SimonSawSunlight
Simon Fabel
what do the big agencies (reuters, ap, afp, etc.) do to maintain their ideal of "objectivity"? what are the requirements for their material to be considered usable in an "objective" journalistic context?
EDIT:
the fact that objectivity is an illusion is implied.
my question has clearly been completely misunderstood, maybe for lack of clarity on my part...
i was not asking whether there is such a thing as objective photography (of course there isn't), or which photographer is more objective than the other. my question is what do bigger news agencies do to get as close as possible to what they believe to be "objective" accounts of certain events, which journalistic "rules" do they enforce? and what do you think are the consequences of that?
EDIT:
the fact that objectivity is an illusion is implied.
my question has clearly been completely misunderstood, maybe for lack of clarity on my part...
i was not asking whether there is such a thing as objective photography (of course there isn't), or which photographer is more objective than the other. my question is what do bigger news agencies do to get as close as possible to what they believe to be "objective" accounts of certain events, which journalistic "rules" do they enforce? and what do you think are the consequences of that?