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Patrick Soon-Shiong spent decades trying to cure cancer and made a fortune in biotechnology, making him one of California's most successful enigmatic billionaires.
Born in South Africa to Chinese parents and ended in Los Angeles where he flourished as a surgeon, scientist and entrepreneur. "The richest doctor in the history of the world," said Forbes magazine in 2014.
A shrewd and agitated mind, Soon-Shiong now seeks to address a very different source of malignant metastasis: the new .
superficial news, clickbait news, strident news, gaudy, polarizing, he plans to tackle all these diseases in his latest incarnation as a media mogul.
Soon-Shiong bought the Los Angeles Times and a handful of California 500 million dollar newspapers, propelling him into an exclusive club populated by Rupert Murdoch, Jeff Bezos and a handful of other owners.
"I'm a drug addict, a drug addict," he told the Guardian in an interview at the LA Times' new home, a 10-acre campus under construction in El Segundo, 20 miles south downtown. "It has nothing to do with business analysis, it has to do with an analysis of what is important for humanity."
A flamboyant claim of a man from business that drags applause as well as controversy. He is widely regarded as brilliant and sometimes emphatic, with promises going beyond reality.
The LA Times is a formerly big newspaper and beaten by its former master of business, a Chicago-based company called Trunk. Cutbacks, layoffs and a revolving executive door left the 136-year-old newspaper weak and rudder earlier this year. Journalists voted for unionization for the first time.
Soon-Shiong bought it in April for twice what Bezos paid for the post. He has also obtained the San Diego Union-Tribune, Hoy in Spanish language and several small community newspapers, now grouped under a business nickname, the California Times.
Soon-Shiong, 65, wants to turn his flagship into a multimedia leviathan of independent and innovative journalism at the time of Trump – a source of reading, viewing and listening essential to rival the Washington Post and the New York Times.
"Can we compete with them? We can not, must, we have to compete with them," he said. Compete in a positive way for everything to prosper. "We must all be the bastions of democracy in this country.We must be this fourth state – institutions that will tell the news."
The doctor's mogul has an ambitious agenda to redress not only the false news – the " cancer of our time "- but also the short periods of attention … hyper-partisan speech.
" Because of this mobile device, you now have an absence of what I call a quiet reading " he said, patting his phone. "You have a generation (of which) brains have been wired to watch short pieces with no attention spans – a part of a physiological change in your brain, literally. "