The power of the uncrowned king

Rebeka 2021-12-08 08:01:45

As mentioned on the first floor, it is simply a textbook for journalists.

What impressed me the most was that

every time there was an outburst, the editor-in-chief asked reporters to verify, verify, and re-verify. After being affirmed, even if the big risks were daring to be exposed.

In order to verify a certain news source, reporters do everything without violating the law. You can call directly to the White House, and in the middle of the night to the hotel where the former attorney general stayed. Just because-they are reporters!

Every day in the editorial department, the bridge section of the forum makes people feel what is the real uncrowned king!

Judging from this film, China has at least 30 years left

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Extended Reading
  • Dillan 2022-04-21 09:02:07

    I didn't even read the second half of the paragraph without Chinese subtitles. Anyway, the amount of information obtained from Chinese characters and English characters is about the same. The characters I've seen about "Watergate" are almost absent here...Nixon has a lot of appearances, but it's real and on TV, and it's a good contrast to the actor's part. Because it is investigating the "Watergate" incident, the Americans feel especially inspiring, right?

  • Velva 2022-03-22 09:01:49

    It's a credit to the screenwriters for bringing political scandals to life in film noir. Screenwriter William Goldman won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay of the year. "The President's Team" does not use visual images to depict corruption and power struggles, it just graphically reveals the relationship between power and corruption.

All the President's Men quotes

  • Clark MacGregor: I don't know. You're implying that I should know. If you print that, our relationship will be terminated.

    Bob Woodward: Sir, we don't have a relationship!

  • [Asking for background information about Howard Hunt]

    Bob Woodward: It's just profile information, mostly. We know, for example, that he works for Mullen and Company, or did work for Mullen and Company, as a writer. He's also a novelist; we know that he works in the office of Charles Colson at the White House...

    Bennett: ...and the CIA.

    Bob Woodward: And the CIA.

    Bennett: Well, if you're conducting that kind of investigation, certainly it comes as no surprise to you that Howard was with the CIA.

    Bob Woodward: No, no surprise at all.