Jane Sheahan’s death was filmed.
Not accidentally. As she desperately fought to hold on in fast flowing floodwaters, and as rescuers [they were not trained professionals] did their best to get to her, a group stood nearby and reached for their phones. Nobody was ever saved through the lens of a phone. Jane was swept away and her body was found on Sunday.
Of course we’ll never know if those extra hands might have made a difference. Perhaps the team of rescuers already on hand – they saved Jane’s son Darcy – did everything that could be done. But that’s not the point.
The issue is this: what compels anyone to film someone’s demise?
This isn’t just the bystander problem anymore. This is Bystander 2.0. The apathy of a digital generation whose phones are an extension of their body. Malcolm Gladwell explained the bystander problem as a passive response to an immediate problem. ‘Oh, somebody else will help out. There’s plenty of people around’. That’s it in a nutshell. But this? This requires engagement with the tragedy beyond just hearing it or seeing it with your own ears and eyes.
These witnesses had to pull out their phones. Select the camera function. Press record.
I’m disgusted because, if I’m completely honest, I might well have done the same thing. Am I wrong in thinking many of us would?
Hear me out.
Everyone’s a citizen journalist these days. Whether they think of themselves that way or not. And pictures maketh the story. We’ve been taught that just by watching the nightly news. “If you have pictures relating to a news story, send them to…” And that’s to say nothing of chronicling your exploits on YouTube. You know the drill.
So extraordinary events become ripe for our own documentaries. Maybe the TVs will use it? Maybe we’ll even get paid for our services to the community?
At best it’s a mindless way of interpreting the world. Does the screen between us and tragedy filter the emotion? At worst it’s devious malice. My friend’s classmate found herself on fire during a cooking lesson and the first reaction from her peers was to video it.
“She was trying to cook whatever dish was on the menu that day and the flames somehow spread from the cooktop to her uniform and the girls nearby – these were her friends – decided they should film it,” she said.
“I mean, who does that? How was that their first thought? Naturally they got into a lot of trouble and the girl was fine in the end but no one else was to know that there and then.”
Those phones sure don’t put out the flames.
As a newspaper cadet I was taught that a story lives or dies by the images that follow it. This isn’t a ‘right’ way of thinking about the world, it was just the way I was taught. Motor accidents, bush fires, floods, armed robberies. Murders. Get there fast so your photog can push your yarn to Page 1, otherwise languish further in the middle of the paper.
I’m not proud of that.
But now we’re all photographers. And I guarantee you no one ever films something thinking ‘this will be really helpful to the authorities if they ever hold an inquiry’. The footage may be helpful, sure, but that isn’t their motivation.
They do it because something compels them to.
They do it because they know they will have an audience. So who’s at fault here?
Have you encountered people filming events like these? What do you think about this issue?








Comments
158 Comments so far
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Wow! The camera thing is an extension of the Bystander problem, but seriously there are so many possible causes for this issue… My number one belief is that western cultures have evolved into one of solitude. We are no longer a community, it’s every man for himself, it’s even a “climb over that person to get what I want” society. No one even thinks twice when someone is shafted so another can achieve!!!
We have become a society of litigation junkies, who are always looking to find fault, to sue, to get “what they deserve”. Of people who look the other way for fear of what others might say, what the consequences are…
Doctors in America will not stop to help an injured person these days, as they are not protected if their first aide doesn’t help – the legal system will often award the injured party causing insurance levies to go sky high… oh but don’t worry, that’s not OUR problem….
This is the first main reason for the bystander problem, the second is reality TV, a enigma that has people sitting down every day to watch a trumped up situation and how people deal with it, we are not engaging or participating, but simply watching it all happen around us. A much preferable situation for many, as they are not being asked to produce, or be responsible… oh here it comes again… what happens to those people are “NOT MY ISSUE”
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This is just horrific. My heart aches for her family …. I know their pain…..
My husband was killed in a car crash in 2010, leaving me and my children alone. The car crash was a big one. The ES erected privacy screens around the wreckage because the men were so badly disfigured….. but the media used helicopters to film the proceedings anyway. In this case, they were already dead … but who in their right mind thinks “OK – I’ll film that”???? I’m a photographer, but would never stoop so low as to film somebody’s violent death. ….
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Exactly Amanda!! The news go way to far to grab a story… Stuff the families suffering!!
