 I think it's important to distinguish between journalism as a craft and occupation with a calling and the media as a sort of industrial complex that monetizes our attention. And a lot of journalists have to work for the media because that's where the jobs are. But their calling and their principles sometimes cut in a different direction. And so they're caught in this institutional setting where what they might want to do and what the employer requires them to do is not exactly the same thing. So lots of times what they end up reporting is sort of a hybrid product between what they would do as journalists and what the media requires of them as an industry. And I think a lot of viewers, listeners, readers, users of the product are totally onto this. And this is one of the reasons why trust in the news media is declining. And this is one of the reasons why we're searching for alternative business models that would allow journalists to do what they ought to do. When people perceive commercial imperatives overcoming journalistic truth, they're not wrong.