Daniel Louis Schorr was an American journalist who covered world news for more than 60 years. He was most recently a Senior News Analyst for National Public Radio. Schorr won three Emmy Awards for his television journalism... (wikipedia)
to equate America with reality and truth, and get people overseas to accept that.
I think it's fair to say that the promise of confidentiality is based on the confidence that what you're being told is true, ... You lose right to any confidentiality if you lie. Sources are whistleblowers - they're people who'll tell you the truth to change something.
Sincerity: if you can fake it, you've got it made.
Good journalism is being criminalized or otherwise rendered perilous to its best practitioners. Attack a government agency like the CIA, or a Fortune 500 member ..., or the conduct of the military in Southeast Asia and you find yourself in deep trouble, naked and often alone.
I have no doubt that the nation has suffered more from undue secrecy than from undue disclosure. The government takes good care of itself.
There was a vacuum in investigation, and the press began to try men in the most effective court in the country.
Murrow covered something because it needed coverage. He wasn't trying to get an audience just for the sake of it.
Power corrupts, and there is nothing more corrupting than power exercised in secret.
Speaker Newt Gingrich says that what is wrong with the present system is not that people abuse welfare but that welfare abuses people.
All news is an exaggeration of life.
Whenever I'm not sure about something, the ethics of something, the question I ask myself is, 'What would Murrow have done? What would Murrow say?' It seems strange after all these years that I still have him as a kind of symbol and an emblem to live by, but I do.
I had to fight to keep reality on television, ... Most of the time I lost.
I'm delighted about it myself, because I'm no longer primarily a television person. I love seeing that the people who exercised that absolute control have lost it, thanks to technology.