Russian TV "borrowed" Titanic footage for Polar coverage

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #1

    Russian TV "borrowed" Titanic footage for Polar coverage

    Finnish teen sinks Russian TV's titanic polar ploy
    Deep-sea deceit: Russia's flag-raising efforts have taken a hit.


    theage.com.au

    By Tom Parfitt, Moscow
    August 12, 2007
    UNEARTHLY blue lights played across the ocean floor four kilometres below the North Pole as the heroic Russian explorers descended in mini-submarines to plant a metre-high flag.
    That's what the Russian state television company, Rossiya, wanted us to believe. The truth was rather different.

    In an apparent attempt to "sex up" a news program, the TV station has been caught passing off footage from the 1997 Hollywood blockbuster Titanic as a real-life report on the Kremlin's recent attempt to stake its claim to the riches of the Arctic Ocean.

    Rossiya's images were distributed around the world, appearing on television news, websites and as "screen grabs" in newspapers.

    It took an alert teenager in Finland with a Titanic DVD to spot the sham. Waltteri Seretin, 13, recognised the images in the national daily, Ilta-Sanomat.

    "I was looking at the photo of the Russian sub expedition and I noticed immediately that there was something familiar about the picture," he told the paper.

    "I checked it with my DVD and there it was, right there in the beginning of the movie; exactly the same image of the submersibles approaching the ship."

    James Cameron's film about the 1912 disaster opens with a scene of mini-subs diving to inspect the wreck of the Titanic. In the Russian report, expedition images from the movie were inserted into real footage and bore an on-screen caption reading "northern Arctic Ocean".

    As the Titanic images were shown, a correspondent said: "When the mini-submarine got to 300 metres, the unloading of the second sub began."

    In fact, a Finnish company made the mini-subs the Russians used and Cameron used them in his film. But it is thought the scene from the movie shown on Russian TV was originally filmed using models in a studio.

    Rossiya is one of two state-controlled channels that have been turned into propaganda tools under President Vladimir Putin and it is the second time in two weeks that the Vesti news program has faked a broadcast.

    Ten days ago, it mocked up a copy of The Times newspaper to make it appear as though the paper had run a critical article about London-based businessman Boris Berezovsky on its front page. The article actually appeared in the comment section.

    Rossiya refused to comment on the polar footage, but the boy who identified it gave a damning indictment of the show. "I have heard that they don't always tell the truth in Russia but I didn't think they could have screwed it up that badly," he said.

    Moscow trumpeted the polar expedition as a PR coup in its effort to prove the Arctic is Russian, and veteran explorer Artur Chilingarov and his team returned to a heroes' welcome.

    The TV fiasco adds fresh controversy to the expedition, which caused resentment among northern hemisphere nations seeking their share of the Arctic's energy riches - at least 10 billion tonnes of hydrocarbons.

    Alexei Simonov, of the Glasnost Defence Foundation, said the channel had attempted to dupe viewers. "This is a sign of the sheer unprofessionalism that reigns when television is turned into a pawn of the authorities," he said.






    http://www.filmstew.com/showArticle.asp ... ntID=16270

    Daily News

    Two-Timing the Titanic
    A 13-year-old Finnish teen cuts through the murky waters and exposes a good old-fashioned bit of Russian disinformation.
    Friday, August 10, 2007 at 7:35 PM
    By FilmStew Staff


    Short of real footage to corroborate its news story about Russia’s recent attempts to stake an underwater claim to the deep sea depths of the Arctic Ocean, state television broadcaster Rossiya did the next best thing; they filched footage from the King of the World. Their presentation of opening scene submarine footage from Titanic as 2008 expedition travelogue made old and new media front headlines, until a faraway film fan set the record straight.

    “I was looking at the photo of the Russian sub expedition and I noticed immediately that there was something familiar about the picture," 13-year-old Waltteri Seretin tells his country’s Ilta-Sanomat newspaper. "I checked it with my DVD and there it was right there in the beginning of the movie: exactly the same image of the submersibles approaching the ship."

    Rossiya mixed real footage with the film stuff, throwing in voiceover narration for the later to make it look like these were the vessels of comrades. Intriguingly, the submarines used by scientists during the recent Russian expedition to the North Pole are identical to the ones used in Titanic, and made by a Finnish company to boot.

    ”I've heard they don't always tell the truth in Russia, but I didn't think they could have screwed it up that badly," Seretin suggests. A once great nation, foiled by kid with a passion for 1997’s Best Picture. It’s enough to drive any ex-KGB agent back to the vodka bottle. So far, Rossiya has refused to comment.
  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #2
    Apparent source of the error.

    Apparent source of the error.

    http://www.regrettheerror.com/2007/08/r ... itani.html
    August 13, 2007
    Rossiya's Titanic error
    A 13 year-old boy in Finland might have a promising career as a fact checker ahead of him.
    Last week he revealed that the image of a submarine used by state-owned Russian TV network Rossiya (RTR) to illustrate a story about a Russian submarine voyage to the arctic was in fact from the film Titanic. The image was then distributed by Reuters, which meant it spread to news outlets in countries around the world. That's the danger of picking up reports from other media without doing independent verification. It's something wire services constantly struggle with, and occasionally they get bit.
    "I was looking at the photo of the Russian sub expedition and I noticed immediately that there was something familiar about the picture," Waltteri Seretin, the Finnish boy, told a Finnish paper. "I checked it with my DVD and there it was right there in the beginning of the movie: exactly the same image of the submer-sibles approaching the ship."
    Here's the official statement from Reuters, and a correction from MSNBC.com below. We have not seen other corrections as of now, which is troubling to say the least.

