PART ONE

PART TWO

N E W S   W A R  -  P A R T   THREE

SIXTEEN
A New Definition For What's News

Reporter Lowell Bergman sets out to investigate the changes in gathering and reporting the news.  Even the standard for what's news has shifted.
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SEVENTEEN
Network News: Then and Now

Not long ago a sense of public service, public trust, drove network news -- and news wasn't expected to make money. That changed in the '80s.
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EIGHTEEN
"Info Snacking"

The '60 Minutes'-Yahoo deal: it illustrates how old media is scrambling to keep up with audience's new expectations on how to get  news/entertainment.
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NINETEEN
The New Universe of Online Media

Rocketboom, Daily Kos, Trent Lott, Rathergate - old journalism boundaries are gone.  Today, anyone with a laptop can be a reporter.
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TWENTY
The Revolution's New Synergies

Network news operations now have blogs. Yahoo News now has field reporters.  But news from TV and the Internet still largely depends on newspapers.
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TWENTY-ONE
The Story of the Los Angeles Times

It's a story about American journalism and the turmoil inside newsrooms across the country. What is the financial future of  the newspaper business?
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TWENTY-TWO
The Fight to Save the Paper

Anxiety grows as ad dollars move to the Web, staff cuts continue. The journalists and the Times's owners sharply disagree about  the paper's mission.
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TWENTY-THREE
"Hyperlocalism"

Wall Street says it's the future of newspapers and point to the Washington Post's transformation. But will going more local save the L.A. TImes?
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TWENTY-FOUR
Who Should Own Newspapers?

The L.A. Times is put up for sale. What kind of owners would best carry on its public service mission of good journalism and in-depth reporting?
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TWENTY-FIVE
Endgame at the L.A. Times

The paper's editor and owners just don't see the business the same way. Baquet is fired and the future of this great newspaper remains uncertain.
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