Thursday, October 4, 2012

Media can be a dreadful weapon

Media can actually change information around and create catastrophic events like the death of a person. This has been happening because the media tries to create problems between the rich and famous persons that appear on TV so that they can gain more money. This is something that evolved in this century because media began to get an impact on the mind of certain people.
In terms again of TV, it can be a dreadful weapon as it tries to show incidents between the people that contest in realities. The owners of certain realities want this type of confession so that they can gain more rating and actually gain more money. An example of this would be in the Peruvian reality, El Valor de la Verdad, where one of the contestants was slaughter after a confession she did on TV. This confession resulted in her death, which happened to be shared with many people through the use of the TV. She had an interview concerning some of the problem she had and then the media changed the information they got so that more problems started to arise. These problems ended up being worse as the ex-boyfriend found out about something she did and then decided to kill her.
 
Article:

Peruvian reality show contestant slain after TV confession

By Catherine E. Shoichet and Maria Elena Belaunde, CNN
updated 9:51 PM EDT, Tue September 25, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • A reality show contestant is found slain more than two months after she appears on TV
  • Authorities accuse her ex-boyfriend of killing her over prize money
  • Investigators are looking into what role the show played, Peru's attorney general says
  • Host: Critics of the show "are giving an alibi to a soulless criminal"
(CNN) -- A Peruvian reality show has become part of a real-life crime drama as authorities investigate the slaying of a contestant who appeared on the program.

Police found Ruth Thalia Sayas Sanchez's body Saturday, more than two months after the 19-year-old's on-air confession that she worked in a nightclub and twice accepted money for sex.
Investigators uncovered evidence of poison in her body and signs that she was strangled, Peruvian Attorney General Jose Pelaez told reporters.

Authorities accuse her ex-boyfriend of killing her because he felt he was entitled to some of the 15,000 soles ($5,700) she won on the show, according to police accounts reported by local media.

Sayas was the first contestant on "The Value of Truth," which features participants answering tough questions about their personal lives in front of an audience and loved ones. Before appearing on the show, contestants are subjected to a polygraph test to verify their responses.

Pelaez said investigators were looking into the role the show could have played in Sayas' death.

"The investigation will determine whether there is some degree of responsibility, even though it seems to me that it would be a responsibility that would not have a causal relation," he told reporters.

The teen's family has said the show did not cause her death.

"This television program has absolutely nothing to do with it,' said Freddy Sanchez Rojas, Sayas' uncle.
On Sunday, the president of Peru's Radio and Television Advisory Council cited Sayas' death as she called on media in the South American country to more closely monitor the contents of their programs.

"I think there is a marked tendency in our media to convert strong and difficult news into a show so everyone can see it. There is a concept of information and news that goes against the very people covered within the report," President Rosa Maria Alfaro said.

Facing increased scrutiny, the show's host has said the program is not responsible for her slaying.
Criticism of the show is unfair, host Beto Ortiz said.

"What they are doing is giving an alibi to the defenders of a soulless criminal, because they are taking away his responsibility by saying that television creates monsters," he said.

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