Sorry for your loss!
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An interesting issue to consider, Rick. Maybe shows like Jackass and the proliferation of Youtube videos and the increasing use of reader-submitted photos and videos on the news cause people to feel that this is a natural and normal thing to do.
We are increasingly apathetic and prone to inaction in our daily lives, not to mention living under increasing scrutiny – that we often place ourselves under via Facebook, Twitter, etc. We are constantly saying something or photographing or filming it for an audience. It’s making us question whether anything is real if it goes unwitnessed.
If you have a funny or interesting thought and you don’t share it on Facebook, or you don’t take a photo of whatever just happened, did it really happen? Does it still have merit?
Living and having experiences that don’t involve technology and that go unremarked and unwitnessed is increasingly rare. I think we are losing our sense of why we do these things – is it to show someone later, or to experience it for ourselves now?
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Well said!!
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Perfectly said picardie!
I’m really not a shutterbug and never have been. Because I am too busy immersing myself in the experience.
With phones now having cameras it would be easy to start filming and photographing but I still haven’t. I’ve missed some unforgettable moments but they are in my head forever.
It wouldn’t have occurred to me to film Jane in the flood waters and now that the thought has been raised, I’m repulsed that anyone would stand around and film it. Get in there and do what you can to help, even if you aren’t sure that it will make a difference to the outcome.
RIP Jane. The courage you have shown was exceptional and you will be long remembered for it. My thoughts are with your son and family.
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In the past couple of months I’ve found myself sharing less and less online. I still read blogs and forums, but I rarely comment. I still post stuff on Twitter and Facebook. But nowhere near what I used to. I just don’t want to share all of me anymore with the whole world. People just don’t need to know the minutiae of my life. Stuff still happens and experiences are still worthwhile even if no-one sees a picture or gets a status update about it.
And if I tell all my stories online then I’ll have none left when I’m talking to people in real life!?
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I’d guess whoever had a camera on them has always reacted this way, it’s just now, everyone has a camera on them.
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I’m a little bit the opposite, I can honestly say It wouldn’t even occur to me to film such an event, I just wouldn’t.
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I believe I wouldn’t either
Wouldn’t cross my mind to pull out a camera to film a horrible event
Gosh!!! It repulses me that this could be people’s first reaction!!!
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I honestly believe I would have been over with the rescuers asking what I could do to help…
I often forget to take a pic when my son does something amazing, it would be furthermost from my mind in this situation.
I may also be the crazy sounding one telling everyone to have some compassion and put their phones away!!!
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Thanks for this piece Rick. I simply find this type of action at such a time just mindless. That the first reaction of individuals in times of distress for another is to reach for a phone and film rather than reach out and help is distressing to me.
I notice though that your piece has a hyperlink first up when mentioning that the death was filmed – I am guessing to the actual footage? isn’t this just supporting that type of behaviour? The knowledge that someone, somewhere will be interested in ‘promoting’ the material?
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Oh goodness, no. The link is just to the news report that describes the fact the moment was filmed. It doesn’t include the footage.
That’s the thing, news media love running video of events like this until they find out someone died. Then they don’t. Not straight away, anyway.
But then, the scale of a disaster can reverse that as well. No one had problems showing the Japanese tsunami and yet we all knew thousands were swept up in those destructive waves … humans have a funny way of rationalising what is viewed, and why.
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Rick,
With the Japanese Tsunami, I wonder if the footage hadn’t been shown, if people would have realised how bad things really were!
The immediate footage was important to get across how bad things were.
However,one of the best pieces of footage of this was when Google street view sent people back to take pictures from the same places since the Tsunami and the horrendous destruction that is evident from this… If I had not seen these photos, I would have easily forgotten about the fact that people are still trying to rebuild their lives so long after.
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Oh, I completely agree the footage put the event into perspective. I just find the distinction between one death = not showing vs many, many deaths = totally fine to show. I pass no judgment on what is right or wrong in that scenario!
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I find it sad that publicly displaying images of the loss of multiple lives is seen as more acceptable than the loss of one life. MM does a bit of this, with the tsunami, the Christmas Island boat crash etc. It is deemed okay to display the last minutes of those peoples lives here but not others. It feels like a bit of a double standard tbh. Although, I do recall that you had images of the mother and sons up here during the floods last year in the last moments of her life and the life of one of her sons. Where is the ethical line drawn at Mamamia HQ?
