Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]First, the movies are not real life. Please understand that. The movies always treat the media terribly. That argument should get the same response as Newt Gingrich's proposal to bring back orphanages because the kids were all happy in the movie "Boy's Town." In my one law class in journalism school they talked about the Lindburg case, and the textbook--and the teacher--said there were no cameras allowed in the courtroom during that trial, and that the recriminations against photographers came afterwards, in cartoons and other dramatizations that depicted the press as having gone crazy. That's what they taught me at Indiana U. (stomping ground of Ernie Pyle). Myself, I've heard of such terrible conduct at that trial but I've never actually seen a picture taken from inside the courtroom. Has anyone else, or did I receive shoddy education? Dave Yoder Eric Welch wrote: What killed cameras in the courtroom in the US for so many years was at the Lindburg baby kidnapping trial when a photographer jumped over the bar to > photograph someone on the stand crying. Typical legal overreaction to its > watchdog. Get rid of the watchdog, and see what shenanigans they get away > with. If they could get the writers out of the courtroom too, they would. > It's just that people outside my profession don't realize the value of > photography is equal to writing and in some ways is superior, or they would > never ban cameras from the courtroom. Take a picture of a prisoner with > bumps on his head and black eyes, and questions are raised.