October 31, 2005

More Media Photo Bias

Via a tip from a reader...

Just when you though the media would have learned from USA Today's manipulating of photos of the Secretary of State, the New York Times run a photo in this article that gives conservative Supreme Court nominee Samuel A. Alito a sickly green pallor.



Is this an accident, incompetence on the part of the NY Times, or a deliberate act by a liberal news organization to taint a conservative Supreme Court nominee?

This photo clearly violates the National Press Photographers Association Code of Ethics and Articles I, IV, V, and VI of the American Society of Newspaper Editors Statement of Principles.

We can hope that the Times will correct this image and print an apology similar to that of USA Today's.

Cross-posted at Newsbusters.org.

Update: The photo has now been removed from the NY Times story, without a retraction.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 09:19 AM | Comments (24) | Add Comment
Post contains 152 words, total size 1 kb.

Blog Drive Ends Soon

I want to thank everyone who has so generously donated to the Confederate Yankee Blog Drive. Your donations mean a lot, when combined with my expected advertising from Pajamas Media, it brings me very close to being able to afford a "brand" laptop to work from very soon.

As Confederate Yankee expects to be doing some more investigative journalism (now in progress) and blogging from "on the road" in our second year (which starts after our Nov. 5 "blogiversary" this upcoming Saturday), this is a welcome addition to our blogging toolkit.

Thanks so much to those of you who have given from your hearts so far.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 08:53 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 114 words, total size 1 kb.

"An Offer You Can't Refuse..."

Fox News, CNN, and ABC News are all announcing that Bush will tap conservative jurist Samuel A. Alito, 55, for the Supreme Court.

Michelle Malkin has the details, which will make judicial conservatives very happy and already has some far left liberals screaming for a filibuster.

My prediction: Liberals will shriek themselves into irrelevancy, the "Gang of 14" will fold, Alito will be easily confirmed, and both sides will squirrel away cash and rhetoric for the '06 and '08 campaigns.

Of course, this was the Evil Rovian Plan all along.

Side Note: How long will it be before the "tolerant left" will try to smear Alito based upon his religion and his heritage?

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 07:31 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 123 words, total size 1 kb.

October 30, 2005

The Best so Far

The Anchoress is one of my favorite reads a a fellow blogger, and in my opinion, this piece may be her best yet, putting this intellectually dishonest turd from Jonathan Alter into perspective.

And before you ask, yes, I've to my own reaction to Alter's steaming pile, which I'll post sometime later in the week.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 04:57 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 63 words, total size 1 kb.

"Activists"

Via FoxNews.com:



"Activists," you say?

At least 61 of their fellow "activists" were killed and another 188 "activists" were injured as four nearly simultaneous "combustible demonstrations" occurred in New Delhi on Saturday, October 29, 2005.

Someone should tell the Associated Press and Fox News that watching your friends and neighbors get blown up does tend to make people active.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 09:50 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 61 words, total size 1 kb.

October 29, 2005

Bacon-Phobics are At it Again

Via Drudge. I'm pretty sure it wasn't Methodists...


Three teenage Christian girls were beheaded and a fourth was seriously wounded in a savage attack on Saturday by unidentified assailants in the Indonesian province of Central Sulawesi.

The girls were among a group of students from a private Christian high school who were ambushed while walking through a cocoa plantation in Poso Kota subdistrict on their way to class, police Major Riky Naldo said.

The area is close to the provincial capital of Poso, about 1000 kilometres northeast of Jakarta.

Naldo said the heads of the three dead victims were found several kilometres from their bodies.

In Jakarta, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono ordered the police to begin a hunt for the killers.

"In the holy month of Ramadan, we are again shocked by a sadistic crime in Poso that claimed the lives of three school students," he told reporters at the airport as he prepared to fly to Sumatra island.

"I condemn this barbarous killing, whoever the perpetrators are and whatever their motives."

You know who they are, just as I do, and the "motive" was that these girls were Christian.

Cropdust with bacon grease, then an ARCLIGHT strike. Sounds about right to me.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 02:01 PM | Comments (5) | Add Comment
Post contains 213 words, total size 2 kb.

October 28, 2005

'Bout That Scooter thing...

