Wednesday 26 January 2011

A Disinformation Age?

Those of us who are fans of Silent Witness had a pretty traumatic beginning to the week. This week's show, which broadcasts its two-hour drama in two hour-long parts, one on Monday and one on Tuesday, included some truly traumatic stuff: those of us who watched on Monday night saw one of the three main characters, Dr Harry Cunningham, seemingly brutally executed, doused with petrol and then set on fire. It was very realistic - so much that someone naive like me was totally convinced, and even began to mourn poor Harry, my favourite character.

What has this got to do with the subject of this blog, and why have I called it 'the disinformation age'? Well, being a bit of a geek, my laptop was sitting on my coffee table as I watched the programme, and as the titles rolled at the end of the show, I found myself immediately looking on the web to try to find out what would happen next - being naive, it still hadn't occurred to me that Harry wasn't actually dead. I was wondering whether they were going to replace him, or whether this was going to be the end of the show, or something else dramatic. I couldn't find much directly, so I checked on the fount of all wisdom, Wikipedia. There wasn't much there, but there was a list of the main characters, and how long they had been in the show. Of the three main actors, William Gaminara was listed as being in the show '2002-present', Emilia Fox as '2004-present', and Tom Ward, who plays Harry, was listed as '2002-2011'. That last fact confirmed, it seemed, that Harry was dead, gone from the show....

Of course the BBC had done the usual kind of tricks to hide the fact that Harry wasn't actually dead - he didn't appear in the trailer for the second part, and the actor's name was conspicuous by its absence from the opening titles, so it was a solid shock when he did reappear, some time into Tuesday's episodes - and added to the fact that the previous episode had been full of flashbacks and dream sequences, it took some time to realise what was actually going on. That, however, is just ordinary broadcasting, and nothing that out of the ordinary. At the end of the episode, rejoicing at Harry's return, I went back to Wikipedia - and already the page had mysteriously changed, listing Tom Ward as '2002-present'....

So what was going on? Why do I call it the 'disinformation age'? Well, of course I don't know who edited the Wikipedia page - but if it was anyone connected to the BBC, I'm impressed. They had thought through how to really convince people that the character was dead, had understood what people like me were likely to do, and set out to create a perfect illusion - to supply the disinformation needed to complete that illusion. On me, it worked - though I know very well I'm naive in a lot of ways, and actually like to be convinced by this kind of thing - but there is a somewhat more sinister side to this. If illusions like this can be created for artistic reasons, aren't they equally likely to be created for other, less palatable purposes? And then what do we trust? 'Official' information? 'Trusted' sources? A combination of these? Could we be moving to an age where as much effort is put into the creation of false information as is put into the presentation of real information? A disinformation age?

One thing's for sure - I'll be even less trusting than I was before..... and that, in itself, may not be such a good thing. Mind you, I thought the week's Silent Witness was great!