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Over the years, Masters says, litigation has been the biggest frustration of his career. 'It's death by a thousand courts,' he says. 'It almost drove me out of the game because it almost turned me into a professional witness and defendant.'
Still, he kept investigating, driven by the maxim that you must finish what you start.
Holmes says: 'More than any other reporter, he revived and expanded the potential of investigative journalism on television. He demonstrated that if you work hard enough, and keep asking often enough, you can get people whose natural instinct is to say nothing to say something - and say it on camera.'
The 7.30 Report host, Kerry O'Brien, also pays tribute: 'I can't think of an investigative journalist who has made such a consistent impact over such a long career span.'
Masters's final Four Corners report airs tonight. Called The Great History War, it suggests Australians might be overstating the legend of the Anzacs. 'Other countries are a bit offended that we're so boastful,' Masters says


We were presented to them as the bishop s foreign guests.There was no doubt about who were the authorities and who were the guests, as the government official presided with obvious authority from the other side of the expansive meeting table separating our small group of foreigners from his side, where the government officials sat. We were given a rather formal presentation of the commerce and industrial achievements of the region, along with a brief reference to historical and cultural highpoints. As the presentation began, we were somewhat concerned to see a television camera enter the room. We were being filmed for who knows what end. At this first encounter, the head official referred to the bishop with obvious respect in word and in manner


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