Whether it's long-form journalism or investigative journalism, it's no fun to just be the guy diagnosing the problem.
When I was young, I flirted with the idea of a career in journalism on one hand and politics on the other.
When I was in journalism school, you were taught to be completely objective. But we don't see that anymore.
When I was a freelancer, I thought this journalism thing was a racket, and now that I'm where I am now, I know it's a racket.
What passes for investigative journalism is finding somebody with their pants down - literally or otherwise.
What I learned at journalism school and at ABC - those skills are the same no matter where you are in the world.
Ultimately journalism has changed... Partisanship is very much a part of journalism now.
To conclude good journalism is one of the models of good conversation and communication in the wider social context.
They take journalism really seriously because they know the force that it is and can be.
There's so much information and journalism on television. We have too much to absorb.
There's not a better job in journalism than the one we have, seriously on '60 Minutes' - not a better job.
There's no worse crime in journalism these days than simply deciding something's a story because Drudge links to it.
There's an old saw about journalism that the more you know about a subject, the less sense reporting about it makes.
There is no doubt that the way journalism worked when I was growing up and getting started has changed forever.
The upside of web-based journalism is that everybody gets a chance. The downside is that everybody gets a chance.