instead i became lois lane. i always had a formal, which is a very operative formula in newsrooms. especially internet news room now. it was four for them and one for me. meaning i did four stories which they assign to me or which are kind of the stories to feed the engine. and the fifth one washe one i cared passionately, deeply, and it was always about the underdog, starvation, digng up especially shining lights on injustice. you know, that's the part that keeps us going. that's the fuel for all of us as journalist, i think. at we are always looking for the other side. that's whyt' not going to go away. to quickly answer the future of journalism question, there is a future. it's maybe not a healthy future at this moment. journalism is alive it's just not as well as we'd like it to be. but we are in the state of evolution, sta of flex, things are changing. as i said to roy earlier, we're kind of like those creatures emerging out of the sea. we haven't decide. i said earlier to someone in the audience, i really do believe community journalism is not going to go away. and i think pr