Best Seller
Paperback
$20.00
Published on Jan 14, 1997 | 352 Pages
Why do Americans mistrust the news media? It may be because show like "The McLaughlin Group" reduce participating journalists to so many shouting heads. Or because, increasingly, the profession treats issues as complex as health-care reform and foreign policy as exercises in political gamesmanship. These are just a few of the arguments that have made Breaking the News so controversial and so widely acclaimed. Drawing on his own experience as a National Book Award-winning journalist–and on the gaffes of colleagues from George Will to Cokie Roberts–Fallows shows why the media have not only lost our respect but alienated us from our public life.
"Important and lucid…It moves smartly beyond the usual attacks on sensationalism and bias to the more profound problems in modern American journalism…dead-on."–Newsweek
"Important and lucid…It moves smartly beyond the usual attacks on sensationalism and bias to the more profound problems in modern American journalism…dead-on."–Newsweek
Author
James Fallows
JAMES FALLOWS has been a national correspondent for The Atlantic for more than thirty-five years, reporting from China, Japan, Southeast Asia, Europe, and across the United States. He is the author of eleven previous books. His work has also appeared in many other magazines and as public-radio commentaries since the 1980s. He has won a National Book Award and a National Magazine Award. For two years he was President Jimmy Carter’s chief speechwriter.
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