In the era of progress, Theodore Roosevelt built the term "trickster" to explain the characteristics of journalists, when he is studying the story he is excited by the mud in the bottom of the pond and gets it I thought that thought to stir. People will compare. But Roosevelt created this nickname but he also used the influence of the leader to attract American people directly. Journalists who are considered to be the best because they use their position to uncover governments, big companies, and societal diseases have never been so far in pursuing their story; It is good for people.
Journalists, known as prostitutes, affect the promotion movement. These leaders revealed the waste of government and business, corruption, and scandals. Upton Sinclair's book, The Jungle, reveals the fear of Chicago Union Stock Yards, a huge meat processing plant, to the United States. The Federal Government established the Food and Drug Administration. The government disbanded the company in response to a series of articles on standard oil monopoly by Ida M. Turbe. Other leaders exposed poverty, city slums, dangerous factory conditions, and fear of child labor
Muckrakers was an American journalist and novelist in the first decade of the 20th century and exposed corruption in large corporations and governments. Theodore Roosevelt invented this term at his 1906 speech and agreed to discover some of the best, but expressed irresponsible sensationalism about these methods. In the advancement of John Bunyan's pilgrim (1678), he implied that the "blind man" could only look down as he could not see his crown by stirring the dirt It was. Popular events such as The Arena, Colliers, Cosmopolitan, Everybody's, The Independent, and McClures participated in this questionnaire and participated in the events of Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell, David Graham Phillips, Ray Stannard Baker, T.W. It works. Lawson, Mark Sullivan, Samuel Hopkins Adams. Examples of hacker novels include Phillips 'Great God Success' (1901), Upton Sinclair's Jungle (1901), and later Winston Churchill's book.