So I'm still coming down off this headache and I'm still trying to understand all this:

Patrick Fitzgerald is indicting Scooter Libby for outing Mr. Sulu?

Indictment here (PDF)

No word on whether or not Jeff Gannon was involved. (Actually, yes there is).

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 05:42 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 51 words, total size 1 kb.

Skullcrusher



Sorry for the light posting. I'm now starring in a production of "Fun with Migraines."

I hope to be back tonight...

Update: See what a lack of sleep can do?








Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 07:12 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 32 words, total size 3 kb.

October 26, 2005

Slitting Their Wrists With Occam's Razor

In response to this morning's post on photo ethics at USA Today, USA Today Vice President and Editor-in-Chief Kinsey Wilson dropped by this humble blog and left the following comment:


I'd like to explain how that happened. USATODAY.com, like other news organizations, often adjusts photos for sharpness and brightness to optimize their appearance when published online. In this case, a USATODAY.com editor sharpened the photo and then brightened a portion of Rice's face. Those changes had the effect of distorting the photo and failed to meet our editorial standards for accuracy and integrity. The photo has been replaced with a properly adjusted copy and an editor's note has been published here: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-10-19-rice-congress_x.htm. The photo did not appear in the USA TODAY newspaper.


The editors of USATODAY.com will make every effort to ensure that something like this doesn't happen again.


Kinsey Wilson
VP/Editor-in-Chief
USATODAY.com

I am very thankful for Wilson's direct response. It is rare for a media officer to respond directly to a blogger, and rarer still to admit that mistakes, indeed, distortions, were made and published.

But I humbly suggest that the techniques cited by Mr. Wilson are not the most likely techniques used to develop the now infamous Rice manipulations. The actual techniques were probably both less sophisticated, and more intentional in design than USA Today would have us believe.

To borrow one of the more popular interpretations of principal of Occam's Razor, "when you have two competing theories which make exactly the same predictions, the one that is simpler is the better."

In other words, the most direct route is often the most likely process, and the process USA Today's Wilson would have us believe created this photo is not the most direct, nor the most logical.

But let's start with what we know.

This is the photo that USA Today originally ran in this article.

It has since been replaced by this image.

The area of manipulation in this photo is on Rice's face, specifically her eyes. Look at the USA Today's manipulated version at 400% enlargement.

Notice that while the eyes and eyelids are heavily manipulated, other areas appear untouched, even if blurry from being blown up to this scale. Now let's take a look at how this photo could have been manipulated in the easiest possible manner.

In the various graphics applications that I've used over the years (Photoshop, Fireworks, Paint Shop Pro), there has always been a "paint bucket" fill tool. The paint bucket fill is just that, a tool that enables the user to "dump" a selected color in an area to fill it.

I created the following image using the replacement image now on the USA Today site.

Now compare:

The image on the left was created in less than 30 seconds using nothing more than the paint bucket fill tool in Fireworks to create something very similar to the "Zombie Rice" photo that was created in-house, and made its way past a photo editor (and perhaps others) and onto USATODAY.com.

When scaled back down, it is all but impossible to tell the difference between the 30 second paint bucket dump and resize, versus USA Today's claim of selecting a specific region of the photo, sharpening it, and then brightening it, to accidentally produce an unflattering photo.

Using Occam's razor, I'd suggest that it was unlikely that USA Today would spend a great deal of time to enhance such a small photo. I future suggest that the end result of USA Today's manipulated photo was quite possibly intentional, and accomplished by a "quick and dirty" technique similar to the one I used.

Now the most important question is how this intentionally manipulated image was created at USA Today, was placed into a story, made it past a photo editor, possibly a content editor, and into production. How did this photo manage to get past several layers of editorial review? Multiple instances of incompetence, or a wink and a nod?

Ethically, there is no excuse for this image making it online. Photographers and editors have a responsibility to the integrity of a photo and the personalities in those photos. Most news organizations take this responsibility very seriously, and photo editors have been dismissed for far less obvious offenses including this example from the Los Angeles Times.

This manipulated image specifically violates the National Press Photographers Association Digital Manipulation Code of Ethics, adopted in1991 by the NPPA Board of Directors:


As journalists we believe the guiding principle of our profession is accuracy; therefore, we believe it is wrong to alter the content of a photograph in any way that deceives the public.

