They don't call it the journalism charity, they call it the journalism industry. And hey - yay CPIC. But I mean, fuck. You've got to be some kind of jackass if you think you can send up your boss as an example of how not to do business. The fact that said boss was actually astoundingly cool about it says something, especially when your organization straight up made up shit about Audi just a few years earlier. Let's talk about 60 minutes, shall we? What Al Pacino in The Insider actually looks like How to hand the 2004 election to Bush Sweeten a Tesla segment with internal combustion samples y'know why print journalism has always been and will always be skeptical of broadcast journalism? Because it's fucking expensive. In order to pay for it, you need a lot of sponsorship. To get a lot of sponsorship, you need a lot of eyeballs. And eyeballs like sensationalism. Chuck Lewis knows this. Yet somehow he thinks Al Capone's Vault by Geraldo is somehow less sensationalist than sabotaging his own boss on air. You want better news? Set the WABAC Machine to 1987.