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Page One Trailer

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Uploaded on May 3, 2011

Andrew Rossi's riveting documentary Page One: Inside The New York Times had its World Premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, and was acquired by Magnolia Pictures and Participant Media for theatrical release June 24. In the tradition of great fly-on-the-wall documentaries, the film deftly gains unprecedented access to the New York Times newsroom and the inner workings of the Media Desk. With the Internet surpassing print as our main news source and newspapers all over the country going bankrupt, Page One chronicles the transformation of the media industry at its time of greatest turmoil. Writers like Brian Stelter, Tim Arango and the salty but brilliant David Carr track print journalism's metamorphosis even as their own paper struggles to stay vital and solvent, while their editors and publishers grapple with up-to-the-minute issues like controversial new sources and the implications of an online pay-wall. Meanwhile, rigorous journalism is thriving—Page One gives us an up-close look at the vibrant cross-cubicle debates and collaborations, tenacious jockeying for on-record quotes, and skillful page-one pitching that brings the most venerable newspaper in America to fruition each and every day.

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Top Comments

  • Standifer Kilgore

    - Just as a note for someone working at a newspaper, it is "you're" in the first sentence, a capital I at the beginning of the second, also an apostrophe in "thats"[sic]. Capital I again in the third sentence, as well as two different places where "its" should be "it's". I take it that you deliver the newspapers.

    · 7

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    in reply to Pablo Escobosa (Show the comment)
  • eiteownzall

    next year...... page two

    · 3

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All Comments (19)

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  • findhelga

    Where on earth are the women in this trailer? Are there none in the film? Because I know they work just as hard as the men at The New York Times.

    ·

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  • EZ4089

    piss off

    ·

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  • bloodrunsclear

    New York Times: The Movie

    Did we mention New York Times was awesome?

    Remember the New York Times?

    Please die you useless partisan relic.

    · 2

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  • arabianknight86

    Wikileaks came into existence because the media failed to do any real journalism. If organizations like the New York Times want to survive they need to do in depth, brutally honest journalism. Which means asking people hard questions, and never taking no for an answer until the truth comes out.

    ·

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  • cyclist4now

    Evolution, physical or social is not always pleaseant. Adaptation is the key to survival for all on this planet.

    ·

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  • Nogard229

    Yeah, because journalist are incapable of exaggerating stories, and skewing facts in an ambiguous and depersonalized manner. Yeah man, they don't have the ability to be biased. lolololol. Yeah, they can't use leading questions, and cover silly stories. Their not owned by corporations that run on profit. yep ytep ypetkajfdlkahfklahfkanbmncnakj­na

    ·

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    in reply to Ultra Magnus (Show the comment)
  • Ultra Magnus

    @amfikz: You are wrong. And obviously not a trained journalist. Amateur bloggers and tweeters are the ones to worry about. They are putting the rumors and unsubstantiated "facts" out there. Real journalists are trained to check sources, research stories, proofread their work, and write lead paragraphs that the average twit (ter) only fantasizes about writing. Print journalism is dying. Electronic journalism is alive and well and will thrive as long as people continue to value the truth.

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