As photojournalists, we have the responsibility to document society and to preserve its images as a matter of historical record. It is clear that the emerging electronic technologies provide new challenges to the integrity of photographic images ... in light of this, we the National Press Photographers Association, reaffirm the basis of our ethics: Accurate representation is the benchmark of our profession. We believe photojournalistic guidelines for fair and accurate reporting should be the criteria for judging what may be done electronically to a photograph. Altering the editorial content ... is a breach of the ethical standards recognized by the NPPA.

USA Today clearly violated these long established guidelines. It remains to be seen how much they actually value the ethics and editorial standards they claim to adhere to.


Notes
Much more from Michelle Malkin's follow up post, USA TODAY REMOVES DOCTORED PHOTO. Malkin's original post DEMONIZING CONDI. My response to Malkin's original post Photo Ethics Eludes USA Today.

Update: Classical Values conducted a similar Photoshopping experiment. California Conservative offers up a version every bit as credible as the original.

From the Pen seems to have beaten us all to the story, but I don't know if I agree with Dan Riehl's assessment of the origins.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 11:21 PM | Comments (6) | Add Comment
Post contains 987 words, total size 7 kb.

Iran Volunteers to Test Israeli Nukes

Having not yet fully developed their own nuclear capabilities, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad seems intent on testing the capabilities of Israel's nuclear warheads... on the Iranian population:


"The establishment of the Zionist regime was a move by the world oppressor against the Islamic world," the president told a conference in Tehran on Wednesday, entitled The World without Zionism.

"The skirmishes in the occupied land are part of a war of destiny. The outcome of hundreds of years of war will be defined in Palestinian land," he said.

"As the Imam said, Israel must be wiped off the map," said Ahmadinejad, referring to Iran's revolutionary leader Ayat Allah Khomeini.

Are Syrian and Iranian leaders in some sort of a contest to see who gets deposed next?

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 11:52 AM | Comments (8) | Add Comment
Post contains 137 words, total size 1 kb.

Hear That?

Three Iraqi Sunni parties are forming a political coalition. Don't expect to see that on page 1 of the NY Times.

That tapping sound you here is the sound of Iraqi democracy driving nails into to coffin of al Qaeda in Iraq.

al Qaeda's strategic war is lost, their tactical capabilities steadily eroded. The terrorists have the ability to still kill, sometimes spectacularly, but they no longer have any chance of containing a nation of people that has demonstrated that it wants freedom, and is willing to trust the ballot more than the bullet.

As daily developments continute to prove, Allah is not on the side of the Jihadis.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 11:43 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 113 words, total size 1 kb.

Confederate Yankee Blog Drive: I Can't Beleive It's Not Butter!

I want to start out by thanking everyone who has generously donated to what I should probably call the "Buy Bob a new computer once he jump starts a charity (if needed)so he can sleep every now and then" fund. I plan to run this drive periodically until my Nov. 5 first "blogiversary," but thought it might help if I had a specific target in mind.
For that, I turn to you.
I'm looking for a notebook computer as my replacement computer, for a couple of reasons, the primary reason being I'd like to be capable of mobile computing, especially as I might have the opportunity to do some on-location blogging in the not-too distant future. But while I'm comfy in my desktop knowledge, I can hardly claim to be anything approaching an expert on notebooks, with my only real experience coming from work-issued Thinkpads at several of my last jobs. I liked them, but they are all I know. What are my other options? I know I'd like:

  • something with a quiet keyboard.
  • something wireless.
  • something rugged.
  • enough "horsepower" to run multiple applications at once, including some memory hogs.
  • to burn CDs and DVDs here and there.
  • long service life.

So what do you guys think? What notebooks will meet these wants, and which (remember, you guys are helping pay for it) can do it economically?
Once I've got that narrowed down, I'll know what my target fund-raising goal should be.
And yes, I'm still accepting donations.






P.S. -- That "Santa's Slays" movie in my last Blog Drive post? I actually watched it, well, subjected myself to it, last night. Let's just say it was everything you would expect in a holiday-themed horror/comedy starring a professional wrestler.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 11:19 AM | Comments (4) | Add Comment
Post contains 302 words, total size 5 kb.

