Ok, the smarter and more observant amongst you will have realised that there never was a Part Un - that's only because Part Deux sounds better.
When you think of a dangerous occupation you automatically think of medics in war zones, policemen in Mexico and those guys who put out oil rig fires - what you don't think of is a journalist working in their home country. Unless of course you're talking about Turkey as we know it now.
Tonight the Zaman office in Yenibosna were raided by the Polis, totally illegal and there wasn't a jot anyone could do about it. They didn't hold back... helicopters above, panzers outside and dozens of masked robocops smashing down doors and breaking open filing cabinets and cupboards.
You add to this the Hurriyet journalist facing twenty three years in jail for highlighting the fact that pro government judges and prosecutors were allowed to purchase property at a substantial discount (100,000tl +) in a state run property sale.
But lets not forget the other dailies Bugün and Millet who were seized last week, and the weekly magazines now publishing under pro AKP trusteeship - dozens of employees summarily dismissed.
Lets also not forget the hundreds, yes hundreds, of journalists and media personal now languishing in Silivri Prison.
I've worked in, lived in, holidayed in and overall enjoyed my time and association with Turkey over the past twenty years or so - but I've got to say, it's becoming a more unpleasant country week by week these days.
Maybe I should aspire for the Fethiye bubble viewpoint...
JF