The interview conducted by Krulwich about the topic of “Yellow Rain” was both manipulative and inherently unethical. The sort of cross examination of both Eng and Kalia about their firsthand account of what they believed to be chemical weapons was uncalled for. Krulwich went into the interview with the preconceived notion that the “Yellow Rain” was nothing more than a natural phenomenon derived from bees which caused him to either intentionally or inadvertently skew the interview in a way that would prove his assumption correct. However, in doing so he effectively marginalized the pain and suffering endured by Eng and the Hmong people. Instead of trying to gear the interview toward pushing his own agenda he should’ve sought out the account of eyewitnesses and equally represent their side of the story in adjunction with the statements made by “experts”. In this way Krulwich could’ve avoided the backlash from readers over his treatment of Eng and Kalia during the interview while at the same time presenting the facts of both sides of a story and letting the reader draw his/her own conclusion. Reporters have a responsibility to uncover the truth; however, in doing so they must try and fairly present all sides of story and displace any bias that they might personally hold. Krulwich chose to value of these doctrines of journalism over the other and that is was caused the kind of response the story received and the criticisms made by other organizations such as the Huffington Post.