏目组临时人员訾某,化名“胡月”,先后两次找到朝阳区太阳宫乡十字口村13号院,以为工地民工购买早点为名,要求做早点生意的外地来京人员卫某等4人为其制作包子。訾某自带了从市场上购买的肉馅、面粉和纸箱,并授意卫某等人将纸箱经水浸泡后掺入肉馅,制成包子。訾某用其自带的家用DV机拍摄了制作过程,随后将其编辑,用欺诈手段获得播出。现公安机关已依法对犯罪嫌疑人訾某进行刑事拘留,将依法严肃处理。
北京电视台生活频道,对该报道审核把关不严,管理制度执行不力,致使该虚假报道得以播出,造成恶劣的社会影响。北京电视台为此向社会深刻道歉。北京电视台负责人表示,要高度重视这一恶劣事件,深刻吸取教训,严肃查处相关负责人员,进一步加强管理,堵塞漏洞,坚决杜绝虚假不实新闻报道,努力提高全体新闻从业人员的思想政治素质、道德素质和职业精神,切实履行好党的新闻媒体职责。

今天吃的肉包子!
发表于 2007-7-18 23:09:12 | 显示全部楼层
为什么不纠正
而要否认呢
悲哀哦
发表于 2007-7-18 23:21:30 | 显示全部楼层
越抹越黑。。。
发表于 2007-7-18 23:21:47 | 显示全部楼层
这条新闻我也看了, 疑惑一大堆
发表于 2007-7-18 23:27:57 | 显示全部楼层
始终不能看破红尘的尘世。。。。
发表于 2007-7-18 23:29:59 | 显示全部楼层
原帖由 myrooroo 于 2007-7-18 23:21 发表
这条新闻我也看了, 疑惑一大堆



M哥哥!

今天问我的朋友。。。
关于FTP的事情。。。。
原来。。
每个月给的租金是这么高的。。。

你还给200GB的。。。真的价钱不低。。。

谢谢你和karaken叔叔的无限量贡献。。。。。。向你致敬!
发表于 2007-7-18 23:36:39 | 显示全部楼层
北京新闻,中午收视率最高的特别关注,全都大面积的报道了,是DV拍的?笑死人了~~
发表于 2007-7-19 07:53:30 | 显示全部楼层
为了面子。。一切都为了面子……
发表于 2007-7-19 10:56:13 | 显示全部楼层
真的是这么黑暗吗
发表于 2007-7-19 11:09:06 | 显示全部楼层
原帖由 blekblek 于 2007-7-18 23:29 发表



M哥哥!

今天问我的朋友。。。
关于FTP的事情。。。。
原来。。
每个月给的租金是这么高的。。。

你还给200GB的。。。真的价钱不低。。。

谢谢你和karaken叔叔的无限量贡献。。。。。。向你致敬!

一会儿水的问题,一会儿包子的事情,今年又是水灾,这是怎么了。

虽然小飞妹说的有点语焉不详。

但就象小飞妹说的,向二位及其他前辈表示谢意及敬礼
发表于 2007-7-19 11:55:54 | 显示全部楼层
很可能是另一出鬧劇。

國民是否在吃廢紙盒+死豬肉不是他們考慮的軸心。
關鍵是不能鬧到國際社會丟了“SH主义”的牌子。

當然這也只是一種可能。
不過光憑這個就立馬吃肉包子也需要一些膽量。
因為即便不是廢紙盒,豬肉本身也存在問題。

[ 本帖最后由 n.zhu 于 2007-7-19 18:50 编辑 ]
发表于 2007-7-19 15:27:19 | 显示全部楼层
一切为了北京奥运 ......  否则老外们哪敢来中国啊
发表于 2007-7-19 15:29:04 | 显示全部楼层
原帖由 blekblek 于 2007-7-18 23:29 发表



M哥哥!

今天问我的朋友。。。
关于FTP的事情。。。。
原来。。
每个月给的租金是这么高的。。。

你还给200GB的。。。真的价钱不低。。。

谢谢你和karaken叔叔的无限量贡献。。。。。。向你致敬!



呵呵, 毕竟还是比国内的便宜许多啊
发表于 2007-7-20 07:00:38 | 显示全部楼层
BBC,韩国的朝鲜日报,新加坡的联合早报,特别是我比较信任的美国公共电台(www.npr.org)都报道了这一“虚假新闻”事件。这些新闻机构都有驻京记者做核实工作,不大会因北京电视台的报道而简单转发。西方国家最近也有很多这种虚假新闻,卷入许多有名新闻机构像纽约时报。以下文章来自Slate杂志
www.slate.com

The Jayson Blair Project
How did he bamboozle the New York Times?
By Jack Shafer
Posted Thursday, May 8, 2003, at 5:45 PM ET



What can you say about a trusted professional who makes stuff up and publishes it as fact?

