pro-obama agenda? >> what i'm doing is bringing decades of experience in journalism and communications to try to rebuild this operation and see where people get their news -- >> you're so experienced you just deflected my question. let me move on. when you were in the middle of this health care fight, which seemed to go on forever, were you disappointed by some of the reporting you saw? >> well, you know, everything has changed so much. i was -- of course i was disappointed. but you're always disappointed no matter which side you're on. and the thing that -- >> what disappointed you? >> well, what i saw on all sides was that reporters are under so much pressure now, you know, to report something every 15, 20 minutes. i mean, when i was a reporter you had a deadline once or twice a day -- >> everything gets thrown up online. >> everything gets thrown up online. everything is news, no matter how small or trivial. any little trivial thing can go on and on and on. but they're under pressure from their editors to churn information out. the government officials, or the campaign officials are trying to tell their own story, and they're under pressure with these waves of news that are pouring over them all the time. and what i think is unfortunate is that it's harder and harder