NEW YORK — A live, online piece of footage of a dying man brought a shocking new immediacy Thursday to the issue that gave birth to the Black Lives Matter movement. ADVERTISING NEW YORK — A live, online piece of
NEW YORK — A live, online piece of footage of a dying man brought a shocking new immediacy Thursday to the issue that gave birth to the Black Lives Matter movement.
The video — posted by a Minnesota woman from inside the car where her boyfriend lay bleeding from police gunfire — was seized on by some as sickening proof of what they have been saying all along: that police are too quick to use deadly force against minorities.
Some viewers found it too painful or voyeuristic to watch, and some of the major TV networks chose to blur the picture.
“We’d never seen anything like this, which is what made the tape all the more remarkable,” said Jim Murphy, vice president for morning programming at CNN, which chose not to obscure the image.
The video out of Fa lcon Heights, Minnesota, spread only hours after the release of footage showing the killing of Alton Sterling, a black man who was shot in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, after being pinned to the pavement by two white officers. Live pictures of Sterling’s son wailing in grief on live TV Wednesday added to the misery.
In the Minnesota shooting, the woman propped up her smartphone, pressed a couple of buttons and instantly was on Facebook live, explaining that her boyfriend, Philando Castile, had been shot by police. She calmly contradicted an agitated officer who was pointing a gun at her through the car window, as a blood-covered Castile moaned beside her. The video continued for 10 minutes.
Except for a technical glitch that prevented the video from being repeated for about an hour Thursday morning, Facebook said it remained available, though with a warning about graphic content. By midafternoon, it had been viewed more than 3.6 million times.
CNN executives remade the network’s “New Day” broadcast on the fly to feature the story Thursday. NBC’s “Today” show, ABC’s “Good Morning America” and “CBS This Morning” used the video, too, but blurred images of the bloodied Castile.
“Unfortunately, people have seen worse,” Murphy said. “The broadcast that she created in that car needed to be seen by the public just as we were looking at it.”