The Lost "dream of a zero-accident future"

Written by Eric Olsen
Published February 03, 2003

This USA Today assessment of TV coverage of the Columbia disaster seems about right:

    Americans have changed between Challenger and Columbia.

    You could sense the shift in the national mood by the questions TV asked and answered this weekend after the destruction of the space shuttle Columbia. The tone when the Challenger exploded in 1986 was one of pained disbelief: Our technology was not supposed to fail us. Such calamities happened to other people in other places.

    But Challenger and Sept. 11 have altered how we view tragedies. Once, mechanical failure horrified us. Now, TV offered it up as a comfort: As terrible as the failure might be, it was preferable to the other option that sprang to mind: a terrorist attack. That is the new nightmare, the phantom we're afraid we'll see every time we turn on the television.

    ....With the phantom put to rest, television settled into its now sadly familiar response to catastrophes. A few fragmentary, early shots of the space shuttle disintegrating were played over and over, until new shots and new angles arrived to be dropped into the rotation. Promises were quickly made not to overplay the images, and they were just as quickly broken.

    And, of course, there were hours of talk. ''This is what we do in the age of television,'' ABC's Peter Jennings said. ''We sit around and talk about it, in part because it helps us understand, God willing, and it certainly helps people get through it.''

    ....And yet there were more noble impulses served as well. Through TV this weekend, we shared the poignancy of national loss and were reminded that such losses can be faced with dignity. ''We'll find the cause, we'll fix it, and we'll move on,'' said NASA's Capt. Bill Readdy, a simple, eloquent expression of the determination that drives the space program.

    As with Challenger, the destruction of Columbia caught us unaware, but it did not catch us or television equally unprepared. We were just as saddened by the loss. But we were not as shocked as we once might have been.

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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The Lost "dream of a zero-accident future"
Published: February 03, 2003
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Section: Video
Writer: Eric Olsen
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