في عام 2002 ، قررت المنتجة الإخبارية على الكابل "كيم باركر" تغيير روتين حياتها من خلال تولي مهمة جديدة جريئة في كابول ، أفغانستان. بعد إبعادها عن أسلوب حياتها الأمريكي المريح ، وجدت باركر نفسها في وسط منطقة حرب خارجة عن السيطرة. لحسن الحظ ، تقابل تانيا فاندربويل ، زميلة صحفية تأخذ الصحفية التي أصيبت بصدمة القصف تحت جناحها. في وسط المسلحين وأمراء الحرب والاحتفالات الليلية ، يكتشف باركر مفتاح أن يصبح مراسلًا ناجحًا.
Famed reporter Stephen O'Malley travels to a small town to investigate the death of a national hero.
In England during WWII, an American news correspondent’s affair with a married British correspondent ends tragically when he is killed in action. Fearing a nervous breakdown as a result of his death, she travels to Cornwall to mourn with his family without any intention of revealing her relationship with him.
Foreign correspondent Pete Garvey has 5 days to win back his former fiancée, or he'll lose the orphans he adopted.
A 38-year-old woman feels her biological clock is ticking and is torn between her ex and a younger lover.
A young married couple's relationship becomes strained when he is assigned overseas as a foreign correspondent and she becomes a major stage star.
For more than forty years, British journalist Robert Fisk has reported on some of the most violent conflicts in the world, from Northern Ireland to the Middle East, always with his feet on the ground and a notebook in hand, travelling into landscapes devastated by war, ferreting out the facts and sending reports to the media he works for with the ambition of catching the interest of an audience of millions.
Anna, a foreign correspondent in Nairobi, and Mercy, a local from the slums, are at the center of this emotional story set against the backdrop of the AIDS epidemic in Africa.
How does a nation slip into war? Dateline-Saigon profiles the controversial reporting of five Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists -The New York Times' David Halberstam, the Associated Press' Malcolm Browne, Peter Arnett, and legendary photojournalist Horst Faas, and UPI's Neil Sheehan -- during the early years of the Vietnam War as President John F. Kennedy is secretly committing US troops to what is initially dismissed by some as 'a nice little war in a land of tigers and elephants.' 'When the government is telling the truth, reporters become a relatively unimportant conduit to what is happening,' Halberstam tells us. 'But when the government doesn't tell the truth, begins to twist the truth, hide the truth, then the journalist becomes involuntarily infinitely more important.'