Journalists can prove to be either the biggest asset to society or its worst evil, depending upon which moral side the professional opts to operate on. Throughout history, there are those journalists who have braved atrocities in order to uncover hidden agendas and intricate conspiracies. Whereas, there are those as well who have misled the general population and chosen to side with the elite, for riches and financial gains. So if you're a journalist, or aspire on becoming one, the following ten movies will delight you to no end!
LOS ANGELES: "The Interview," the Sony Pictures comedy believed to have triggered a cyber attack on the studio, has racked up over $40 million in sales from 5.8 million digital downloads, the studio said on Tuesday.
SEOUL: North Korean military's "cyber army" has boosted its numbers to 6,000 troops, the South Korean Defense Ministry said on Tuesday, double Seoul's estimate for the force in 2013, and is working to cause "physical and psychological paralysis" in the South.
LAS VEGAS: Sony chief Kazuo Hirai on Monday spoke for the first time publicly about the cyber attack that derailed launch of controversial comedy "The Interview," calling the assault "vicious and malicious."
LOS ANGELES: Tolkien fantasy epic "The Hobbit" enjoyed a third week at the top of the North American box office, while controversial comedy "The Interview" took in another $1 million in its limited release.
BEIJING: North Korea suffered an Internet shutdown for at least two hours on Saturday, Chinese state-media and cyber experts said, after Pyongyang blamed Washington for an online blackout earlier this week.
SEOUL: North Korea accused the United States on Saturday of being responsible for Internet outages it experienced in recent days amid a confrontation between them over the hacking of the film studio Sony Pictures.
LOS ANGELES: Sony Pictures comedy "The Interview" grossed more than $1 million in limited release at the U.S. box office on Dec. 25, the studio said on Friday.
LOS ANGELES: Some US independent movie theaters are to show the Sony Pictures comedy "The Interview" on Christmas Day as planned, despite threats blamed on North Korea's erratic regime.
LOS ANGELES: Describing the lonely work of leading a company through a devastating cyberattack, Sony Pictures Entertainment chief executive Michael Lynton on Friday said the Hollywood studio did not make a mistake in pulling satirical film "The Interview."