 We live in an age where everyone can be a journalist. You know, I've seen this and it's changed the way that the journalism is practiced. It's changed the very definition of journalism. I'm Stan Grant, Professor of Global Affairs at Griffith University, a long time journalist, 30 plus years, and author. I've just started this role as Professor of Global Affairs and it comes at a really critical time. Anyone with a blog and a mobile phone can call themselves a journalist. Journalism practice world leads to royal commissions. It topples governments. You know, it's a dangerous weapon in the wrong hands. Journalism really matters, but we're living in an age where the business of journalism is trivializing the practice of journalism. My advice for up-and-coming journalists is do not forget what lies at the heart of journalism, it is endless curiosity and a desire for knowledge and a broad understanding of the world. I think what I bring to something like this, if I look at my own sort of background, is that I've lived what I've read about. That's the main thing for me. There's something I want to bring home to students here and what you learn has real-life consequences. What you say and what you believe and the arguments you make, they have real consequences. Countries change because of the arguments of people and what they put on paper.