Why Aspiring Journalists Should See “The Post”

This true story about the Washington Post will have every college student changing their major.

Pic­ture it: Two elite news­pa­pers with huge nation­al influ­ence going head-to-head to report on one of the biggest scan­dals in Amer­i­can his­to­ry and fight to exer­cise their right of the First Amend­ment. Then, throw in pow­er­house actors Tom Han­ks and Meryl Streep direct­ed by Steven Spiel­berg. What do you get? “The Post,” a journalist’s dream movie about the 1971 pub­li­ca­tion of the top-secret infor­ma­tion in the Pen­ta­gon Papers pub­lished by the Wash­ing­ton Post (the Post).

The Pen­ta­gon Papers were a 47-vol­ume Depart­ment of Defense study on the Viet­nam War that exposed just how much lying and manip­u­la­tion the gov­ern­ment was using to deceive the Amer­i­can pub­lic about what was actu­al­ly going on in the war. While the New York Times already had pos­ses­sion of the Pen­ta­gon Papers and had writ­ten a series of arti­cles based on the study, the gov­ern­ment tem­porar­i­ly banned them from pub­lish­ing any fur­ther sto­ries about it.

While that wasn’t so good for the New York Times, the ban gave way for the Post to gain a small win­dow of time to jump on the sto­ry them­selves despite Pres­i­dent Nixon and his administration’s efforts to keep them from doing so.

 

In the film “The Post,” Han­ks plays the brusque and bril­liant Post exec­u­tive edi­tor Ben Bradlee and Streep por­trays the strong-willed, and now infa­mous, Post pub­lish­er Katharine Gra­ham. Togeth­er, they form an unstop­pable team to get ahold of and pub­lish the whop­ping 3,000 pages that would not only change America’s view on the Pres­i­den­cy and the nature of the Viet­nam War, but also how news­pa­pers could pub­lish clas­si­fied mate­ri­als even when they went against our government.

The Post” is a great film for any­body to go see if they want a lit­tle his­to­ry les­son on the Viet­nam War and the Pen­ta­gon Papers, if they love Tom Han­ks and Meryl Streep (which is basi­cal­ly every­body) or just love a good ole fash­ioned dra­ma about the cor­rup­tion of Amer­i­can pol­i­tics. How­ev­er, it is a cru­cial movie for any aspir­ing jour­nal­ist to go see right now just like many oth­er jour­nal­ism films that came before it, such as “Spot­light” and “All the President’s Men.”

Why you ask? Because it shows how deter­mi­na­tion, good jour­nal­is­tic skills and fight­ing for what you believe in as a jour­nal­ist are cru­cial in keep­ing the press’s First Amend­ment right to expose the truth at any cost. Despite all of the government’s efforts to keep the Pen­ta­gon Papers out of the press, the team at the Wash­ing­ton Post didn’t lis­ten and didn’t give in, so they could deliv­er the truth to the people.

First off, this is por­trayed with impec­ca­ble taste by Meryl Streep. Streep’s char­ac­ter, Katharine Gra­ham, gains con­trol over the news­pa­per after the death of her hus­band and is seen by many as some­one who only fol­lows the orders of the men in the news­room. As the film goes on, how­ev­er, the deci­sion to pub­lish the papers lies on her shoul­ders and she trans­forms from a demure socialite to a hard-nosed news­woman. Streep’s por­tray­al of Gra­ham not only shows the strength and deter­mi­na­tion you need to have as a reporter, but also the willpow­er it takes to make a tough deci­sion for the bet­ter­ment of your readers.

And Tom Han­ks’ char­ac­ter, Ben Bradlee, doesn’t shy away from the fight against the Nixon-led gov­ern­ment either. Bradlee is exact­ly what an edi­tor should be, which is deci­sive, brave and inspir­ing to his team of writ­ers and aspir­ing edi­tors should take note if you want to make it as an edi­tor at any pub­li­ca­tion, print or online.

‘The Post’ film poster.
Pho­to cred­it: Teas­er Trailer

Both Bradlee and Gra­ham show the heart and ruth­less deter­mi­na­tion that they need­ed to beat their rival paper to fin­ish pub­lish­ing the most con­tro­ver­sial and shock­ing doc­u­ments the coun­try has ever seen. And, to top it off, they are doing it while also set­ting a prece­dent that has allowed every gen­er­a­tion of jour­nal­ists that have come after them the free­dom to go against the gov­ern­ment and the sta­tus quo for the bet­ter­ment of society.

With­out the events in this movie, the events in “All the President’s Men” and “Spot­light” would not have tak­en place. With­out the courage of Bradlee and Gra­ham, the Post’s very own reporters, Carl Bern­stein and Bob Wood­ward, nev­er would have had the back­ing to expose the Water­gate scan­dal, which only came a year later.

Fast for­ward about 30 years and the Spot­light team at the Boston Globe who uncov­ered the sex­u­al abuse in the Catholic Church. While it was extreme­ly dif­fi­cult for them to get sur­vivors and church offi­cials to talk, they had the full back­ing of the news­pa­per and they didn’t have the nation­al gov­ern­ment breath­ing down their necks.

The con­tro­ver­sy sur­round­ing the pub­lish­ing of the Pen­ta­gon Papers ruf­fles everybody’s feath­ers all the way up to the top of the gov­ern­ment food chain and legal action was tak­en. While The New York Times man­aged to pub­lish a few of the papers, the Depart­ment of Jus­tice issues a tem­po­rary restrain­ing order against any fur­ther pub­li­ca­tion. Why? Because it was seen as harm­ful to nation­al secu­ri­ty, which is just gov­ern­ment code for: “We don’t want peo­ple to see how bad­ly we messed up.”

Now, of course, the Times and the Wash­ing­ton Post had to fight back, which is chron­i­cled in the movie. In the famous case of New York Times Co. v. Unit­ed States, the Times and the Wash­ing­ton Post teamed up and the Supreme Court ruled that the gov­ern­ment failed to prove harm to nation­al secu­ri­ty, and the pub­li­ca­tion of the papers was legal under the First Amendment’s pro­tec­tion of free­dom of the press.

After that rul­ing, every news­pa­per in the coun­try was allowed to pub­lish the por­tions that the Times had not already pub­lished. That includ­ed how numer­ous Pres­i­dents, from Tru­man to Nixon, had all mis­led the pub­lic about the degree of America’s involve­ment in the war.

While these papers came out at a time when Amer­i­cans were already skep­ti­cal about the war, the Supreme Court took the press’ side and gave them the pow­er to decide what to pub­lish with lit­tle gov­ern­ment influ­ence as long as it’s crit­i­cal to pub­lic opin­ion. Imag­ine liv­ing in a soci­ety where the press doesn’t get the free­dom to speak out against the gov­ern­ment and put them in line when they mess up on such a high lev­el. With­out the pub­lish­ing of the Pen­ta­gon Papers and with­out the courage and great jour­nal­is­tic skills of the not only the team at the Wash­ing­ton Post, but also at the Times, we wouldn’t have that free­dom today.

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