In ch. 3, Schudson chronicles the principal division between newspaper journalism before objectivity and fairness became the standard for ethical reporting. On the one hand are those outlets that present news as a story—entertaining, dynamic, interesting. On the other hand are those that present news as information—dry, ordered, presumably disinterested. If we live in a post-objectivity era, if journalists have today abandoned the ethical standards of fairly presenting all sides of an issue and of not inserting political or personal bias into news coverage, then are we returning to the pre-objectivity standards of journalism that Schudson covers here? Using an example of print journalism, try to illustrate either one of these two points (1) the ideal of the story or of information has returned to print media today; (2) a new ideal has taken over, one completely different from objectivity, fairness, the story, or information.