Photo Ethics Eludes USA Today

Michelle Malkin busts the photo editor of USA Today for manipulating a photo of Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice in a way that makes Dr. Rice look just a wee bit possessed.

As she notes, Richard Curtis is USAT's Graphics and Photos Managing Editor, and while I don't know if he directly had a hand in deciding to run the doctored photo, he is ultimately responsible for a manipulation that would appear to be a violation of most people's concept of photo ethics (If you have a problem seeing this ethics violation, slap a pair of Linda Blair eyes on Hillary Clinton or Jesse Jackson and you should be able to suddenly see it clearly).

What are responsible photo ethics? When is it acceptable to manipulate photos, and to what extent? Fred Showker at 60 Second Window has a wonderful practical guide for photo ethics, which defines in part what acceptable photo ethics entail:


editing procedures are allowed to compensate for limitations and defects inherent in the digital photographic process. However, the editor must be diligent to protect the photo's true-to-life accuracy.


And isn't:


For the sake of representing honest and accurate information, the digital editor should avoid anything that will change the actual event or scene as it was captured by the camera. This includes adding, removing or moving objects in such a way that the context of the event is altered. The digital image editor must be careful to let the photos speak for themselves. So it's not permissible to alter any aspect of place or time -- like removing wrinkles or gray hair. Additionally they should never enhance or distract from the apparent quality or desirability of a subject, or the aesthetics of a place.

It is quite clear that USA Today violated these guidelines, creating an image that was a misleading, decidedly negative representation of an individual. The person or persons who directly manipulated this photo and the person who allowed it to run should be disciplined, and possibly terminated for a gross and deliberate abuse of journalistic integrity.

Now is when we will discover if USA Today is a responsible news organization, or a tabloid. The ball is in your court, Mr. Curtis.

(Cross-posted to NewsBusters.org)

Update: Horrible, pre-coffee grammer cleaned up.

Update #2: Welcome Matt Drudge/Michelle Malkin/Instapundit readers to my little corner of the web. Confederate Yankee usually writes about politics and media bias, and you caught us on one of those media bias stories. We're currently soliciting funds to replace an aging (circa 2001) computer, and if you have a few bucks to spare, it would be greatly appreciated.

If you want to know more about Confederate Yankee before you donate, please visit the main page for more articles.

Thanks!







Update #3: Horrible, post-coffee oversight of the incorrect spelling of grammar as "grammer" cleaned up.

Update #4: Please read the updated follow-up post "Slitting Their Wrists with Occam's Razor."

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 09:56 AM | Comments (41) | Add Comment
Post contains 496 words, total size 7 kb.

This Post Intentionally Left Untitled

I'm glad to see my favorite former Congress idiot is getting along just fine without me (h/t: Doc Paul).

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 09:04 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 29 words, total size 1 kb.

Galloway: Getting It In The End?

If even a fraction of this Senate report (pdf) is true, blowhard British MP and left wing hero, is in for a world of trouble -- or at least two countries worth.

If the Senate report is correct, Galloway not only commited crimes on American soil, but he commited perjury in a libel case in England that he won as well, based upon these same claims of innocence.

Galloway appears to have counted on illegal Iraqi oil for his future.




He might want to consider shifting his investments elsewhere.

Update: Christopher Hitchens is having a field day with these developments.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 01:29 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 112 words, total size 1 kb.

Fitzgerald to Clear Rove?

Yeah, I know I've been ignoring the whole Plamegate thing for the most part until tonight, but what do you take away from this 11th hour story in the New York Times:


With the clock running out on his investigation, the special counsel in the leak case continued to seek information on Tuesday about Karl Rove's discussions with reporters in the days before a C.I.A. officer's identity was made public, lawyers and others involved in the investigation said.

Three days before the grand jury in the case expires and with the White House in a state of high anxiety, the special counsel, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, appeared still to be trying to determine whether Mr. Rove had been fully forthcoming about his contacts with Matthew Cooper of Time magazine and Robert D. Novak, the syndicated columnist, in July 2003, they said.

How would you read that?

Digby, of Hullabaloo (according to Memeorandum the first and only blogger commenting on this story at the moment), apparently didn't read anything into that at all. He seemed more intent on trying to furtively establish links dragging in Vice President Cheney in a section future down the page.

