Wednesday’s attacks in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, in which four former US soldiers were killed in a terrorist ambush before their bodies were dismembered, dragged behind cars and hung from a bridge by an angry mob, created a conundrum for television networks faced with the tough moral question of how to best profit from these shocking images.
“If we show them, we make a shitload of money,” explained ABC News spokesperson Al Reuben. “If we don’t show them, maybe we can claim the moral high ground and make a shitload of money down the line. It’s a tough call.”
Least troubled by the moral quandary was Fox News, whose plans to strap a helmet-cam to one of the dead bodies were scrapped when the angry mob grew impatient waiting for technicians to get a reading on the gray levels.
“Americans have a right to see this footage,” opined Fox News Executive Producer Leonard Williams. “And we have the right to boost our ratings through the fuckin’ roof by being the first to show the really awful parts that make you want to throw up. If anybody out there was blindly discharging a firearm into their Arab neighbor’s house yesterday, you know they were watching hard-hitting Fox News.”
Other networks took the debate more seriously, holding off on showing the footage through the morning, and then gradually releasing more and more of the horrible images throughout the day as it became apparent that Internet sites were kicking their ratings in the balls by showing the Fallujah footage uncut. By Wednesday evening the gloves were off and charred bodies were seen dangling from the Euphrates River bridge on most major networks.
“We really didn’t want to show the footage of those kids beating the guy’s flaming corpse with their shoes,” explained CBS Evening News spokesperson Clint Adams. “But then we realized, ‘Jesus Christ, we’re losing money here!’ I feel truly bad for the families of these men, and any children who may have been forever scarred by these images, but come on. You know how much money we made off that Somalia footage? Shit.”
While the long-term impact of these images is yet to be seen, experts speculate that the American people being reminded that “Oh yeah, war is really ugly and horrible and stuff” can only harm the president’s chances for reelection in November, not to mention driving the final nail into the coffin of Iraqi tourism.
“We owe it to future history to inform the American people of what’s really going on over there,” offered Marcus Graves of ABC News. “Maybe because of this footage being in the collective memory, next time we’ll think twice about going to war again.”
When asked by the commune news if he was shitting us, Graves admitted that yeah, he kind of was, but it sounds a lot better than saying you make your living selling people grisly video death. No argument here.