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Crunks 2008: The Year in Media Errors and Corrections

Editor’s Note: This site doesn’t accept advertising (note: see UPDATE below). I’d be grateful if you’d consider purchasing a copy of the Regret the Error book, which won an award from the National Press Club this year. You can learn more about the book and read some reviews here. UPDATE March 2009: I’ve added some Google ads to the site. Of course, I still hope you’ll take a look at the book.

Trend of the Year: Epic Organizational Failure
It’s rare to look back over a year of corrections and errors and see so many examples of organizational failure. Years past have seen plenty of malfeasance by individuals, but 2008 is remarkable for news organizations that pursued completely outrageous behavior.

In Japan, the Mainichi Daily News, the English website of Japanese newspaper Mainichi Shimbun, had to be relaunched thanks to its repeated publishing of false, titillating stories. In England, the Express Newspapers chain published a series of major front page apologies to repent for its wildly inaccurate and damaging reports about a British family. In the United States, the Bulletin, a weekly in Montgomery County, Texas, was revealed to be perhaps the first newspaper to pursue plagiarism as a standard operating procedure.

As opposed to other years when a story (think Sago Mine disaster) dominated accuracy news, the headline for 2008 is that three news organizations knowingly and willfully fabricated, plagiarized or otherwise abdicated their ethics on a regular basis.

For their amazing feats of organizational failure, Mainichi Daily News, Express Newspapers and the Bulletin are each presented with a Regret the Error Award of Demerit. These three organizations join the only previous recipient, The Sun (UK) tabloid, which received the dishonor in 2006 for its repeated scandalous errors, remarkable apologies, and nasty pseudo-apologies. Congrats all around.

Other Trends of Note
Rick Reilly: Cat Nip To Plagiarists
Sports writer Rick Reilly deserves credit for having produced work of such brilliance that two different sports writers plagiarized his work in a period of less than two months. No wonder ESPN paid millions to hire him away from Sports Illustrated. One of the thieves, Dave Pratt, also offered up what has to be the accuracy quote of the year after he was asked by the CBC about his theft: “It was a Saturday and I wanted to get out of [the office] before noon.” Bravo.

David Gest Does Not Have Herpes*
Four different newspapers published apologies this year because they had reported – inaccurately! – that David Gest has herpes. Specifically, they reported that Gest alleged that he had contracted herpes from Liza Minnelli on their wedding night. The offenders were The Independent (UK), Daily Mail (UK), Times (UK) and the Baltimore Sun. (Perhaps I missed a few others.) Read all four apologies here, and here’s one from the Daily Mail:

In articles published on 23 and 26 May 2008, we gave the impression that Mr Gest had contracted a sexually transmitted infection and alleged that he had Liza Minnelli’s dog killed without her knowledge.
This was wrong. David Gest has never had a sexually transmitted infection and did not have Ms Minnelli’s dog killed.
We apologise to Mr Gest for any embarrassment caused.

Obama, Again
It’s a rule that the more someone is in the news, the more they’ll be the victim of media error. Obama errors were one of 2007’s Trends of the Year. They deserve mention again. Included below in this year’s Crunks is a Treasury of Obama Corrections from 2008. The next four years are going to be interesting…

New Award: The Ian Mayes Award for Writing Wrongs
Last year, Ian Mayes, one of the great correction writers of all time, stepped down as the readers’ editor of the Guardian. His corrections were sublime: to the point, witty, and self-effacing. (You can read the Regret the Error tribute to him at the end of last year’s Crunks, or buy his book of Guardian corrections.) With his blessing, I have created an award in his honor, the Ian Mayes Award for Writing Wrongs.
It will be awarded to the publication or person that demonstrates wit and wisdom in the writing of corrections. Mayes has agreed with my suggestion for the first recipient of the award. He is David Hummerston, the Saturday editor/editorial counsellor and readers’ editor of the West Australian. Yes, the man wears many hats.
In addition to everlasting fame, Hummerston will receive a signed copy of Ian Mayes’ book, Journalism Right and Wrong: Ethical and other issues raised by readers in the Guardian’s Open Door Column. Here’s a sample of Hummerston’s work from 2008:

Old Sparky: The compilers and suppliers of our On This Day column deserve to learn a lot more about electric execution. The recidivist column wrongly stated that the first electric chair execution took place on July 7, 1890. In fact, it was Wednesday, August 6, 1890 in New York – ironically then known as The Electric City of the Future – that wife-killer William Kemmler became the first man executed in an electric chair. Although Dr George C. Fell said Kemmler “never suffered a bit of pain”, a reporter who also witnessed the execution wrote in the New York Herald the next day that “strong men fainted and fell like logs upon the floor”.

