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Kate Middleton jelly bean story prompts amusing Independent prank url

Posted by Axegrinder on 19 April 2011 at 10:38
Tags: The Independent, Uncategorized, sub-editors

Newsdesk demands for ever more stories about Kate Middleton and the Royal Wedding may be pushing hacks to breaking point.

As evidence, I cite this piece in The Independent from Monday about a jellybean resembling Kate Middleton which is being sold on Ebay.

Check out the url. Was it penned by whichever online news functionary was tasked with following up the story from the Telegraph in pursuit of a cheap traffic boost? Or is it the work of some outside prankster?

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/utter-PR-fiction-but-people-love-this-shit-so-fuck-it-lets-just-print-it-2269573.html

11.20am update: I see from comments below that - for reasons that are far beyond me - this fun url probably didn’t come from inside the Independent. Although it does come up when you do a search for ‘jelly bean’ on the Independent website. Any ho, it makes a good point.

Update#2: SEO specialist Malcolm Coles has explained more about all this. Apparently  you can change their urls to anything you want provided you keep in the “unique identifier number”.

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Independent guilty of byline banditry with use of Kelvin MacKenzie’s hackademia attack

Posted by Axegrinder on 11 April 2011 at 09:49
Tags: Kelvin MacKenzie, The Independent

Comments from former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie dismissing journalism academia as “make-work projects for retired journalists” stirred up the world of hackademia nicely on Friday.

His words appeared as a picture bylined article in the Viewspaper section of The Independent - an unusual place to find a MacKenzie byline.

It now turns out that MacKenzie hasn’t been freelancing for the Indy, but that the piece was in fact adapted from an interview with the former Sun editor carried out by student journalist Harriet Thurley which first appeared in City’s alumni magazine XCity.

This attribution, missing from the print version of the piece, now appears online.

Nice exclusive for Harriet. Shame on the Indy for denying her a byline and rather misleading its readers.

Ironic that a piece deriding journalism education should provide ample evidence of the need for such training.

Harriet has blogged about her encounter with MacKenzie here.

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Q: Has a cure been found for the common cold? A: No.

Posted by Axegrinder on 2 November 2010 at 11:30
Tags: The Independent

Experienced newspaper readers will know that when the headline ends in a question mark, the answer is always no.

So Axegrinder held on to his hat when he saw today’s ‘i’ front page headline stating: Has a cure been found for the common cold?

But then as ‘i’ claims to be targeting a new generation of time-poor commuters who don’t currently buy newspapers perhaps they fell for it. Those who forked out £1 for The Times would have been given the rather less sensational page 11 headline: “Scientists one step closer to a cure for the common cold”.

The discovery by Cambridge researchers showing that antibodies can fight viruses once they have entered cells “may open up new avenues for developing antiviral drugs”, the boffins tell The Times, opening up the possibility of a cure for the cold some time in the future.

For 20p i is amazing value, and a great round-up for the all the news for someone in a hurry - and its dedicated staff of ten production journalists must work incredibly hard to get it out each day. But I think they could have done better with the two other front page headlines as well.

The ‘Quiet, please. It’s a rock concert’ headline about Boy George, also on the front, teases a feature inside about a rant by the pop singer at a charity concert which was reported by the News of the World on 17 October (paywall protected). And I couldn’t help thinking of the late Keith Waterhouse’s advice on use of ’screamers’ when reading the Pimp my poppy! headline in the bottom right corner:

“An exclamation mark cannot tell the reader that a particular passage is funny. The most it can tell him is that it was meant to be funny.”

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Guardian forgets the most famous flaming victim of all – its very own Max Gogarty

Posted by Axegrinder on 9 February 2009 at 16:27
Tags: Emily Gould, James Silver, Max Gogarty, New York Times Magazine, Paul Gogarty, The Guardian, The Independent, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown

Monday’s Guardian carries an interesting piece by James Silver about flaming, “where hostile messages about writers are posted on forums or blogs”. 

