Part 1 of the interview:
As a broadcast journalist working for CBS and CNN, Kristina Borjesson experienced first-hand corporate push-back and retaliation for her investigative work on the crash of TWA Flight 800. But she channeled that experience into two books, which draw out other prominent media figures to share their own experiences of corporate and government censorship. This week on the Campbell Conversations, Grant Reeher engages Borjesson in a provocative discussion of the books and the issues they raise.
Part two of the interview:
In 1996, Kristina Borjesson was a broadcast journalist assigned to cover the crash of TWA Flight 800. As she dug deeper into the story, she experienced push-back from corporate executives and government officials, and was ultimately dismissed. She has recently produced and directed a documentary about the crash, and on this week’s edition of the Campbell Conversations, host Grant Reeher continues the conversation he started with her last week about corporate and government censorship of news reporting, as she experienced it through this event.

Editor's note: In part of the interview, Borjesson says that Bob Parry was let go from his job at NBC for his Iran-Contra reporting. Borjesson later corrected that, noting that Parry was let go from Newsweek.