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Fixers may primarily use legal means, such as lawsuits and payoffs, to accomplish their ends, or they may carry out unlawful activities. The White House Plumbers have been described as fixers for Richard Nixon; their methods included break-ins and burglary.[3] Fixers who specialize in disposing of evidence or bodies are called "cleaners",[4] like the character of Victor "The Cleaner" in the film La Femme Nikita, or the fictional Jonathan Quinn, subject of the Brett Battles novel The Cleaner.[5]

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In Britain, a fixer is a commercial consultant for business improvement, whereas in an American context a fixer is often an associate of a powerful person who carries out difficult, undercover, or stealth actions, or extricates a client out of personal or legal trouble.[1][6] A fixer may freelance, like Judy Smith, a well-known American public relations "crisis consultant" whose career provided inspiration for the popular 2012 television series Scandal.[7] More commonly a fixer works for a single employer, under a title such as "attorney" or "bodyguard", which does not typically describe the kinds of services that they provide.

In sport, when a match fixer arranges a preordained outcome of a sporting or athletic contest, the motivation is often gambling, and the fixer is often employed by organized crime. In the Black Sox Scandal, for instance, Major League Baseball players became involved with a gambling syndicate and agreed to lose the 1919 World Series in exchange for payoffs.[8] In another example, in 1975, Boston mobster Anthony "Fat Tony" Ciulla of the Winter Hill Gang was identified as the fixer who routinely bribed jockeys to throw horse races.[9][10] Other insiders may also be fixers, as in the case of veterinarian Mark Gerard, who, in September 1978, was convicted of fraud for "masterminding a horse-racing scandal that involved switching two thoroughbreds" so that he could cash in on a long-shot bet.[9]

In journalism, a fixer is someone, often a local journalist, hired by a foreign correspondent or a media company to help arrange a story. Fixers will most often act as translators and guides, and will help to arrange local interviews that the correspondent would not otherwise have access to. They help to collect information for the story and sometimes play a crucial role in the outcome.[11] Fixers are rarely credited, and often put themselves in danger, especially in regimes where they might face consequences from an oppressive government for exposing iniquities the state may want to censor.[12][13]

A map based on publicly accessible research data shows a visual representation of data collected from various studies conducted on both fixers and their journalist counterparts from over 70 countries. Gathered from the Global Reporting Centre, the survey demographic map had 132 respondents from North America, 101 from Europe, 23 from South America, Africa and Eurasia, 63 from Asia and 9 from Australia.[15]

With funding from the Canadian Media Research Consortium and the University of British Columbia Faculty of Arts, we created an online survey of 20 questions which was distributed through email and social media to reporters and fixers worldwide beginning in mid-2016. More than 450 people from 71 countries completed the individual anonymous survey. At the end of the survey, the respondents had the option of volunteering to be interviewed. Over the course of 10 weeks in early 2017 we interviewed 35 respondents, most of whom had at least five years of experience working in some capacity in global journalism. Some respondents asked that we withhold their names to protect themselves, as well as their professional relationship. Graduate student Olivier Musafiri helped with the interviews and some of the data analysis.

Only one of the fixers we interviewed acknowledged working for the government, and apart from addressing language, most did not reference their ethnic affiliations. However, interviews with reporters indicated that many correspondents are keenly aware of those affiliations.

Given the findings of our study and the inherent power differential in the fixer-foreign correspondent relationship as it has long been practiced, we believe that a critical next step is to examine different approaches to foreign reporting.

It was the first of many times I received invaluable help and insight from fixers, the resourceful, well-informed locals who assist foreign correspondents. Most in this region are fluent in Arabic and many are aspiring journalists.

Although he still works as a fixer, Moe has become an outspoken critic of foreign journalists. After one too many dealings with correspondents who he says mischaracterized context and people or outright distorted facts, he wrote a searing piece on his blog in 2010. He admits that fixers who are less than scrupulous sometimes mislead journalists, but says ultimately the facts and ethics of journalism are the responsibility of those who put their names on stories.

Homebuyers are shunning fixer-uppers, even though they often come with a reduced purchase price. WSJ personal-finance reporter Veronica Dagher joins host J.R. Whalen to discuss why prospective buyers are looking elsewhere.

J.R. Whalen: Here's your Money Briefing for Thursday, June 29th. I'm J.R. Whalen for the Wall Street Journal. Traditionally, fixer upper homes have given buyers an opportunity to save some money on the cost of the house and remodel and renovate to their liking. But in today's housing market, almost nobody wants them.

J.R. Whalen: We'll talk to Wall Street Journal Personal Finance Reporter, Veronica Dagher, after the break.Prospective home buyers already facing limited choices in a tight market are turning away from so-called fixer uppers. Wall Street Journal Personal Finance Reporter, Veronica Dagher, joins us. So, Veronica, people have been buying fixer upper homes for decades. There are even TV shows about them. Why are they falling out of favor with buyers now?

Veronica Dagher: So, fixer uppers are already less favorable for buyers these days, because not only you've got your high interest rate on your home loan, your mortgage rate is higher than people paid about a year ago, but also, typically when you renovate a house, you need to take a construction loan and the rates on those loans have also increased.So, you've got higher construction loan costs, you've got higher mortgage rates, you've also got high property taxes, higher property prices. All of these things are pressuring buyer's wallets. Not to mention, you still have inflation in other parts of your budget. Depending on what sector you work in, you may be worried about your job. So, there's just so much pressure on buyers right now. So, they're just not in the mood for any of this.

Ahead of former President Donald Trump's upcoming arraignment on criminal charges, his ex-counsel and "fixer" Michael Cohen said in an interview that while the case is connected to a payment he made to an adult film star, he feels the charge or charges are about holding the former president "accountable."

A fixer-upper is a home that can usually be lived in but needs maintenance work (redecoration, redesign, or reconstruction) and is typically offered at a low purchase price. Fixer-uppers can be attractive to buyers looking for more house for the money, or to investors looking to flip the property and make a profit.

There are several things you should consider before buying a fixer-upper: your intended use of the property (home or resale), the potential market value of the renovated property, and how much time and money it'll take to renovate it. Speak with a Redfin Agent before deciding to buy a fixer-upper, and be sure to have a well-qualified inspector and contractor assess the home before you're locked into a purchase contract.

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