Thursday, April 28, 2011

Chapter 13, May 5th

     Richard Nixon’s Watergate scandal was known as one of the most wide spread political corruptions revealed in American history. Only new reporters and courageous newspapers covered the piece about this shocking abuse of power.
     The section More than a Third-Rate Burglary goes into depth on how being the president in a scandal was unheard of, and the Watergate scandal that had burglary and theft stories circling was too much for the White House. Flushing Out the Evidence was about Woodward and Bernstein who got there first break by exposing the address books in the case. Pushing the Limits of Investigative Reporting was about the young reporters teaming up and becoming a force of journalism. This case would have a lot of new coming journalists making their mark in the industry. The section Standing Firm was about the dates of June 1972 to 1973, the workers and journalists on the Watergate situation, and how the 15th Street in Washington, D.C. is where the committed journalism took place. The White House Collapses is fairly simple in the way that it talks about Nixon being accused of destroying the evidence of his knowledge of the criminals breaking in.
     The last section was titled Reporters as All-American Heroes because there were many journalists like Woodstein who were built on this case because they brought the information to the public. If I had lived in this era, I would also want the information that they, along with a lot of other reporters brought.


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Friday, April 15, 2011

Chapter 6, April 26th

During the late Nineteenth century, the economy started to expand a large amount of business. The energy that America was showing was one that had never been seen before. The country had also been establishing the founding fathers and laissez-faire policies had been adopted.

The section about attacking municipal corruption spoke about how Lincoln Steffens was the first muckraker and his career writing at the New York Evening Post covering and muckraking Wall Street and the politics in New York. In the section Busting the Trusts, Ida Tarbell's history of him being surrounded by derricks, tanks, and pipelines. She created the series "History of the Standard Oil Company." Tarbell has been called the queen of muckraking by the public. Awakening the Public to Dangerous Foods and Drugs was an in-depth look at the journalistic approach at presenting the public with the information of drug and really health awareness in general. The power that the press had was finally being combined with new information about dangerous issues. Exposing "Treason" in the U.S. Senate was a section that spoke about the earlier years of the twentieth century and how the upper house Congress was widely known as the body of America to take action and actually have major reactions. Lastly, Muckraking: An Unparalleled Legacy raps up the chapter with a section that speaks about the era of muckraking.

I think that Muckraking was a necessary form of journalism at the time. The public needed to know what was really going on in their own states and was interested to know the opinions of the writers and the journalists were happy to do that. If I lived in that era, I would probably want to see more muckraking going on because it was a more raw interesting form of news at that time.