When video misleads: How editing and visual tone shape the story #factstell

CGTN CGTN — 4min

In journalism, video evidence is often treated as the strongest form of proof.

But that is also what makes it so powerful when it misleads.

In this episode of Facts Tell, we examine how subtle editorial choices can reshape what audiences believe they are seeing.

From the disputed editing of Donald Trump's remarks in a BBC Panorama documentary to the contrasting visual treatment of Wuhan in different language versions of a BBC film, we break down how sequencing, context and color grading can influence perception in ways many viewers may not notice.

Watch the full episode, share your thoughts in the comments, and follow CGTN for more analysis on how information is shaped before it reaches the public.

00:00 - Intro: The illusion of video proof
00:30 - Case 1: Trump's $5B lawsuit vs.

BBC
01:20 - Stitched footage: What Trump really said
01:59 - Case 2: Hollywood's biased "yellow filter"
02:39 - BBC's Wuhan documentary: Dual-color bias
03:08 - Technical excuse vs. visual reality
03:43 - Outro: Don't always trust what you see

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