But I don't think the Times would bury the lead on this story; they want Rove and they're interpreting the special counsel's last-minute information gathering as tying up loose ends that could lead to an indictment of Rove.

But there is, of course, at least one other explanation for this apparent last-minute flurry of activity: Fitzgerald might be making sure that he is justified in not bringing charges against Karl Rove at all.

If special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald has decided not to indict the man that liberal's most hate, he better have his ducks in a row and able to withstand intense scrutiny. This last second fact-checking would appear to be consistent towards that end as well.

Time will tell.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 12:57 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 321 words, total size 2 kb.

October 25, 2005

Almost Over?

According to anonymous sources in the Washington Note, indictments are coming from Plamegate prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald tomorrow:


  1. 1-5 indictments are being issued. The source feels that it will be towards the higher end.
  2. The targets of indictment have already received their letters.
  3. The indictments will be sealed indictments and "filed" tomorrow.
  4. A press conference is being scheduled for Thursday.

Will anyone else simply be happy when this is over? I'm tired of the idle speculation, the "educated" guessing, the bloviating, the bile, and leaks from the investigation that seem to dwarf the events actually being investigated.

If folks commited crimes, they out to be help accountable, and that's about all that matter from where I sit. Give them a fair trial, and let the chips fall where they may.

Update: Now what could this mean?

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:04 PM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 136 words, total size 1 kb.

Ulterior Motives?

Via WaPo:


"I'll be laying down and not getting up," Sheehan said Tuesday to a small crowd in which the number of journalists exceeded the number of protesters. "When they let me out, I'll do the same thing if I get arrested."




I wonder why....


*sings* "I'll be seeing you, in all the old familiar places..."



Updates:
John Cole isn't impressed with Sheehan or other Left Wing Heroes.
Jeff Quinton is echoed (echoed).
Cox & Forkum, as they often do, peg things perfectly.

Re-update: added the lyrics. It felt so wrong, and yet so right.

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 06:00 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment
Post contains 99 words, total size 1 kb.

Confederate Yankee Blog Drive (Day Whatever): Threats of Evil Santa

I'd like to thank those of you who have so generously donated to the Confederate Yankee Blog Drive so far. As you know, proceeds with go to a new PC so that I can turn this aging Dell (circa 2001, we've liberated two countries and had elections there since then) over to my wife and daughter for their web -surfing and educational game-playing needs, and then have a dedicated 'puter to blog with. As it is, I'm having to share computer time, and that leads me to writing until 1-2 AM (like now), which wipes me out and lowers the quality of my output as well. I wants to write good for you.

Besides, if you don't, I'll slip this onto your Amazon Wish List:

You don't want to know the "plot":


Santa ([Former Pro Wrestler Bill] Goldberg) is actually Satan, who 1,000 years ago lost a curling match to an angel...

Bill Goldberg. Acting. Look, I hate to do this, but daddy needs a computer...

So help a blogger out, will ya?







Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 01:36 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 190 words, total size 4 kb.

A Defense Without Bite

Poor Gorgeous George Galloway is have a tough time of it lately. First Christopher Hitchens ate him alive in a televised debate, and now the U.S. Senate says it can prove he took payments from Saddam Hussein totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars, and lied about it under oath in front of Congress.

Via The Independent:


George Galloway, the British MP, was last night accused of lying by a US Congressional committee when he testified earlier this year that he had not received any United Nation food-for-oil allocations from the deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

In a report issued here, Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman and his colleagues on the Senate Subcommittee for Investigations claim to have evidence showing that Mr Galloway's political organisation and his wife received vouchers worth almost $600,000 (£338,000) from the then Iraqi government.

The Senate subcommittee, chaired by Sen. Norm Coleman, a Minnesota Republican, cites testimony from former Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz and wire transfers recorded by both Citibank and the Arab Bank.

So how does that den of critical thinking, the Democratic Underground, respond to the charges against one of their favorite Saddam sycophants?

By attacking the credibility of Coleman's teeth. Yes, the quality of your dentistry determines your credibility in DU Land.

Now, who said that the Democrats were a party without ideas?

Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 01:01 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 228 words, total size 2 kb.

<< Page 1 of 5 >>
133kb generated in CPU 0.0315, elapsed 0.1131 seconds.
69 queries taking 0.0925 seconds, 292 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.