Sunday, September 10, 2006

 

The ABC 9/11 Docu-Drama Flap

The ABC docu-drama about the 9/11 attack hasn't aired yet, but it is getting lots of attention. The point of discussion is one of the points of major interest to this blog: how free can one be in "improving" history to make it better viewing -- or better reading?

I'm pleased to see that most commentators are almost outraged that ABC's original version has scenes that are absolutely inaccurate. The point these commentators are making is that this story is too important to trivialize by such tampering. Moreover, the scenes subject to criticism depict real people, in a real story -- and these scenes present a picture that is directly contrary to the facts on public record.

David Gurgen, in comments on CNN's Reliable Sources, made a distinction between writing about real people and fictional characters. Writers must, he suggested, be very careful about accuracy when dealing with real people. On the other hand, he suggested, writers have more freedom with fictional characters placed in the midst of real events. This distinction, in my view, is significant.

Gurgen did not, however, address one of the questions writers face: how free can one be in writing about real people when the facts are NOT known? Is one free then to make them up, in an effort to tell a good story, or maybe, to illuminate a real event with well-considered supposition?

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