Lies, Damn Lies, and Network News
October 7, 2024 in News by RBN Staff
source: lewrockwell
Or how I was initiated
October 7, 2024
In the summer of 1980, I was a naive 19-year-old on a mission to backpack around the world. To achieve my goal, I had to pick up odd jobs and gigs along the way, since wiring money from home was a slow, expensive and laborious task.
I had gotten a job crewing on a sailing yacht from Amsterdam to Monaco for the season, which paid and fed well. I later found myself in Corfu, caddying for wealthy Greeks and crewing on the Bond film For Your Eyes Only. This gave me enough money to achieve one of my primary goals of visiting the pyramids at Giza.
While staying in Cairo, I frequented Shepheard’s Hotel, with one of the most famous bars in all of Africa. It was a combination of every stereotypical writer’s bar in every film noir ever — hot, dusty, smoky, and packed with foreign journalists and correspondents from around the world, drinking gin tonics and grousing about the latest assignment.Best Price: $9.52Buy New $15.03(as of 03:47 UTC – Details)
My hostel didn’t have fans, but Shepheard’s bar did, so I spent many afternoons escaping the clambake outside, reading and listening to tales of war and peace.
One afternoon, the correspondent from NBC Cairo was complaining about being sent to Johannesberg to cover the race riots. He looked at me, appraising my physical constitution, which was pretty buff back then. He called me over, slid a case out from under the table and asked me if I knew how to use a camera. I opened the case to find an Éclair NPR reflex self-blimped synch sound 16mm rig, with an Angénieux 12-120mm f/2.2 variable focal-length lens. It was beat up, but to my eyes looked like a stack of gold bars.
Looking through the viewfinder, I checked the front and back focus, then connected the cable from the battery belt and mounted the Sennheiser MKH 416 shotgun mic, checking the audio levels. I then shouldered the camera and looked at the correspondent.
A round of chuckles went around the table. “He’s your man, Mike,” one gravelly voice said through a cloud of blue smoke, backlit by a shaft of afternoon Cairo light.
Within the hour, I was at the NBC office, enjoying the first A/C I had felt in months, while the logistics guy processed my travel and press papers. At the same time, the correspondent was briefing me on the assignment, most of which I never heard. My heart was doing sommersaults, my mind was doing cartwheels, and I had the distinct and inescable feeling that I was somehow pulling off a grift. Certainly, the pay package had more numbers than I had ever seen, and that only made me more nervous.
At an ungodly hour the next morning, I arrived at the office to pick up the camera and several spools of film. I secured my backpack in the office storeroom, bringing only the bare necessities in my day pack, then I lugged the whole mess out to the waiting car. We sped off to the airport in the cool dawn light as the Adhan went up from every mosque in the city.
Ten hours later, I found myself in the Carlton Hotel bar, in much the same environment I had left in Cairo, except it was the dead of winter, which I hadn’t planned on.
We sat for four days in the Carlton bar, waiting for an assignment, while drinkng copious amounts of gin and playing bridge and canasta. The call finally came mid-morning, and the bar emptied out into a fleet of waiting Land Rovers We drove for a couple of hours into the remotest parts of Transvaal. The entire trip, I was wrestling with the camera gear, checking and rechecking every detail, while crammed up against the door with two other cameramen trying to do the same thing.
The fleet ground to a halt in a cloud of red dust in the middle of a group of mud brick huts. In front of us, two black families were yelling, and throwing sticks and rocks at each other. On cue, we looked at each other for a beat, then baled out of the cars and started rolling on the scene, while the correspondents were running in circles with their translators, trying to get the story and set up interviews.
Several large sticks barely missed me, as I ran from position to position, getting as many angles as I could, without getting the other cameramen or reporters in the shots. We all shot through the first spool at about the same time and scrambled back to the car to change reels.
I didn’t have a daylight spool, so I had to use a dark bag to unload the exposed film and load new stock. This proved to be a major task, with my heart pounding, a veritable flood of adrenalin in my blood, and my correspondent screaming at me to get this or that shot.
When the exitement had died down, I was lying in an exhausted heap with the other cameramen, while the correspondents wrapped up. We all glanced at each other, wondering what the hell we had just seen, but no one said a word. As it turned out, the two black families were fighting over a stolen chicken.Best Price: $10.12Buy New $10.32(as of 05:47 UTC – Details)
Back in Johannesberg, I sat in the film lab nursing an adrenalin hangover and wondering what the hell I was doing here. When the film was developed, I carried the three 10-minute reels to the satellite ground station.
While I was loading the film onto a telecine to upload the footage to New York, the correspondent showed up to view the footage. When it had all been uploaded, he clapped me on the back and congratulated me on a fne bit of work.
The next morning, we were gathered at the bar with three grizzled and barely functioning TeeVee sets tuned to different networks. When NBC Nightly News came on, I sat bolt upright, wondering if they were going to use my footage, and how they would frame this story. The correspondent’s face came on, telling of racial unrest and the evils of Apartheid, cutting to my B-roll of flying rocks and sticks, and angry black faces.
The editing was artfully done. There were establishing shots of police in riot geear advancing toward the camera in wide and medium shots. Cut to angry black faces and rock throwing in close ups and medium close ups. Though there were no shots linking these two groups, the clear impression for the passive viewer was that these groups were in close proximity and directly engaging each other.
No mention of stolen chickens.