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MADDIE WATCH - Anorak’s at-a-glance guide to press coverage of Madeleine McCann Kate McCann and Gerry McCann - a few words on apologies:
A WORD on newspaper apologies in the University of Virginia’s Cavalier Daily – oh the irony – featuring Our Maddie as the ultimate newspaper apology.
Christopher Hitchens has said that the purpose of putting corrections in a newspaper is not really to correct what the paper got wrong. It’s to point out that everything else in the paper was right.
Tim Thornton goes on to talk of corrections and clarifications. And then introduces Craig Silverman who writes the excellent book Regret the Error.
Dave Berry got Silverman’s correction of the year award for this gem:
In yesterday’s column about badminton I misspelled the name of Guatemalan pla
Silverman was much less amused by this front page correction in a United Kingdom newspaper:
The Daily Express has taken the unprecedented step of making a front-page apology to Kate and Gerry McCann.
We did so because we accept that a number of articles in the newspaper have suggested that the couple caused the death of their missing daughter Madeleine and then covered it up.
We acknowledge that there is no evidence whatsoever to support this theory and that Kate and Gerry are completely innocent of any involvement in their daughter’s disappearance.
We trust that the suspicion that has clouded their lives for many months will soon be lifted.
As an ex
Kate and Gerry we are truly sorry to have added to your distress.
We assure you that we hope Madeleine will one day be found alive and well and will be restored to her loving family.
Anorak broke that story.
The apology was not only an error being corrected - that was a reaction in line with a court ruling in which the Express and its sister papers the Daily Star Star on Sunday and Sunday Express “donated” (their word) £550000 to the Madeleine Fund for libelling the missing child’s parents.
Thornton concludes:
When we were children we may have believed that grown ups were omniscient and infallible. Now that we’re grown ups we know that’s not true. So it shouldn’t come as a shock that a newspaper’s staff is neither omniscient nor infallible. As readers when we see an error we should point it out so it can be corrected. That’s fair. And fairness is more than grown-ups can reasonably expect from most things in life.
Fairness in the British press? Anyone else laughing?
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