Last week, New York Times reporter Jayson Blair joined Janet Cooke, formerly of the Washington Post, the New Republic's Stephen Glass, the Boston Globe's Patricia Smith, and Jay Forman in Slate as journalists who got caught embellishing, exaggerating, and outright lying in print. The will to fabricate cuts across disciplines, with academics and scientists inventing data, too. Last year, Emory University history professor Michael A. Bellesiles resigned following an investigation of charges that he concocted evidence to support his book Arming America, and Bell Labs fired researcher Jan Hendrik Schon when it discovered he made up scientific data and published it.

The unmasking of a counterfeiter tends to inspire busy discussions of his motive. In the case of Blair, who is black, observers such as Mickey Kaus speculate that affirmative action may have pushed Blair to a position of responsibility before he was ready for it. The busted fabricator almost always cites personal or emotional problems, and sure enough, Blair struck that note last week, telling the Associated Press, "I have been struggling with recurring personal issues, which have caused me great pain. I am now seeking appropriate counseling. ..."

Those seeking to "understand" the liars' behavior tend to blame the liars' employers, making the liar the victim. The bosses pushed him too hard, or they took a young, promising journalist and threw him into the deep end—beyond his known abilities and experience—way before he was ready. Folks rush to swaddle the liar and his motives in psychobabble instead of placing the onus where it belongs.

No single explanation can cover every case, but my guess is that most liars make things up for the simple reason that they don't have the talent or the ability to get the story any other way. According to the Washington City Paper account, Blair repeatedly concocted specifics, both sensational and mundane, while covering the D.C. sniper story. He didn't really need to: Other Times reporters were on the story, too. My guess is that Blair made stuff up because he didn't know how to wheedle gossip out of prosecutors and cops, he didn't know how to put two and two together and make the next call to find news, and he didn't know how to take notes and report the facts straight.

Jonathan Chait, who worked with Glass at the New Republic, remembers that Glass wasn't really much of a stylist: Glass' stories read beautifully because the late Michael Kelly poured his genius into them before publication. Kelly would often remark on reading a Glass first draft of how great the story was but that he needed more detail. As it turned out, Glass wasn't much of a reporter, either. Instead of digging for more, he conjured the effects he thought Kelly wanted. A little closer to home, a similar thing happened at Slate when I edited Jay Forman's monkeyfishing piece. When Forman, who did go monkeyfishing, turned in a first, flat draft about his Florida Keys adventure, I encouraged him through several rewrites to add more writerly detail to increase the piece's verisimilitude. Forman complied, inventing numerous twists to the tale and even confessing intense remorse for things he never did. (Addendum: In February 2007, writer Jay Forman contacted Slate to confess that his entire story was untrue. See this article.)

The lesson I learned isn't to refrain from asking writers for detail but to be skeptical about details that sound too good or that you had to push too hard to get the writer to uncover or that are suspicious simply because any writer worth his salt would have put them in his first draft. All that said, it's almost impossible for an editor to beat a good liar every time out.

Blair, like Glass, Cooke, Smith, and Forman, got away with making things up for as long as he did because journalism is built on trust. As New York Times Executive Editor Howell Raines told the Washington Post today, "Frankly, no newspaper in the world is set up to monitor for cheats and fabricators." When an editor gives somebody a notebook and pencil and tells him to go out and report, it's a little bit like giving somebody you barely know a loaded gun. You expect him to use it wisely and honestly. But one slip, and there's hamburger all over the wallpaper! Hence, most reporters don't make things up because 1) they're as ethical as Jesus Christ or 2) they know they'll get caught.

The Blair revelations should distress everybody who creates or consumes copy. How many prevaricators lurk out there? But the wrong takeaway from the Blair-Cooke-Glass-Forman disasters is to assume that young people can't be trusted to report. Instead (and how about this for drawing a happy face in a mound of manure?), their sordid experiences in the journalism trade indicate that so many young people get caught making stuff up because you can't get away with it for very long. Journalism ain't perfect, but it loves to eat its sinners.

******

Send your lies to [email protected].

Jack Shafer is Slate's editor at large.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2082741/
Copyright 2007 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC
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