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The mid-1980s saw a dramatic relaxation of Communist Party control over China’s economic, political, and intellectual life. It was arguably the most liberal period in the history of the People’s Republic, as a new generation of reformers sought to push the country towards a more open and tolerant system. These same trends, however, alarmed Party hardliners, who made repeated attempts to roll back the tide of liberalization.   For members of the American press corps in Beijing, it was a period of testing the boundaries, challenging the restrictions on news coverage at the heart of the system, and exploring parts of Chinese society that had long been off-limits. Assignment China: the 1980s tells their story.   The episode  features interviews with some of the leading journalists who covered China during those years, They include John Burns, Edward Gargan and Ncholas Kristof  of the New York Times,  Michael Weisskopf and Dan Southerland of the Washington Post, Richard Hornik and Jaime FlorCruz of Time, Michael Parks and Jim Mann of the Los Angeles Times, John Sheahan of CBS News, John Pomfret of the AP,  Adi Ignatius of the Wall St. Journal, and Dorinda Elliot of Newsweek.   The film breaks important new ground, with John Burns revealing new details about his detention and expulsion from China in 1986, Mike Wallace’s producer sharing the behind-the-story story of the disastrous CBS "60 Minutes" 1986 interview with Deng Xiaoping, which almost got CBS  News kicked out of China, the equally interesting story of how Communist Party chief Zhao Ziyang appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press" in 1987, the saga of the reporters who covered the 1987 unrest in Tibet and were booted out of the region for their efforts, and the way journalists reported the remarkable  intellectual and political  opening in 1988 which paved the way for the pro-democracy demonstrations in 1989.   With rare archival footage and still photos, Assignment China: the 1980s paints a revealing  picture of how the media covered the China story in the years leading up to the crisis in Tiananmen Square.