 When I have my microphone in my hand, I have some kind of superpower where I'm not afraid to ask questions and I'm not afraid to just charge up and ask someone about their life. So I was probably in sixth grade and my parents took us on this family trip to the Bay Area and we somehow ended up in the middle of a People's Park protest and we were just like driving through the People's Park protest and I was like, yeah, that's my college. That's where I want to go to school. I came to Berkeley knowing what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wanted to be a White House correspondent at NPR. Through Berkeley, I met people at the local public radio station in San Francisco, KQED. That's where I got an internship and ultimately my first job in radio. So I can draw a direct line between the campuses of UC Berkeley and the job I have now. I'm Tamara Keith, White House correspondent for NPR. I majored in philosophy, which is kind of like a punchline most of the time, but actually majoring in philosophy taught me how to think, how to break down arguments. I mean, I think really the philosophy degree made me a good question asker, which is something I do every day. That is my job, is asking questions. And so now, when I am at a presidential press conference and I can tell that the president isn't really answering the question, I know the best way to ask another question that will actually just home in on the thing that he's avoiding. Tamara Keith. Yes. So regarding the Affordable Care Act, in this environment, is it possible to do the kind of corrections that the business community... I've gotten to fly on Air Force One and report on the president and to walk up to the White House to go to work. And you have this moment where you're like, I'm going to work in the White House. It's just, I stop and pause almost every time I walk in and think, wow, this is real, this is my job.