![]() |
Sunday Times got Bono-'Shoot the Boer' story rightOh, how we love to bash the Sunday Times - especially those of us who use to work for her. It is one of the biggest and loudest voices in our media landscape so its corporate culture can be arrogant and its journalists are given to bragging. When it gets it right with big exposés, it is influential. When it gets it wrong, the detractors dive in with thinly disguised glee. And so we have had the bizarre Bono-"Shoot the Boer" saga over the past two weeks, complete with Afrikaans singer Steve Hofmeyr dumping his U2 concert tickets into the Jukskei River. Many U2 fans and media luvvies got in a frothy about the Sunday Times apparently misrepresenting the Irish pop star's comments to Sunday Times journalist Buddy Naidu on questions he asked about struggle songs and the controversy over ANC Youth League Julius Malema singing "Shoot the Boer." (If you've been in a cave recently and haven't followed the soap opera, click here to read The Daily Maverick's account of it. I would recommend you also read the comments thread in which the article's author and Sunday Times editor have a bit of a go at each other.) Not being either a Bono or Hofmeyr fan nor personally offended by "Shoot the Boer" (I have sung it myself at student marches in times past), I wrote it off as a storm in a teacup - which, incidentally, is what Sunday Times editor Ray Hartley told The Daily Maverick. If the Sunday Times did mislead anyone, I reckoned, it was unlikely to be intentional or malicious - and more likely to be in error. And, quite frankly, Bono the Billionaire is big enough to fight his own battles. Rather extraordinary step But that was until the Sunday Times took the rather extraordinary step this last Sunday of running an article by Naidu, giving a lengthy account of his interview with Bono - all recorded on a dictaphone as Sunday Times reporters are required to do. (Click here to listen to what Bono said.) So not a storm in a tea cup then - not to the Sunday Times by the end of last week. Naidu's piece made for interesting reading - not because he proffered an opinion, though he was a tad smirky about Bono (then again, I am, too), but because it was a straight account of the "interview" that involved all the band members and four other journalists besides Naidu and a brief one-on-one afterwards between Bono and Naidu. Having read this article - and it is taken from Naidu's dictaphone recordings so there is no reason to doubt its veracity - my reading of the situation is that these were good questions for Naidu to ask. Further, it is clear that Bono was aware of both the "Shoot the Boer" controversy and Malema, and that he said there was a place for struggle songs but, sung at inappropriate times and places, they were obviously offensive. First two paragraphs Go back to the original Sunday Times piece, and the headline is: "Struggle songs have a place - U2" while the first two paragraphs of the story say: Julius Malema may have found an unlikely ally in U2 frontman Bono who, on Friday, waded into the debate over the singing of the controversial Shoot The Boer song. Well, blow me down for weighing in on the side of the evil Sunday Slimes but this all seems correct. The paper got it right and played it straight: Bono said struggle songs were kosher when used appropriately and his comment was indeed in the context of his knowing about the "Shoot the Boer" Constitutional Court case and of Malema. Some ambiguity in poster There may be some ambiguity in the "Bono guides Juju" poster as it could imply that the two men had met. But then the choice of the word "guides" is also not inaccurate as it says Bono gave advice or his opinion - which is what he did, otherwise he could have told Naidu: "I'd really rather not comment on that". The demands of space dictate that street posters use a bold shorthand and, by comparison, had the Sunday Times poster declared: "Bono backs Juju", that would certainly have been pushing it. So how did this become a voracious media feedback loop in which the Sunday Times was the villain? Well, an inaccurate Times Live headline on a wire story from SAPA proclaiming "Bono backs Malema's 'Shoot the Boer' song"on the Monday following the original Sunday Times article had a lot to do with it. It seems the international press picked this up and, on the same day, The Daily Maverick interviewed music journalists at the U2 interview with Naidu, who accused the Sunday Times of distortion based especially on the TimesLive headline. Bono didn't really help matters when he told Talk Radio 702 that he was "puzzled" by the furore, that he didn't give unequivocal support to singing struggle songs and that there was a place for them. Culprit was Times Live So, once again the original Sunday Times article and headlines and poster were correct. The culprit then was that Times Live headline, now long gone as Hartley told The Daily Maverick that it was changed because it was over the top. In her interchanges with Hartley, The Daily Maverick journalist Mandy de Waal makes something of the fact that she has a screen grab of the original Times Live headline but this is neither here nor there. Hartley - whom we must remember does not oversee Times Live, which is a separate Avusa division to the Sunday Times - said it was wrong and that it had been changed. I think there are three interesting little wakeup calls here:
Shrill voices feed off each other The comments thread on The Daily Maverick article is so interesting because it shows how shrill voices feed off each other and up the tempo even more. Only one commentator that I could see - "Malome Tom" - stood apart from the crowd and asked: So what's being said here? that bono couldn't have possibly said what he was QUOTED as saying? that there's a disconnect between headline and body of article? For more:
About Gill Moodie: @grubstreetSAGill Moodie (@grubstreetSA) is a freelance journalist, media commentator and the publisher of Grubstreet (www.grubstreet.co.za). She worked in the print industry in South Africa for titles such as the Sunday Times and Business Day, and in the UK for Guinness Publishing, before striking out on her own. Email Gill at gill@grubstreet.co.za and follow her on Twitter at @grubstreetSA. View my profile and articles... |