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Tuesday, February 13, 9-10pm ET
FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman examines the political,
cultural, legal and economic forces challenging the news media
today.
In the four-part special "News War,"FRONTLINE correspondent
Lowell Bergman examines the political, cultural, legal and economic
forces challenging the news media today. Through interviews with
key figures in the print and electronic media over the past four
decades - and with unequaled, behind-the-scenes access to some of
today's most important news organizations - FRONTLINE traces
the recent history of American journalism, from the Nixon
administration's attacks on the media to the post-Watergate
popularity of the press, to the new complexities presented by the
war on terror, the Internet and other global forces now changing -
and challenging - the role of the press in our society.
In part one of "News War: Secrets, Sources & Spin,"FRONTLINE
examines the political and legal forces challenging the mainstream
news media today and how the press has reacted in turn.
Correspondent Lowell Bergman talks to the major players in the
debates over the role of journalism in 2007, examining the
relationship between the Bush administration and the press; the
controversies surrounding the use of anonymous sources in reporting
from Watergate to the present; and the unintended consequences of
the Valerie Plame investigation - a confusing and at times ugly
affair that ultimately damaged both reporters' reputations and the
legal protections they thought they enjoyed under the First
Amendment.
FRONTLINE correspondent Lowell Bergman interviews key figures
in print and electronic press for FRONTLINE's "News
War"series. Watch select interviews at pbs.org/frontline/newswar.