Another way to tell a war story
NEW YORK — Allen Pizzey, a 60-year-old veteran war correspondent who considers himself a bit of a Luddite, never imagined that he would embrace blogging.
But the CBS newsman found himself turning to the Web during a recent stint in Baghdad after he noticed the numerous pieces on the network evening newscasts devoted to the pet food recall in the U.S.
"There seems to be an inordinate amount of time spent on what started out as 12 dead pets," said Pizzey, who can catch the American newscasts every morning on the Baghdad bureau's grimy television monitors, beamed in via satellite like day-old dispatches from another world.
Don't get him wrong: Pizzey is an animal lover. (He and his family have four cats, two dogs and a terrapin at their home in Rome.) But he was disheartened by the disconnect between the horrors of the war and the preoccupations of American viewers.
Rather than stew quietly, he vented his concerns in an online reporter's notebook, posted March 22 on CBSNews.com.
"What is depressingly clear is that what seems important here is far removed from what viewers in the U.S. seem to be concerned about," he wrote, adding: "How 12 dead animals in a country the size of the U.S. rates with the sliding scale of mayhem here is what I'm finding hard to gauge. When only 12 human bodies are found on any given morning in Baghdad with marks of the kind of torture the ASPCA would quite rightly have a pet owner in court for, it is judged as 'progress' for the security plan."
After covering conflicts around the globe for three decades, Pizzey has joined the ranks of television correspondents who have turned to the Internet to convey the messy realities of war that can't be encapsulated in two-minute reports.
"It's nice to be able to have that outlet," he said in an interview this week from Rome, back home after a five-week rotation in Iraq. "One of the things that blogs provide is an opportunity for people who are interested in the news to understand a little bit about what it feels like. I don't think I should personalize everything I do. But if you're sitting in the middle of the kind of horror that is Iraq today, you sort of wonder, 'How do I make these people understand?' "
NBC's Richard Engel, ABC's Terry McCarthy and other network war correspondents also supplement their on-air pieces with extensive online reports.
- TV Reporters Decry Drop in Iraq Coverage Jun 03, 2006
- Blogging Sells, and Sells Out Sep 26, 2004
- NBC to use `civil war' to describe Iraq Nov 28, 2006
