Some of the recent work in the field of media discourse
has been concerned with various levels in the organization
and structure of audience participation programs on radio
and television; other approaches to the analysis of talk
in these settings have focused on the interactional frameworks
at play in the talk. The aim of this article is to develop
the interactional approach by looking at the production
of narratives in a mediated context: specifically, the
production of a story from two different, and conflicting,
points of view. The stories I analyze occur within two
different program genres (talk show and television court)
where lay members of the public are often called upon to
produce accounts of events which are then contested by
another participant. This article discusses the significance
of tense shifting in these second versions, from narrative
past to conversational historic present, in the public
construction of believable alternative stories.