Bad conduct: Charles Mackerras was not born in Australia (Emma hits heights, Today, page 6, December 1). The eminent orchestra conductor was born to Australian parents in 1925 in musical-sounding Schenectady, New York. Apropos of nothing, Schenectady was where, in 1886, the Machine Works company was set up by Thomas Edison, who also knew a thing or two about conductors.

E=mc3+1: As mathematicians, journalists make fine geishas. One of the paper’s most perspicacious readers has again successfully challenged our careless checking of figures in reports received from overseas and interstate. In one report we had an Olympic swimming pool holding a meagre 1000 megalitres – a waist-high depth that would becalm Eamon Sullivan (’Angel’, 4, drowns as plastic dam wall fails, page 17, November 25). And in another report we had 40,000 US “gleaners” filling 80,000 4-6kg sacks with 250kg of vegetables – a minuscule 6g per person (Hard times bite in America, World page 28, November 26). We still don’t know what we meant.

Hip hip, Horatio: Legendary British Admiral Horatio Nelson would have turned 250 today. We published a fascinating but mathematically muddled report from London about an auction today, wrongly stating it would mark the 250th anniversary of his death (Ring and box highlights of Nelson anniversary sale, page 36, September 25). If this was true, he would have died 47 years before the Battle of Trafalgar, where he was struck by a French sniper’s bullet and died on the first day of combat on October 21, 1805. Like Nelson, we had only one eye on the job.

Birdbrains: We swiftly swallowed the information supplied to us which described a photo of a bird in flight as a Rottnest Island Sparrow (The science of fine photography, page 19, August 16). As any eagle-eyed ornithologist would attest it was, of course, the much less rare Welcome Sparrow.

Deep depression: Our economics editor has officially gone from recession to depression. By mangling the names of two of history’s most highly decorated economists, John Maynard Keynes and Milton Friedman, we not only created an economy of truth but blamed poor Milton Keynes for having “crazy” ideas (We can all learn from Depression, Opinion, page 21, September 29). Milton Keynes is an English town famous not only for its grid system of roads and its herd of concrete cows but because in 1998 it was deemed so boring that even chartered accountants refused to move there. The “crazy” ideas comment was intended for John Maynard Keynes, who was voted one of Time Magazine’s most important people of the 20th century – and who was not boring.

Congratulations!

Correction of the Year
One of the year’s most coveted awards goes to none other than Dave Barry. Here’s how the famous humor writer chose to correct a misspelling he made in a column published by the Miami Herald:

In yesterday’s column about badminton, I misspelled the name of Guatemalan player Kevin Cordon. I apologize. In my defense, I want to note that in the same column I correctly spelled Prapawadee Jaroenrattanatarak, Poompat Sapkulchananart and Porntip Buranapraseatsuk. So by the time I got to Kevin Cordon, my fingers were exhausted.

Read More »

2008 Plagiarism/Fabrication Round-Up

As noted in this year’s edition of the Crunks, 2008 saw an example of institutional plagiarism (the Bulletin), as well as an incident of institutional fabrication (Mainichi Daily News). Both are mentioned below, along with the rest of this year’s notable examples of plagiarism and fabrication. On the more positive side of things, this year saw John McIntyre of the Baltimore Sun write a great guide to spotting a plagiarist or fabulist. It’s highly recommended. And now, on with the bad news. (Also, please email me if I missed any.)

