Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-0837-8 • Paperback • November 2000 • $18.95 • (£14.99)
Bruce W. Sanford, a partner with the law firm of Baker & Hostetler in Washington, D.C., is one of the most accomplished press lawyers in the United States. The National Law Journal lists him as one of the nation's one hundred most influential lawyers.
Chapter 1 Prologue: A Dangerous New Season
Chapter 2 The Canyon of Distrust
Part 3 Part One: Origins and Causes
Chapter 4 From Benchley to Brill, Luce to Levin
Chapter 5 Dan Quayle Meet Hillary Clinton
Chapter 6 The Girl from Yesterday
Chapter 7 The Public Service Quotient
Part 8 Part Two: Unintended Consequences
Chapter 9 The "Ride-Along"
Chapter 10 A Fine Day for the Government
Chapter 11 "Hello, Houston. We Have a Problem"
Chapter 12 The Credibility Breakfast
A brilliant work that shows how this hatred [of the media] has affected everything from the way news is covered to the way judges and juries handle trials. This is a must-read.
— Larry King, professor of mass communication, Stephen F. Austin State University
In language that is lively rather than legalistic, Sanford offers a compelling, richly annotated argument.
— Scripps Howard News
Sanford has transformed the often plodding art of media criticism into something resembling fun.
— Mark Jurkowitz, The Boston Globe
[An] important and thought-provoking work.
— USA Today
Though Sanford is highly regarded for his knowledge of First Amendment law, he expertly tackles a number of peripheral issues that would be of interest to students and scholars in journalism and mass communications. His impressive understanding and presentation of the public opinion polling data, media criticism, and ethics expands the relevance of this book to a variety of sub-disciplines within the field.
— Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly
Well-researched volume.
— Fearless Reviews