3News is a New Zealand tv company reporting a NZ story. So it puzzles me why this error was made: I would not have expected such a mistake, in a story from one's own country.
But not to rest on its dubious laurels, 3News did it again yesterday!
This time the story was of international significance: the return to NZ of shrunken maori heads (= toi moko, the maori term for the tattoo and the head that bears it). Under the headline 'Maori heads returned after French senator's fight' we read:

So far, so good. But then...the illustration.
3News used this picture >, a 19th Century image of a maori woman (or wahine) with facial tattoo (moko). But why use her image to illustrate the story? Hers was not a head that

< particular image has been widely used by other media - but not this time by 3News!

And the picture's caption reads:
"A French senator fought for five years to change the law so the toi moko could be returned." Why then did 3News not use a picture of Catherine Morin-Desailly herself? > After all, she seems to be the hero of the hour, and the 19th century maori woman was not a French

Fair go, 3News! Surely you can't be in that much of a rush, that you can't get it right! Or should your slogan now be: 'See it first...then get accurate news elsewhere'?
3 comments:
Not that I'm trying to defend TV3 on this one, but -- that image appeared as one of a number of large images displayed around a stage and ceremonial tangi as shown in the televised news item itself, supposedly something to do with the return of the heads. The question is -- what have those four or five images (the woman shown was but one of them) got to do with the participants in that ceremony and, I would suppose, the returning heads themselves? Some iwi/whakapapa connection?
That MAY have been a possible (though nebulous) link...if so, then 3News should have captioned the picture thus.
Questions, questions...not answered by the story. Thus, an inadequate story.
I do agree with you -- it would have been great if there was more of an explanation behind those background images. I suppose they thought "We can't show the heads, because of tapu, so -- we'll show a Maori face instead, because it was there." Quite sloppy, really. Now folks will think one of the heads was of that woman ...
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