January

The Weekly Standard apologized after it discovered that a December 2007 article by David Satter included several passages from articles published in the Eurasia Daily Monitor. Link

The Sunday Times (UK) “inadvertently” plagiarized content from Radar magazine. Link

The new sex columnist for the New York Press resigned after her first column included questions taken from Dan Savage’s syndicated sex column. Link

February

After work submitted by a contributor was found to have included plagiarized material, the Brown Daily Herald conducted a review and discovered “two [additional] articles … that contained passages similar or identical to those in other publications.” Link

An article in the Miami Herald contained passages taken from an article in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Link

The New York Times published an Editors’ Note that revealed a paragraph contained in a front page article about Argentina was taken from the Miami Herald. Slate’s Jack Shafer discovered the theft. Link

The Ventura County Star fired its surfing columnist after it discovered that two of his columns contained plagiarized material. Link

Award-winning photographer Liu Wei-qiang admitted to faking a widely-published photograph that showed a herd of endangered Tibetan antelopes near a passing train on the controversial Qinghai-Tibet railway. Link

Read More »

A pseudo-apology to Victoria Beckham

It has come to our attention that in recent years, we, The Media, may have mistakenly given the impression that Victoria Beckham was a figure of ridicule. Certain articles and other items pertaining to the popular Spice Girls singer could have led readers to question her talent and integrity, it has been found. Indeed, some remarks relating to the well-known entertainer and mother of three were open to misinterpretation as criticism of her, and may have been received by some readers as such.
Now, a lengthy and in-depth inquiry has proven that Mrs Beckham is beyond reproach. Moreover, she is known to be respected as an International Style Icon and celebrated as the pinnacle of British culture. We therefore accept that everything we said before was wholly misleading and untrue, and issue an unreserved apology. We hope that Mrs Beckham can forgive us for this inaccurate reporting, which we now withdraw without exception.
The exhaustive investigation carried out by us, The Media, has found that the false and ambiguous reports concerning Mrs Beckham began as early as 1994, when she enlisted as a member of the band, henceforth known as the Pop Geniuses, the Spice Girls. During these early days of her meteoric and wholly deserved rise to fame, her enigmatic smile and aspects of her reserved personality led certain sections of The Media to mislabel her grace and natural reserve, referring to her, with clumsy affection, as “Posh”.
This was not, of course, intended to signal standoffishness or lack of charm; in fact, the intention was to convey respect and deference. However, last week it was found that elements among the less-educated reaches of the reading public may have misunderstood this complex frame of reference, believing the appellation to be a joke, a nickname or a form of sport. We would like to insist that this was not the case.
Over the years that followed other aspects of our, The Media’s, unfettered enthusiasm for Mrs Beckham, her career and her place in the national culture have been equally inelegantly expressed. For instance when, in 2000, some of the younger and less experienced members of ourselves, The Media, began to refer to her admiringly as Skeletal Spice, there were those among the public who assumed this to be a sign of disapproval or disrespect, we have been informed. Naturally we can rebut this inference wholeheartedly. Likewise, any reference, circa 2004, to a Ms Loos or persons of a similar nature was either the product of the writer’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to any persons (living or dead), events or locales was entirely coincidental.
Nor, we are pleased to clarify, is this investigation, our apology or any of the events heretofore pertaining, timed to reflect or in any way coincide with the reading public’s staunch refusal to hate Mrs Beckham and their insistence on buying her stylish new clothing range. As we are happy to point out, we, The Media, have been keen supporters of Mrs Beckham since day one, and any indications to the contrary have been entirely in the imaginations of you, the reading public. Shame on you. In fact, many of us in The Media have had Pops, or Posh Crops, since even before last week. Though they have never suited us quite as well as Mrs Beckham’s does her.
We are happy to make this clear wholly, entirely and unreservedly, whatever you may think.
Sincerely,
The Media
Link

A pseudo-apology from The Sun

The Sun may have inadvertantly suggested that former England manager Sven Goran Eriksson was a prize twerp in selecting Theo Walcott for the 2006 World Cup squad.
We now accept Mr Eriksson was ahead of his time and correctly recognised his ability. We wholeheartedly apologise.
Link

More here.