For those unaware of this new phenomenon, Silver explains that this is feedback from readers that is “instant, ubiquitous, and sometimes downright unpleasant — with some comment threads on the web quickly turning into a feeding frenzy”. 

He cites examples involving writers Emily Gould of the New York Times Magazine and Yasmin Alibhai-Brown of The Independent.

But strangely he makes no mention of the most famous recent example of a British writer being flamed into silence — Max Gogarty and his unfortunate gap year travel blog that appeared … on The Guardian’s website

For those with short memories, last February the Guardian unveiled Gogarty under the headline “Max, 19, hits the road” and this standfirst: “Meet Max Gogarty, 19, from north London, spends his money on food, booze and skinny jeans, writes for Skins in his spare time. He’s off to India and Thailand to have a good time, and you can join him in his weekly blog.”

Sadly, the blog lasted just one day, perhaps chiefly because the Guardian upset its senstive readers by forgetting to mention that Max is the son of Paul Gogarty, whose byline is seen frequently on the paper’s travel pages.

Accusations of nepotism featured often among the 10 pages of readers’ comments that appeared before the thread was closed within 24 hours of Max making his debut as a Guardian blogger.

For some reason readers failed to warm to Max’s prose, including gems such as: “I’m kinda shitting myself about travelling”, “I’ll do my best to tell of the debauched beach parties” and “every one I’ve spoken to is making no secret of the fact that Thailand should be pretty damn decadent”.

The flamers reacted instantly with comments such as: “who’s [sic] son is max then? terrible terrible terrible, shame on you guardian”; “the cynic in me is asking, how come Max has managed to get his own blog to write about the same thing that thousands do each year?”; “Oh Christ, this guy’s going to get an absolute hammering”; “Great to see nepotism is alive and well” and “This must be a joke. This guy is going to be torn to shreds. Either someone is very naive or it is pure genius – the blog and resulting comments has the potential to be one of the most amusing things on the web.”

And indeed that is what it became, and there are still two Facebook groups honouring Max’s brief but never-to-be-forgotten blog.

Twelve months on, surely it’s time the Guardian told us what became of poor Max.

 

 

 

 

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Wonder why Woolies is filling Jane Moore’s column?

Posted by Axegrinder on 26 November 2008 at 01:17
Tags: Catherine Ostler, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, Daily Telegraph, Evening Standard, Gary Farrow, Gordon Ramsay, Jane Moore, Liz Hunt, Sue Carroll, Tana Ramsay, The Independent, The Sun, Virginia Ironside

As expected, Fleet Street’s women columnists have leapt on the Gordon Ramsay ’scandal’ like a pack of vicious, sharp-tongued hyenas. 

Leading the assault in recent days have been Allison Pearson in the Daily Mail (“As his monumental hypocrisy was revealed, the 42-year-old Celebrity Father of the Year could at least have shown some embarrassment, even a little shame”); Sue Carroll in the Daily Mirror (“Any man who doesn’t understand that a secret lover, left to simmer unattended, will one day finally explode like a toxic stew can only be described as totally naive or completely arrogant”); Liz Hunt in the Daily Telegraph (“If Gordon has strayed … then I hope, in private, that pots are being hurled, that a few kitchen knives have found their way out of the block, and the F-word is issuing from Tana’s mouth rather than his”); Catherine Ostler in the Evening Standard (“Somewhere in this sorry saga is a victim, but who? Surely it’s Tana Ramsay”) and Virginia Ironside in The Independent (“He’s been a complete wally, and no one would blame Tana for giving a bollocking rather more fiery than he would deliver in one of his restaurants”).

Meanwhile, over at The Sun,  Jane Moore wrote in her column on Tuesday: “My local Woolworths has just closed down and now the entire chain is on sale for £1.”

Er, quite.

As readers of Axegrinder on Monday will know, Gordon Ramsay’s press spokesman is Gary Farrow, head of The Corporation PR agency. Farrow is also married to Jane Moore.

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