| OVER THE LINE
Dateline's predator series goes too far
by Deborah Potter
More reports about "Predator"
The "To Catch a Predator" series on "Dateline NBC"
has been a smash hit for the network's news division since it launched
more than two years ago, drawing a substantial audience and public
praise for bringing sex offenders to justice. But the program's
tactics have always been controversial, and now they've landed NBC
in court. The charge is breach of contract, but the complaint paints
a picture of a program willing to cross ethical lines to win ratings.
Former "Dateline" producer Marsha Bartel, who worked
at NBC for more than 20 years, was let go last December just a few
months after being promoted to sole producer of the "Predator"
series. Bartel says the company told her she was being dropped in
a general round of layoffs. While there's no question that NBC has
been downsizing, Bartel believes she was forced out because she
complained to her supervisors that the "Predator" series
repeatedly violated the standards of ethical journalism.
NBC has disclosed that it pays an advocacy group, Perverted Justice,
to set up the "Predator" sting operations featured on
10 installments of "Dateline" so far. The group's volunteers
pose as young teens in Internet chat rooms, looking for adults interested
in having sex; when they arrange to meet, the network's hidden cameras
are waiting.
NBC insists it's not paying for news, but Bartel's lawsuit alleges
the payments violate the network's own standards against conflict
of interest. "Contrary to NBC Policies and Guidelines, NBC
unethically pays Perverted Justice to troll for and lure targets
into its sting," the lawsuit says, "thereby giving it
a financial incentive to lie and trick targets." Bartel says
that targets sometimes are "led into additional acts of humiliation
(such as being encouraged to remove their clothes) in order to enhance
the comedic effect of the public exposure of these persons."
The program also works closely with police — too closely,
according to Bartel. Her complaint says the network provides police
with video equipment and tapes so they can record the arrests they
make for NBC to air. She also alleges that NBC pays or reimburses
law enforcement officials to participate in the stings "in
order to enhance and intensify the dramatic effect of the show."
Do these practices make the "Dateline" staff an arm of
law enforcement or turn the police into journalists? Either way,
they're a bad idea.
To be fair, reporters and editors enhance dramatic or comic elements
of a news story all the time, by choosing what information to include
and where to place it. But paying or tricking participants in a
story to intensify the drama or comedy crosses the line. This isn't
"Candid Camera." "Dateline" is supposed to be
a news program.
It's also true that undercover journalism is a noble tradition
that has exposed serious wrongdoing in the past. "Dateline"
itself has used hidden cameras to reveal fraud at car dealerships
and child labor violations. But those stories had wide impact, and
the video was necessary to prove the case. On that basis, "Predator"
doesn't measure up.
"Predator" reporter and host Chris Hansen defends the
program and its tactics. In promoting his new book based on the
series, Hansen has bragged that of the more than 200 men charged
in the investigations, only one has been found not guilty. "I
think..it's for the greater good," he told NPR's "Talk
of the Nation." But some of the cases are not going to court.
A Texas district attorney recently threw out 23 arrests from a "Dateline"
sting as inadequate for prosecution. One sting target in Texas fatally
shot himself last fall as officers forced their way into his house,
while NBC cameras stood by outside.
Hansen says he doesn't feel responsible for the man's death, and
he sees nothing wrong with paying Perverted Justice. He compares
those payments to the contracts NBC signs with retired generals
and FBI agents who comment on the news. But that's a stretch of
Rose Mary Woods proportions. The generals aren't setting up wars
for NBC to cover.
In a statement responding to Bartel's lawsuit, NBC says it has
been transparent about its reporting methods. "Although the
reports have been subject to some controversy, audience reaction
has been overwhelmingly positive." That's great for NBC's bottom
line, but it doesn't justify the way the program operates.
No one's suggesting that the would-be predators exposed by "Dateline"
are anything other than scummy. But did the network really need
to produce 10 programs to make that point over and over again? All
the attention suggests the country is crawling with these creeps,
but statistics don't support that. Besides, there are plenty of
other worthwhile stories going begging for airtime while "Dateline"
tracks perverts.
"Dateline" has done some excellent work; its documentary
about a first-year schoolteacher in Atlanta won a Peabody award
this year. It was compelling television, focusing on systemic problems
that affect millions more children than Internet predators. But
it wasn't sexy and aired just once, in August, when audiences are
traditionally low.
Yes, viewers may prefer to watch "humilitainment" like
"Predator" instead of a meaningful investigation. But
that's no reason to let your news division produce it and pretend
it's a documentary.
This article was originally
published in American Journalism Review, August/September 2007
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