Pseudo-apology

We may owe an apology to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. Last month we dubbed it “Whitehall’s answer to Sir Elton John” after it emerged that it had spent £ 46,000 on pot plants in two years. Now we learn that staff at the Department for Children, Schools and Families spent £ 78,000 on pot plants in a single year. The crown, thus, is theirs.

More here.

A pseudo-apology

Guardian_2From a football (soccer) column in The Guardian:

This
column might have given the erroneous impression that it does not
revere the legendary football manager, Sven Goran-Eriksson. The
Guardian wishes to apologise to Mr Eriksson for any distress caused,
and is happy to clarify that he is the manager of the season 2007-08,
the only coach to have done the double with three clubs in three
countries, the modern master tactician and Sweden’s greatest babe
magnet, bar none.

Svennis, I’m so, so, so, so, so
sorry. I shouldn’t have compared you to Death in The Seventh Seal,
shouldn’t have called you frigid, lily-livered and deluded, or harked
on about your Cuban heels, or made gratuitous references to your
Zeus-like libido, or been catty about the sweet dream that you were
managing Manchester United, or questioned your ingenious scouting on
YouTube. I was foolish, Svennis, an ignoramus. Glib. Just a stupid
football fan wantonly giving you sticks.

My
colleagues advised me to wait at least three games before apologising.
But that would be wrong. One game in, and you already have my heart. I
have not been so exhilarated since Dennis Tueart scored with overhead
kicks in three successive games and Colin Bell streaked on to the pitch
at half-time singing If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body (Would You Hold
it Against Me).

Sven is playing fantasy football.
In two weeks he has bought the ingredients for a divine footballing
cake and baked it to holy perfection…

A pseudo apology from The Sun

Sun_ukA correction from Victoria Newton, who writes the Bizarre column for the paper:

EARLIER
this week I reported that Noel Gallagher was spotted drinking mineral
water at an Arsenal v Man City match. A reader rang to say Noel was
being sensible, supping water all night. I would like to make it clear
that Noel was, in fact, right on it with pals Mike Pickering, Phil
Smith and Manc character Scully.

I apologise for any damage to his reputation as Bizarre Caner Of The Year. Link

Return of the British pseudo-apology

Timesuk_19
More here.

David Graveney says critics of the England coach should now write to say sorry.Simon Barnes tries very, very hard indeed…
I
am indebted to David Graveney, your chairman of selectors, for
suggesting that I write you a letter of apology. He says that such
things never happen in the media; it is important for us all here at
The Times to show how wrong he is.

I have,
indeed, said some harsh things about you and about the England team you
coached during the trip to Australia. I have, for example, said that
England’s record in one-day cricket under your stewardship was woeful
and was likely only to get worse.

You have
proved me wrong in a delightfully unexpected way. England have won four
one-day matches on the trot, beating Australia, the world champions,
three times in succession. As a result, England won the Commonwealth
Bank Series, one of the most ancient and prestigious competitions in
world sport. Your team have a trophy and an infinitely bigger and more
imposing one than the Ashes urn.

A nation
rejoices and, as Mr Graveney implies, I am forced to change my views on
what went before. All of us who criticised you and your team must now
ask ourselves: "Does it really matter that England were beaten 5-0 in
the Test series? Does it really matter that the Ashes were surrendered?
Does it really matter that this was England’s worst showing in a Test
series in Australia since 1921?"

I think
the implication of Mr Graveney’s epistolary demand is that I -and
others who have criticised you and your team -should admit that we were
wrong and eat a fair amount of humble pie.

For
example, I was of the view that Monty Panesar should play in the first
Test. I believed that picking Ashley Giles sent the message to the
Australians that England were running scared. I also believed that
failing to pick Panesar for the second Test was piling folly on folly.

I
also believed that England went into the Test series underprepared,
that in bending over backwards to keep the players happy, you failed to
mount a significant challenge for the Ashes. But I have to confess that
I was wrong on all these counts. I now see that England’s 5-0 defeat
was one of those flukes that occasionally happen to brilliant teams who
are perfectly prepared. The fact that they happen more often to
ill-selected and poorly prepared teams is irrelevant.

