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Zusatztext “Unsettling . . . a valuable and alarming book.” – Los Angeles Times Book Review “Important. . . . Downie and Kaiser offer valuable firsthand insights.” – The New York Times Book Review “A strong contribution. . . . Downie and Kaiser write from inside the tent! and they write from experience. Their views are worth our attention.” – The Miami Herald “Unsettling. . . . The News About the News has a message worth reading.” – St. Louis Post-Dispatch “We needed something persuasively powerful. Here it is. . . . [This book] makes the case that news is essential! that the quality of news has been in decline and that letting it go on declining is not just bad journalism but bad business. I wish I'd written it.” –James M. Naughton! American Journalism Review “Downie and Kaiser are not campus alarmists! but serious men who do not kid around. . . . A thorough piece of reporting in the upright plain-but-honest tradition.” –Russell Baker! The New York Review of Books “A vividly written account of what is indeed American journalism in peril. It will grip anyone who reads a paper regularly and watches television.” – The Times Literary Supplement “Influential. . . . A fascinating inside look.”– The Boston Phoenix “An insightful and penetrating look at how journalism has changed for the better and worse.” – Booklist “Refreshing and educational. . . . Any reader who cares about the quality of information available to the American citizenry is bound to learn something new! and probably unforgettable! from this insiders’ account.” – BookPage “An insightful and authoritative look at how corporate financial demands have consistently eroded newsroom budgets with a corresponding cutback in the coverage of the news.” – The Sacramento Bee “Brief yet meaningful. . . . An important! up-to-date study that should be required reading for . . . serious consumers of the news.” – Publishers Weekly Informationen zum Autor Leonard Downie Jr. and Robert G. Kaiser Klappentext Freedom of the press is a primary American value. Good journalism builds communities, arms citizens with important information, and serves as a public watchdog for civic, national, and global issues. But what happens when the news turns its back on its public role? Leonard Downie Jr., executive editor of The Washington Post , and Robert G. Kaiser, associate editor and senior correspondent, report on a growing crisis in American journalism. From the corporatization that leads media moguls to slash content for profit, to newsrooms that ignore global crises to report on personal entertainment, these veteran journalists chronicle an erosion of independent, relevant journalism. In the process, they make clear why incorruptible reporting is crucial to American society. Rooted in interviews and first-hand accounts, the authors take us inside the politically charged world of one of America's powerful institutions, the media.Chapter One News Matters The story is a legend now, but it really did happen. Early in the morning of June 17, 1972, inside the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in Washington's Watergate office building, police arrested five men wearing business suits and rubber surgical gloves and carrying cameras and sophisticated bugging devices. The Washington Post assigned a longhaired newsroom roustabout named Carl Bernstein and one of the paper's newest reporters, Bob Woodward, to report the story. Over the next two years they unraveled a tangled conspiracy of political spying and dirty tricks, wiretaps, break-ins, secret funds and a criminal cover-up–all orchestrated by President Richard Nixon's White House. For a long time the Post was the only news organization to take Watergate seriously. The Washington e...