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I think the whole point of the debate is that the line is blurred. We by no means claim to be perfect at MM. I know I’m not. I just admitted that in the article.
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It was a genuine question Rick. Is there a policy or something as to what gets shown/written about and what doesn’t? What is Mamamia’s policy on these things?
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And I answered genuinely. Mamamia’s policy in things like this is one of good taste. We tend to leave tragedies out of our news roundup full stop, unless on national and international scales. Or if they raise an important discussion point. We don’t do death knocks. We don’t show pictures of dead bodies. We decide what needs to be covered. Then we use our own barometers of good taste balanced with what can be gained by viewing certain images. There are no hard and fast rules.
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Thanks Rick! I was hoping by the tone and sentiment expressed through your piece that wasn’t the case but I was honestly too scared to hit the link just in case. Just as you have expressed so well through your piece the benchmark for what is considered appropriate and acceptable seems to have moved and you just never know. I have clicked on links on other news sites and been shocked by where the links take me.
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I remember on September 11 (well, September 12 here) one of the US broadcasters showing the second plane going into the building in slow motion, then reversed out, then back in, and out, etc probably for five minutes. I have no idea why the producers thought this was a good idea. I mean, the footage of the plane going into the building was repeated enough anyway, I couldn’t see the reasoning behind this completely voyeuristic clip. Sick.
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I agree, Frazun – it is mindless. Mindless consumption, mindless broadcasting, mindless promotion… we need something to make us stop and think to snap out of this mindset!
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disgusting, just digusting, stop viewing life through a lens and live life and help your fellow people out!
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Its a well known phsychological reaction that when in a group situation, we are prone to the ‘bystander effect’. like that famous case in america where an entire apartment building listened as a woman was brutally murdered and lay to die on the street. Each person thought someone else had called the police.
im not surprised that her death was filmed. I am however ashamed of the human race. that this has become the norm is disgusting. and who knows, one more hand, one more person stepping up and jane may still be alive. A son may still have his mother.
RIP
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It use to be the case of fight or flight.. run to help or run for help.. Now it seems that people love to be the spectator.. sit on the side line and just watch.. Where has the help gone for the fellow man, it surely isnt on the record button.. I for one think modern technology has maybe gone a little too far
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While I’m shocked at what happened to this woman, I do think that there can be some usefulness in people taking photos or filming car accidents, etc because from an insurance lawyer perspective, it helps significantly. I can’t recall the number of police reports that I’ve read that are seriously lacking and don’t assist me at all, if there were independent photos or video, it could be seriously useful evidence.
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But if whomever was videoing/photographing the incident has HELPED then maybe there would have been no need for legal involvement further down the track.
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I also, as I wrote, seriously doubt anyone ever has this in mind when they decide to start filming.
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Do you think people do it for the accolades down the track? To be the person that has the footage that everyone wants to see?
Which is massively scary and a reflection on just how inwardly focussed people have become.
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I think there’s an element of *some* people wanting their 15 mins. Not everyone thinks that way – praise be – but there are enough people who want to be featured on the news, or get 1 million hits on YouTube…
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That’s true too, and like Rick said, he doubts that someone films it for that purpose, but the fact is (from my perspective as a lawyer anyway), professionally, if they’ve filmed it anyway, despite their purpose, if it helps me do my job, i want or need the footage. Doesn’t mean personally I might not find it abhorrent!
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“I wonder why we’re fucked up as a race – anyone?”
- Bill Hicks
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People blame the media for this sort of action however is it them or our sick desire thats fuels them. I am a friend of Janes and about 150 of us spent Saturday with water in some cases up to our shoulders searching for her, while praying that she was safely up a tree down stream. Black hawk helicopters with night vison had spent the night before searching in vain and Police, SES staff and others had searched non stop from the minute she was swept away. While appreciating that filming can assist later with investigation etc , sticking it on utube etc or the news is totally uneccesary and disgusting. What is equally disgusting is the likes of the Sunday Mail showing front page photos taken from the families facebook pages pretending that they have actually spoken to some one close to them. All praise must be given to the local Western Star reporter who did not name her until formally advised by the Police. This man is truly a gentelman Those who knew her were aware who it was very soon after the initial tragic accident and those that didn’t had no reason to know.