The
fact that the undercooked Stephen Harmison sent the first ball of the
series straight to second slip must also be overlooked, even if it did
set the tone for the series.

I have also
been slow to admit that Giles took three wickets for 262 runs in his
two matches. I have been too eager to point out that Giles dropped
Ricky Ponting on 35 in the second Test; it was merely a coincidence
that Ponting went on to make 142 and England suffered their most
traumatic defeat in cricket history. I now see that the fact that
Panesar took eight wickets in the third Test only vindicates your
decision in holding him back for Perth.

I admit that I felt that England losing the Ashes series 5-0 was a poor result.
But
now, thanks to Mr Graveney, I realise that I attached too much
importance to the competition. The fact that the Ashes lit up the
entire country in the glorious summer of 2005 had gone to my head;
likewise, the fact that the Ashes 2006-07 was the most eagerly awaited
Test series in history.

I should be able
to laugh off such a thing. Sure, the 5-0 defeat was disappointing, but
it paved the way to victory in the Commonwealth Bank Series, didn’t it?
What more could anyone want? And if England go on and win the World Cup
that starts next month, won’t that make it all worthwhile? Won’t it be
the culmination of a masterplan?

I have
suggested, Duncan, that you took England to the most humiliating Test
series in Australia for 86 years, that you took a punt on damaged
players being fit and lost, that you failed to pick a proven
match-winning spinner, preferring a decent trier who can bat a bit,
that you picked a wicketkeeper for his batting even though his batting
had gone, that you took a team woefully short of preparation and so
made a gift of the first Test, from which your side never recovered.

I
apologise for having said all these things. I apologise from the bottom
of my heart -because you brought us the Commonwealth Bank Series trophy.

England’s
tour to Australia was a triumph! Anyone who denies this is a fool! And
I, fool that I was, had the temerity, the blindness and the
impertinence to criticise your handling of a Test team, merely because
they lost the Ashes series 5-0 in such a humiliating fashion. Can I
ever apologise enough?

Yours in sport, Simon
Link

Crunks ’06: The Year in Media Errors and Corrections

Written and Compiled by Craig Silverman

Gather ’round for our annual collection of the funny, shocking, sad and disturbing media errors and corrections from the past year. From typos that celebrate Queen Elizabeth and her remarkable egg-laying abilities, to media hoaxes, unreliable sources, the Sago disaster and apologies for mistakes nearly 120 years ago, it was a good year for Regret. Though not a banner one for our media brethren.
We dubbed 2005 the Year of Consequences. This latest was the Year of the Belated Apology. Read on for the details and, in our vernacular, The Crunks.
We would also like to present an Award of Demerit to the Sun newspaper in the U.K. This site simply wouldn’t be possible without you. (See below.)
Thanks for visiting, for sending in corrections, and for all those who link to Regret.

The Crunks ’06

Remarkable Trend of the Year: Belated Apologies
If you subscribe to the oft-ridiculed journalistic notion that three of anything officially constitutes a trend, then this was indeed the Year of the Belated Apology. We trace its popularity back to 2004’s Correction of the Year from the Lexington-Herald-Leader:

It has come to the editor’s attention that the Herald-Leader neglected to cover the civil rights movement. We regret the omission.

At the time, we called it, “Simple, elegant, brave. Better late than never.”
It appears as though some newspapers took the example to heart. Three U.S. publications ran long delayed corrections/apologies this year with the longest coming almost 120 years after the fact. Like the Herald-Leader’s offering, they dealt with issues of racism in the papers’ past.
In May, the Tallahassee Democrat ran a special section about the 1956 Tallahassee bus boycott. Included in the package was an article headlined, “Fifty years in coming: Our apology.” It read, in part:

…Leaders in that journey toward equality should have been able to expect support in ending segregation from the local daily newspaper, the Tallahassee Democrat. They could not. We not only did not lend a hand, we openly opposed integration, siding firmly with the segregationists.
It is inconceivable that a newspaper, an institution that exists freely only because of the Bill of Rights, could be so wrong on civil rights. But we were.
While the Democrat today is a far different organization from what it was 50 years ago, we have never formally apologized for our actions. Nothing will change history, certainly not a few words. But words are a powerful tool and can have a lasting and healing impact…

