 I'm curious, you've covered a lot of different administrations and a lot of different personalities and organizations. What was your favorite White House to cover and why? And what makes a good, how does an office holder build mutual respect and rapport but also take on journalism that they don't think is accurate or fair? There was only one White House, I mean I've covered White Houses in the sense that I've been there and I've reported on them but there was only one White House where I actually was the White House correspondent in the 80s under Ronald Reagan. I was the chief White House correspondent for NBC News and that is by far still today my favorite administration and I think the kind of model for an administration. I'm not talking about their policies and whether I like their policies or not, if you're the reporter covering a White House to the degree possible, you shouldn't factor in, you're reporting on what they're doing but they had a vision and they had a plan to execute it and they succeeded in executing it and one of the things that as a reporter you admire is competence in a politician and their ability to achieve their goals and Reagan and his team were really quite remarkable in that. I was fortunate enough to cover his run for president in 1980 against Jimmy Carter and it was the best campaign I ever covered. They had a plan each day for what the headline was going to be and it was organized around having events at spots with backdrops to dramatize that story and make that point. He had a clear agenda, again I'm not saying whether I agreed with it or not which was really irrelevant, I was reporting on it but of shrinking the size of government, of rolling back some of the regulation, of strengthening defense, restoring America's position in the world, this was during the Iran hostage crisis and not that long after Vietnam when Americans kind of felt bad about themselves and he went about achieving it and so I guess what I'm really saying is that I admired the sheer professionalism of it and you talk about dealing with the media and our job isn't to be friends and it is an adversarial relationship and not opponents and not even critics but they're trying to get their story out and we're trying to put their story in context and to the degree that there is, and I'm sure this doesn't go on with you in Lansing governor, but that a governor or president is trying to put the best face on something, it's our job to try to hold them to account and I had plenty of run-ins with people in the Reagan administration but there was a professionalism about it and there was an understanding that we were doing our job, they were doing their job, that maybe they didn't like the story as I told it on Nightly News today but that I didn't have any vested interest in either their success or their failure, I was just trying to report the facts and I think they took it that way and the next day was another day and they were going to deal with us so they really, the Reagan administration really stood out for me, there have been a series of administrations that I have admired but that was clearly on a variety of levels, having a clear mission, having a plan to execute it, succeeding in executing it, the professionalism of their relationships with the media and the Hill, they were impressive, they were very impressive, no question about it. What was the least impressive administration?