Kyotoshopped

You may have heard about this little tempest that busted our collective teapot last week. CBC.ca used a photo of smoggy Toronto to run alongside a story about the Kyoto Protocol. An iffy selection, but then the image was put through a “warming filter” in Photoshop, giving it a “smoggier” look.

Avast! That’s a no-no. Readers of the Small Dead Animals blog, which uncovered the altered image, took this as proof positive that everything CBC has reported on since 1936 is a fabrication, that global warming is a communist plot, and that al-Qaeda is being directed by the ghost of Barbara Frum.

CBC.ca has its own policy about when images can and can’t be altered, and conceded a mistake had been made. I, however, have my own image policy for this blog: EVERYTHING MUST BE PHOTOSHOPPED. I have some photoshopping experience, and I think CBC.ca could take a lesson from my more liberal policy.

GRAPHICS ARE EASY

For instance, CBC claims that carbon dioxide and greenhouse gasses are difficult to photograph. Bah. I used to have CO2 for my BB gun - what’s wrong with that?
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Don’t like it? Well, how about an “artist’s impression” of a CO2 molecule: 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OK, so it looks a little cheery, not at all like the impending doom of our planet. But that’s fixable, if you have a more liberal photo policy like I do.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
What about greenhouse gas? Well, I could have whipped this one up for them in a heartbeat:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
But Paul, you say, isn’t such flawless digital manipulation too difficult for harried newshounds? Not at all. Allow me a creative demonstration.

A greenhouse:


 
 
 
 
 
 

Kyle Gass:


 
 
 
 
 
 

Put ‘em together, and you get…


 
 
 
 
 
 

Greenhouse Gass! That took all of two minutes. We should never have to look at a generic image of a former smokestack, or the environment minister of the minute, ever again.

Need an image for Kyoto? What’s wrong with the city itself?


 
 
 
 
 
 

Now, I don’t know what a “protocol” is, but how about a picture of Procol Harum?


 
 
 
 
 
 

Child’s play. In fact, it’s like those Rebus puzzles children enjoy so much. How’s this for a fun, brain-developing news graphic?


 
 
 
 
 
 

Get it? Carb On Di Oxhide. Carbon Dioxide! Utter genius. And it beats the hell out of another John Baird headshot. What wouldn’t?

DISCLAIMERS ARE EASY TOO

Of course, it has been suggested that manipulated images should have some sort of label or icon to inform the gullible. That was also suggested to me (see my response) and it’s one of the reasons I started tagging my photo manipulations with my trademark (but not trademarked) [g] icon.

Good idea. So good, in fact, that I’ve already prepared a handful of useful icons that CBC.ca can use to indicate when images have been manipulated. Here’s a sampling:

Image Has Been Cropped


 

Correct usage:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

File Photo


 
 
 
Correct usage:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Warming Filter Applied


 
 
 
Correct usage:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Bit of a Stretch


 
 

Correct usage:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Now, I’m not suggesting that CBC.ca is alone in its need for a more clear approach to identifying news graphics. Not at all!

Here are some graphics that may be of help to CBC’s competitors:

 

Image contains cute animal to attract viewers

 
 

 

Image contains boobs to attract viewers

 
 

Image or story has been shovelled onto site from third-party supplier

 
 
 

 
Photo or story contains obvious bias

 
 
 

 

Photo or story contains unobvious bias

 
 

If successful, I can imagine rolling out these helpful pictograms to my blog as well. Stories and images for my posts might be branded like this:

 

Anecdote About My Kids

 
 

 

Another Story About Toilets

 
 

 

My Wife Would Not Approve

 
 

 

For God’s Sake, Gorbould, Nobody Cares

 
 

Posted by: Paul Gorbould | 04-26-2007 | 03:04 PM
Posted in: CBC | Teh Internets

10 Comments »

  1. I’m contacting the Ombudsman right now to demand your icons be added to all CBC images! Especially on TV!

    Comment by bryanf — April 27, 2007 @ 8:08 am
  2. Love the photoshoped “menacing” CO2 molecule. If not copyrighted I’d like to use it for some protest warrior picket signs the next time Dr. Fruit Fly buzzes into the community for a GHG “freight night”.

    If the global warming “chicken shows up we will have a graphic representation of what exactly it is that has him so scared. ;-)

    Comment by WL Mackenzie Redux — April 27, 2007 @ 9:52 am
  3. Perfect. I could probably use a version of that last one myself, and your evil C02 molecule deserves to be on every global warming story, if only as a warning to readers or viewers.

    Comment by Blackadder — April 27, 2007 @ 3:21 pm
  4. Hoo boy. The page after page of slavering left bashing on that there other Blog pretty much speaks volumes about the situation. The fact that a ‘graphic’ is being raised high as a prime example of the CBCs nefarious intent is equally illuminating about the mindset involved.

    I could have sworn the original image had a giant skull and crossbones floating phantom-like in the smoke and that a distant mushroom cloud was rising somewhere past the CN tower. Sheesh.

    Comment by Grondzilla — April 27, 2007 @ 11:36 pm
  5. ROFL !

    Great work on the icons. I especially liked the last one. And I think the Communist Broadcasting Corp should include your “Obvious bias” icon on everything they film, print or write. Pity it’s not easily translated to radio audio, too.

    mhb23re
    at gmail d0t calm

    Comment by mhb — April 28, 2007 @ 12:22 pm
  6. Oh, my, Paul, you’ve come a long way since you occupied a lowly desk in the “Ideas” outer office. Kinda thought you would, though. All the best.
    Bob

    Comment by Bob Catt — April 28, 2007 @ 12:32 pm
  7. Oh, dear Lord. The small dead animals have arrived.

    Comment by j0hnnyb — April 28, 2007 @ 2:54 pm
  8. Gorbulon:

    Your best.blog.entry.ever.

    Comment by Landru — April 28, 2007 @ 8:58 pm
  9. Thanks, everyone. I had good fun with this one.

    It has also become my most popular entry to date - due in no small part to the 700 referrals from Small Dead Animals in the past 24 hours. Now THAT site gets traffic!

    And of course I’m tickled that people are starting to use the icons already. Check out Tea Makers branding our new CBC Chairman “a bit of a stretch” :)

    Wish I could pin a face on Bob Catt… now you’ve piqued my curiosity. Thanks, though, and welcome to the blog!

    Comment by Paul Gorbould — April 28, 2007 @ 10:15 pm
  10. Love this Paul! Surprised this hasn’t been mandated already, in the media. Would like to see more of your post pictograms. (Beats the hell out of Smileys!)
    How about:
    -WTF?
    -May Be Offensive.
    -Work Is Shit.
    -Cool/Stoked/Sweet/Wicked.
    -It’s A Guy Thing.
    -It’s A Chick Thing.
    -Sports Rant.
    -Political Rant.

    Comment by Jennifer Coyle — May 5, 2007 @ 3:41 am

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