ABSTRACT
Investigative journalists sometimes resort to the use of fake identities in order to reveal fakes and malpractice, a phenomenon that can be described as revelatory fakery. Acclaimed investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw, in collaboration with BBC Africa Eye, employs revelatory fakery to expose and prosecute wrongdoers in Ghana. From an ethical viewpoint, Anas’s revelatory fakery, a second order fakery, becomes a seedbed for an exponential level of fakery. This article poses the question whether Anas’s work is journalism or instead yet another expression of fakery that allows a prosecutor to act as a journalist. This question is contextualised within the ethics of the broader narratives created by the BBC Africa Eye investigations, which feed and promote a spectacular but “fake” narrative about Africa as a place of negatives, difference, and darkness.
Acknowledgements
Patricia Kingori is funded by a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award (Pseudo Global Health: Fakes, Fabrications and Falsehoods in Global Health grant number 209830/Z/17/Z).
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 US FDA, 1 April 2020.
2 These comments and others can be viewed at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0WDtG7E1tg&lc=UgybZv6-p6uKCv88uXZ4AaABAg.