Sir Harold Evans: 'You can't buy my credibility'
Speaking to the programme about newspaper relationships with their advertisers former Sunday Times editor Sir Harold Evans said there was a danger of misleading the reader by running ads disguised as articles.
"Can the reader know whether he's reading a puff piece paid for, or is he reading something the reporter, with his hand on his heart, has professionally written?"
Sir Harold added he wouldn't embrace an advertiser if it meant 'selling his soul'.
"If I was a news editor and I was about to publish something, I'd say, would I be running this if I wasn't being paid for it?".
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
News and politics clips
Listen to a selection of clips from recent and upcoming programmes.
More clips from 19/02/2015
-
Lift awkwardness: Digital distractions replace ‘musac’
Duration: 02:40
-
Al Jazeera Peter Greste: 'A struggle on behalf of press'
Duration: 05:49
-
Rodgers and Hammerstein's forgotten musical Allegro
Duration: 04:15
-
Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes: Possible UKIP victories?
Duration: 04:40
More clips from Today
-
Gisèle Pelicot 'doesn't want to be an icon'
Duration: 14:16
-
Mishal Husain: 'Good morning and goodbye'
Duration: 09:07
-
Inside Number 9 hits the stage
Duration: 10:13