Ottawa Citizen

‘EXTRAORDIN­ARY PIECE OF WORK’

Vice praised for Charlottes­ville report

- DAVID BAUDER

Many were quite hostile to me. But I did not want to let that show on my face.

For all the words flowing NEW YORK since last weekend in Charlottes­ville, the most striking television reporting has been Vice Media’s insider account of the white supremacis­t movement and what it has wrought.

Correspond­ent Elle Reeve’s initial story of the weekend violence took up the entirety of HBO’s halfhour Vice News Tonight broadcast Monday, and by Thursday had been viewed more than 36 million times on TV and online. Reeve’s expertise from reporting on the intersecti­on of the internet and white supremacy movement over 18 months helped vividly illustrate attitudes and tensions.

In the process she put the alternativ­e nightly newscast, which debuted last Oct. 16, on the map.

“What distinguis­hes us is being on the road and trying to be in the middle of an event as much as we can just to show people what is happening,” said Josh Tyrangiel, executive vice-president of news at Vice. “It felt very much like a moment for us.”

MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace called it “an extraordin­ary piece of work. I encourage everyone to watch the whole thing.”

While Reeve couldn’t have anticipate­d the violence, she expected the event would be significan­t because it would get a large turnout and was bringing together factions that typically have little use for one another.

Vice’s cameras not only captured chants of “Jews will not replace us” during the march, Reeve interviewe­d members of the movement explaining their bigotry. One man, directs anti-Semitic remarks at U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner: “Donald Trump gives his daughter to a Jew,” he complains. Another profanely says that they will “kill these people (Jews and blacks) if we have to.”

In one startling moment, Reeve and a camera person push their way into a van carrying some of the white supremacis­t leaders.

“It’s not enough to say, ‘these people are bad,’ ” Reeve said. “You have to say why they are bad.”

Or, more precisely, show it. The report, which generally avoids narration, takes viewers through the weekend confrontat­ion in the immersive style that characteri­zes Vice’s work. In its coverage of the events surroundin­g Heather Heyer’s death, Vice interviews a man who fruitlessl­y tried to revive her.

Reeve said it was important to let demonstrat­ors know she wasn’t frightened or intimidate­d by them.

“Many were quite hostile to me,” she said. “But I did not want to let that show on my face.”

Reeve was still in Virginia reporting on the story Thursday. She said no one in the white supremacy movement has talked to her about her reporting, and she has no interest in reading what they might be saying about her online.

Her boss, Tyrangiel, said the sources Reeve built paid off this week. She’s paid close attention to the distinctio­ns between the people and ideologies within the movement, he said.

“There aren’t that many people who have taken the time to really examine it,” he said. “She’s able to get more access than most. That said, a lot of what we got last weekend wasn’t as much about access as it was insistence.”

Tyrangiel said he didn’t want anyone to confuse getting to know these activists with liking them.

“One of the things that we were very careful about was that we could not be used,” he said. “We don’t want to be in a position where we’ll helping to get their message across. At the same time, this is a very important story.”

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? White supremacis­t Chris Cantwell was featured in the Vice News coverage of Charlottes­ville protests.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS White supremacis­t Chris Cantwell was featured in the Vice News coverage of Charlottes­ville protests.

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