    On August 2, 2007 in a TV story about two Russian submersibles planting a flag on the seabed under the North Pole, we used file shots of MIR submersibles as part of this story.
    Reuters mistakenly identified this file footage as originating from the Arctic, and not the North Atlantic where the footage was shot.
    This footage was taken during the search for the Titanic and copyright is held by Russian State broadcaster RTR.
    This location error was corrected as soon as it was brought to our attention. A still image of the submersibles was also taken from the footage and put out on the Reuters photo wire. The caption has been corrected.

    This correction was published on MSNBC.com:

    In an Aug. 2 story about Russia planting a flag at the bottom of the North Pole, Reuters provided a photo with a caption identifying a submersible as participating in the expedition. Reuters later corrected that to say the image was of a similar submersible used in the search for the Titanic.

    Comment

    • u-5075
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 1134

      #3
      Rivalry now going on over

      Rivalry now going on over Arctic Riches

      Denmark joins international race to claim the Arctic
      The race for the Arctic has intensified this month, with Denmark, Russia, Canada and US all setting sail to claim rights at the North Pole which may contain around 25 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas.

      15.08.2007 - 09:13 CET | By Lisbeth Kirk
      Denmark has sent a research team to the Arctic ice pack to seek evidence that the Lomonosov Ridge underwater mountain range is attached to the Danish territory of Greenland.

      The research team, with specialists from Canada, Denmark and Sweden, set off on Sunday (12 August) from Tromsoe in northern Norway on board the Swedish ice-breaker Oden. They will return to Norway's Svalbard islands on 17 September.

      Canada, Russia, the US and Norway have also claims in the Arctic region, where the US Geological Survey has suggested as much as 25 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas could be hidden.

      The race for the Arctic is also intensifying because global warming is shrinking the polar ice cap, which could some day open for new shipping lanes linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

      Russia believes the Lomonosov Ridge underwater feature is linked to its Siberian territory and made a submission to the United States as early as 2001 claiming sub-sea rights stretching to the Pole.

      To back up the claims, members of Russia's parliament watched from a mini-submarine when their country's flag was planted on 2 August four kilometres (2.5 miles) below the North Pole.

      The meter-high flag is made of titanium so as not to rust, said Russian news agency ITAR-TASS.

      The move was treated with derision by Canadian foreign minister Peter MacKay who likened it to tactics used in the 15th Century, the BBC reported.

      Canada itself has just started Arctic sovereignty claims with prime minister Stephen Harper announcing last week plans to build an army training centre and a deep-water port at Nanisivik near the eastern entrance of the Northwest Passage to help refuel its military patrol ships.

      Ottawa also plans to buy at least six new patrol ships for the area.

      Washington has sent a coast guard cutter on a mapping mission to the Arctic this week to determine whether part of the area can be considered US territory. It is the third US Arctic mapping cruise since 2003.

      The North Pole seabed is not currently regarded as part of any single country's territory and is governed instead by complex international agreements.

      Danish claims for the areas go via Greenland. Although part of the Danish Realm, Greenland is not a part of the European Union.

      A visit to Greenland by European Commission president Jose Barroso in June was largely focussed on climate change but also included signature of an EU-Greenland partnership deal.

      Comment

      • u-5075
        Junior Member
        • Feb 2003
        • 1134

        #4
        Media Watchdog Calls on NBC

        Media Watchdog Calls on NBC to Correct Titanic Error
        PR Newswire’s news distribution, targeting, monitoring and marketing solutions help you connect and engage with target audiences across the globe.




        Mistake Bolsters False Russian Claim to North Pole, Says Kincaid

        WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Accuracy in Media editor
        Cliff Kincaid today called on NBC Nightly News to apologize for misleading
        viewers into believing that an image it presented on Monday night's
        newscast was of a Russian mini-sub under the North Pole. In fact, the image
        was of a submarine searching for wreckage of the Titanic. While not the
        first news organization to air the misleading image -- originally broadcast
        by Russian TV channel Rossiya -- NBC has refused to apologize for or even
        explain the mistake.

        "It is inexcusable that a reputable news organization like NBC would
        stonewall our request for a correction of the record," said Kincaid.
        "Reuters corrected its error in this case, and it is high time for NBC to
        do the same."

        In his column, "NBC Promotes Bogus Russian Claim to North Pole,"
        available on the AIM website at http://www.aim.org, Kincaid makes the case
        that NBC's failure to correct its error, in addition to its unjustified
        statement that the North Pole is governed by a U.N. treaty, are
        embarrassing errors that require immediate correction. Kincaid points to
        evidence that Americans were the first to set foot on the Pole and travel
        under it in a submarine, and that American claims to the region are legally
        valid.

        Accuracy in Media is a citizens' media watchdog organization whose
        mission is to promote fairness, balance, and accuracy in news reporting.
        Founded in 1969, AIM is the oldest non-profit press watchdog group in
        America. For more information, please visit http://www.aim.org.

        To arrange an interview with AIM editor Cliff Kincaid, contact Sarah
        Schaerr Norton at (202) 364-4401 ext. 107 or sarah.schaerr@aim.org.

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