Then, in November, the Raleigh News & Observer and Charlotte Observer produced special reporting packages about race riots that erupted in 1898. Both papers ran editorials that apologized for their part in the awful events of that year. From the Charlotte Observer’s apology:

An apology is inadequate to atone for the Observer’s role in promoting the white supremacist campaign. But an apology is due. As Mr. Faulkner observed, the past is not dead. For much of the 20th century black citizens were denied political rights, adequate education and economic opportunity because of their race. The legacy of that era helped shape North Carolina for decades. Only in recent years has our state begun to reap the benefits of talented blacks’ full participation in its economic, cultural and political life.
We apologize to the black citizens and their descendants whose rights and interests we disregarded, and to all North Carolinians, whose trust we betrayed by our failure to fairly report the news and to stand firmly against injustice.

A powerful reminder that our present actions – and inaction – could be creating the apologies of the future.

Correction of the Year
We have to admit it was a tough choice this year. Last year’s winner was a classic example of a typo gone horribly wrong. This year, we are going to recognize a correction that won largely on the strength of one part of one sentence: “…no revellers dived into bedrooms in search of drunken romps…” Okaaay. It makes reading the offending article all the more necessary. And because it’s from the Sun (U.K.), you know you’re in for something outrageous. Not that we seek to celebrate this kind of totally false reporting. In fact, we give this award in an effort to give media everywhere pause the next time they hear about a scandalous birthday party involving teenage guests passing out, vomiting and diving into bedrooms in search of drunken romps. Heck, we’ve all taken that call before.
From the Sun (U.K.):

Following our article on Princess Eugenie’s birthday celebrations, we have been asked to point out the party was closely monitored by adults throughout and while a small amount of mess was cleared away at the end of the evening, there was no damage to furniture, no revellers dived into bedrooms in search of drunken romps and to describe the house as being trashed was incorrect. We are happy to make this clear and regret any distress our report caused. Link

An excerpt from the offending story:

ASTONISHED witnesses told last night how Princess Eugenie’s 16th birthday party descended into a drunken rave – with teenage guests snogging, boozing and being sick.
Fifty youngsters had flocked to the Hooray Henry bash at the Duchess of York’s Pounds 10 million mansion.
But rather than sitting down to a meal prepared by caterers, some began knocking back champagne, spirits and strong lager they had secretly smuggled in – and quickly became legless.
…The witness told how randy guests dived into BEDROOMS in search of drunken romps.
Others PASSED out because they were so drunk, while several VOMITED inside the property.
And rooms were TRASHED, with carpets stained and cigarettes stubbed out on furniture as the March 18 party continued into the early hours, to the strains of a blaring disco.

Runner Up
From the Wilmington, Delaware News Journal:

An article in Sunday’s Local section on the estate sale of former Gov. Elbert Carvel quoted Olin Vanaman of Wilmington about his excitement in purchasing 35 of the governor’s decanters during the auction, including one used at Queen Elizabeth’s coronation. Vanaman said he used a slang term when describing Carvel as “a big boozer,” but he did not mean that the former governor was a heavy drinker. Vanaman refers to people who collect decanters as “boozers,” he explained, “the same as guys who collect cars are gear-heads.” No reference to drinking or the consumption of alcohol was intended in the article. Link

Other Favorites
From the Chicago Tribune:

An editorial in Friday’s paper incorrectly stated that Florida Cresswell, a candidate for state representative in the 28th District, was convicted in 1999 of battery and stealing Tupperware. In fact he was convicted of stealing a battery from a van as well as Tupperware that was inside the van. Link

From The New York Times:

A film review on Wednesday about “Little Miss Sunshine” referred incorrectly to contestants in the fictional children’s beauty pageant of the title. The critic intended to compare the contestants to underage prostitutes, not to “underage fleshpots.” Link

From The Oregonian:

A headline on Page One on Saturday should have made clear that Oregon Health & Science University will be studying the effects of meth, not cooking it. Link

The headline in question? “State’s latest meth cook: OHSU”

