This story got the first few minutes of ABC News' nightly national news broadacast last night (Sunday).
Now, nevermind the fact that there are a few dozen shark attacks per year in the US, and a handful of them are actually fatal, whereas a few hundred people per year drown in US ocean waters with no help whatsoever from sharks.
You might recall (if you're in the US) that the media went crazy in mid-2001 with the "
Summer of the Shark".
So, my question is, what responsibility does the news media have for assessing and informing about levels of risk, versus sensationalist fear-mongering? Where's your line between spending half every broadcast on heart disease and cancer, and spending a lot more than 4.4% of the news on deadly accidents (a third of that being traffic accidents, and then in order falls, choking, drowning, and fires) and 0.7% of the news on homicides? Is the US media perpetuating the "OMG terrorists are trying to blow up an airplane" TSA warnings that result in more airport security procedures/theater?