“Media, including television, were helpful during the war, with reporters carrying cameras on the front lines. It was a special moment in the history of journalism, as for the first time it was twenty-four-hour coverage—a live war. CNN, BBC, and other networks did not know how to handle the images of massacre on the streets; at first they only played the sounds without showing the images. Things have changed a lot since then. Nothing is sacred, nothing is shocking anymore. We get to see every possible horrible image, all through the media. But this doesn’t make the world a better place; it does not mean that we are more engaged just because we see more. In a way, just hearing the sound of the massacres created more horror than seeing the beheadings or executions broadcast does nowadays…”