From the Los Angeles Times:

A listing in Sunday Calendar said hot dogs would not be allowed at the Scandinavian Autumn Fest and Marknad on Sept. 17 at Vasa Park in Agoura. No canines will be allowed at the event. Link

Apology of the Year
From (who else?) the Sun (U.K.):

On 13 February we published an article headed “Who bum it?” reporting that two Premiership footballers and a music industry figure had a “gay romp” in which a mobile phone was used as a “gay sex toy”. On 16 February we published a picture of Mr Cole and his fiancee headed ‘Ashley’s got a good taste in rings’.
Some readers have understood that Mr Cole was one of the two Premiership players involved in the gay sex and that Choice FM DJ, Masterstepz, was the music industry figure.
We are happy to make clear that Mr Cole and Masterstepz were not involved in any such activities. We apologise to them for any distress caused and we are paying them each a sum by way of damages. The Sun wishes Ashley all the best for next Saturday’s World Cup quarter-final.
Link

Runner Up
From the Mirror (U.K.)

Following the publication of an interview with Glenda Gilson on 11 September 2006, Ms Gilson contacted us to state that the words published on the front page: ‘I haven’t had sex for four months’ were not words used by her.
While we accept that these precise words were not used by Ms Gilson we believe that they conveyed the sense of what was said in part of the article published on pages eight and nine to which the readers’ attention was expressly drawn.
We acknowledge that Glenda Gilson was offended by the words in question and we wish to express our regret for any offence caused to her and her family.
Link

One More
From the Sun (U.K.):

AN item on 2 August last year “Telly Teri’s Romps in Van” stated that actress Teri Hatcher had sex romps in her VW camper van at her home.
Although published in good faith, we now accept that the article was totally incorrect and we apologise to Ms Hatcher for the embarrassment caused.
Link

Error of the Year: We Have a Tie
Winner the First: In mid May, Canada’s National Post thought it had a huge scoop thanks to information from an Iranian writer, namely that a recently-passed law in Iran could require non-Muslims to wear special identification badges on their clothing.
The paper splashed the story, “Iran Eyes Badges For Jews,” across six columns on its May 19 front page and capped it off with a huge photo of Hungarian Jews sporting yellow stars during WWII. The story was wrong, totally wrong.
The Post ran an article detailing some of the questions about the story the next day, but it had already been picked up in North America, Europe and beyond. Then, finally, on May 24 the paper ran a Page 2 note from its editor headlined, “Our mistake: Note to readers.” It read, in part:

…We acknowledge that on this story, we did not exercise sufficient caution and skepticism, and we did not check with enough sources. We should have pushed the sources we did have for more corroboration of the information they were giving us. That is not to say that we ignored basic journalistic practices or that we rushed this story into print with no thought as to the consequences. But given the seriousness of the allegations, more was required. Background

Winner the Second: The tale is well known, so we’ll offer one word: Sago. We considered demoting this error to second place, due in large part to the culpability of the mining company. As news of “12 Alive!” spread over the wire and airwaves, the company kept silent and didn’t do its part to reveal the correct information. The media, of course, deserves its fair share of blame for turning rumor into fact, but the company had the means to temper the story right away and instead remained silent. So a pox on both houses. Sago will live on as a tragic event made all the more tragic by incorrect reports that spread the world over. That’s a rare phenomenon, so it also earns Error of the Year honors. Background

Read More »

Love those pseudo-apologies

Sun_uk_9
The Wombles:An apology
MR
ORI NOCO of Wimbledon has contacted us to say he was deeply distressed
to be compared to an England cricketer in yesterday’s Sun.
We
are happy to point out that his cricketing abilities are much better
than any current member of the England team and we apologise for any
distress this may have caused.
If any other Wombles feel upset we also apologise to them.

The Sun (UK) returns with another pseudo-apology

RECENT articles in this column may have given the impression that Mr Sven Goran Eriksson was a greedy, useless, incompetent fool. This was a misunderstanding. Mr Eriksson is in fact a footballing genius. We are
happy to make this clear.

See a previous Sun one here and this from another tabloid.