We have not been afforded the opportunity to
view the full program, but the promotional
trailer and published media reviews suggest that
what has been produced is as biased a production
as we have seen in some time. It is unfortunate
that the producers of this television program
appear to have has fallen into the trap of
distorting facts, relying on claims rejected by
courts of law, breathlessly rehashing as “news”
stories that have been covered exhaustively in
the past and relying on anonymous sources who
appear intent only on harming The Boeing
Company.
When first contacted by the producers, we
accommodated them in order for them to produce a
fair and objective report including facilitating
factory access, interviews and providing full
and open responses to their questions. The 787
is an outstanding airplane delivering value to
our customers, but we have also talked candidly
in public about its challenging development
process. There are no tougher critics about our
early performance than Boeing. Unfortunately,
the reporting team appears to have chosen to
take advantage of our trust and openness and
abused their position from the outset by
deliberately misrepresenting the purpose,
objective and scope of their planned coverage.
This specious production appears to have ignored
the factual information provided by Boeing and
instead based the majority of its reporting on
unnamed sources pursuing their own agendas and a
disgruntled former employee engaged in a legal
dispute with Boeing. In one instance, the
producers resorted to ambush tactics normally
seen only in tabloid-style TV news. The
anonymous sources the TV program depends on are
clearly working with those who seek to harm
Boeing and its workers. They appear to have no
real interest in truth, safety or better
informing the public.
Even on-the-record sources seem to have changed
their stories for the producers. For example,
former Society of Professional Engineering
Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA) President Cynthia
Cole said this about the 787’s first flight in
2009: “Today’s flight is a testament to the
skill, hard work and diligence Boeing employees
put in to get this airplane ready to fly,” SPEEA
President Cynthia Cole said in a news release.
“Boeing returned to engineering, and that’s what
made today possible and successful.” Now, she
states in the documentary trailer that Boeing
“shortchanged the engineering process.”
Instead of an objective view of the 787’s
development, viewers and our employees will see
a television program that is neither balanced
nor accurate in its portrayal of the airplane,
our employees, or our suppliers. This program
and those involved with it do a disservice to
the hard-working men and women of Boeing and our
supplier partners who designed and build the
787.
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