mr. phillip webster, who's been a great man been there forever, he started life working in the gallery, the whose sole job was produce t the,000 words a day what happened in parliament. if you wanted the background story, where the fights were, that would be there. that was also true when i went into the house in the late '70s. and that's gone. it's been replaced by this sort of personality conflict based journalism. if you have -- if you're pursuing a policy which is consensual, which ought to be a good thing, the papers in the editorial columns will say why aren't you going for agreed policies with the opposition. well, often you are. probably half the legislation is agreed. but nobody notices. the second point i'd make, mr. jay, is this. that although the television and radio have become and in and out the internet much more powerful, balance the print media, it is still the print media that sets the news values. i was very struck in mr. bolton's written evidence this is paragraph 17 of his evidence he brings that point out that they set the news values and they set the news values for t