Two filmmakers interview journalists, press victims, activists and top UK academics to find out about the corruption that led to the notorious phone hacking scandal, and the public inquiry that followed.
In the wake of the Leveson report the media's focus has quickly diverted from a brief period of self-examination to business as usual. This opportunity for serious consideration of the true, entrenched causes and effects of the UK's inadequate media must not go unexplored, and the recent press scandals must not be framed in terms of the 'bad apples' soundbites we're so often fed. Examining the people and practices of the media industries, The Fourth Estate illuminates not only specific incidences of corruption by press groups, but how the wider business as a whole, including the film and entertainment industries, has a huge amount to answer for in the state of political economy of the west. There's no business like show business...
Produced in the UK on a zero-budget, filmmakers Lee Salter and Elizabeth Mizon spent two years contacting and interviewing journalists, organisers and critics of the corrupt industrial practices highlighted by, but not limited to, the Leveson Inquiry in 2011. While the phone hacking scandal illuminated the depth and breadth of the cavalier flouting of legality and integrity in British journalism, there are larger implications and connections to ideology, entertainment, and political economy at work in this crisis. Examining the people and practices of the media industries, The Fourth Estate illuminates not only specific incidences of corruption by press groups, but how the wider business as a whole, including the film and entertainment industries, has a huge amount to answer for in the state of the political economy of the west. There's no business like show business.