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Video: How the Scott Trust remit included the Observer in 2004

Posted by Axegrinder on 7 September 2009 at 14:42
Tags: The Guardian, The Observer

A Guardian promotional video has landed in my in-box dating from around 2004 - happier days for The Guardian and Observer.

Back then it seems that Guardian Newspapers boss at the time Carolyn McCall (now chief executive of Guardian Media Group) had a different take on the remit of the Scott Trust from the current interpretation.

She says: “The whole purpose of the Scott Trust is to ensure that The Guardian and The Observer exist in perpetuity - that they are totally independent, they can say what they want and behave the way they want without a proprietor. That is a fantastic thing and we think it gives us a great loyalty with not only with our readers but also with our staff.”

Fast-forward to 2009 and McCall is considering closing The Observer to stem GMG losses and safeguard the future of journalism of The Guardian “in perpetuity”.

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Observer hack feels Twitter outrage of Aggers and Lily Allen

Posted by Axegrinder on 25 August 2009 at 16:15
Tags: BBC, The Observer

Will Buckley, the Observer’s senior sports writer, has roused the Twitter mobs this week thanks to a critical article aimed at BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew centring on Saturday’s Test Match Special interview slot which featured pop star Lily Allen.

Apparently bemused by Agnew’s unabashed fawning over Allen, Buckley suggested in the piece that “Aggers had positioned himself firmly on the pervy side of things”.

Cue outrage. Buckley’s line proved to be the springboard for several pages of critical comments and a subsequent Twitter storm.

Agnew blankly tweeted: “I gave Will Buckley 24 hrs to apologise for calling me a pervert, and he has declined.” Moments later he told his followers the email address of Buckley’s boss - and Observer sports editor - Brian Oliver, and suggested that anyone who “may feel moved by this” could register their views.

He then admitted that he had “taken being called a pervert quite badly.” No kidding, Aggers.

But hark. Is that the sound of a miniature pop princess jumping into the fray?

Knocking Buckley’s bouncer out of the ground Lily Allen tweeted: “I dont know one person that agrees with The Observer on this one. Maybe this is Buckley’s attempt at creating a name for himself as the demise of the Observer Monthlys (including Sport) are imminent. Sorry @aggerscricket , I should have left you all alone.”

The spat has now taken a turn for the mainstream, with the Telegraph penning an article on the controversy. The Telegraph? Interested in a story that is vaguely related to Twitter? I never would have guessed.

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Guardian’s rethink over who “calls the shots” at Indy

Posted by Axegrinder on 13 July 2009 at 22:47
Tags: John Mulholland, Roger Alton, Simon Kelner, The Guardian, The Observer

The reappearance of Simon Kelner in today’s Media Guardian 100, the “definitive guide to the people who really matter in the media”, will surely have left some members of the selection panel rather red-faced.

Why? Go back 12 months and this is how the Guardian justified removing from the list the Independent managing director and editor-in-chief, and introducing Indy editor Roger Alton at No. 48: “It is Alton who now wields the power at the daily paper, said our panel, not Kelner. ‘Roger has still got it all to do but I think he will put the Independent on the map,’ said one panellist. ‘Alton is the one that matters, not Kelner. He is the one calling the shots.”

But what is the panel saying now? “Events of the past 12 months have thrust him [Kelner] firmly back into centre stage.” Which can also be translated as: “The panel really made an utter balls-up of this one.”

Kelner returns at No. 57. Alton is kicked off the list.

Meanwhile, The Guardian puts current Observer editor John Mulholland firmly in his place by once again failing to include him in the top 100. The editors of The Sunday Times and Mail on Sunday win a place but the Guardian’s stablemate is snubbed. While Alton was in charge of The Obs, he was always included on the list.

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Guardian’s Jemima Kiss is left wanting more

Posted by Axegrinder on 8 March 2009 at 21:18
Tags: Jemima Kiss, The Guardian, The Observer

Guardian and Observer staff may have shiny new offices to work in but management had better note: hungry journalists are not happy journalists. 

Guardian reporter and digital publishing guru Jemima Kiss has revealed she is not in love with the fare being served up in the office canteen. 

She Twittered: “There’s obviously a credit crunch in the Guardian canteen. Admittedly I do have a big appetite but seriously guys – sparrow portions.” 

It’s not the first time Kiss has moaned about the grub on offer. Last month she told her followers: “Going on a mission to find decent fish and chips as our canteen has a batter FAIL.”

Axegrinder hesitates to mention it but perhaps her “big appetite” can be forgiven. We understand she is, as they say, eating for two.

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‘the’ Observer brought down to size by Guardian group’s new integrated style guide

Posted by Axegrinder on 19 December 2008 at 14:03
Tags: Amelia Hodsdon, Bob Poulton, David Marsh, The Guardian, The Observer

So farewell then, ‘The Observer’. Say hello to ‘the Observer’.

The loss of the upper-case ‘t’ from the Sunday paper’s title is just one of the changes resulting from the unveiling today of a unified style guide for the Observer, the Guardian and guardian.co.uk.

Axegrinder hears that some people at the company’s new Kings Cross home regard this little change as symbolising the paper’s overall defeat in the style wars. The new “integrated” guide has been edited by a duo from the Guardian, David Marsh, assistant editor, production, and Amelia Hodson, a senior sub-editor.

Earlier today, subs on the Obs received an email from Bob Poulton, the Sunday paper’s production editor, announcing: “The Observer and Guardian style guides have been integrated with effect from this week. The revisions have been agreed by a working group representing the Observer, the Guardian and guardian.co.uk.

“This is a necessary step for cross-platform working and web publishing. In some cases, the Observer (note the lower case t) has adopted Guardian style; in others, the Guardian has adopted Observer style; in yet others, style has been updated and is different from former Observer and Guardian styles.”

Poulton then lists the “most significant entries and changes” for Observer subs. These are as follows (non-subs, look away now, for you will surely die of boredom):

accents as well as French and German, use on Spanish and Irish words, and proper names in any language where possible

act caps for name of act, eg Official Secrets Act

Andalucía

antisemitic

apostrophes follow Observer style with possessives and always use ’s, rather than be guided by pronunciation, eg Dickens’s house, Gallas’s own goal, Jesus’s disciples

art movements generally l/c: art deco, art nouveau, cubism, dadaism, expressionism, gothic, impressionism, pop art, surrealism etc*but Bauhaus, Modern (in the sense of Modern British, to distinguish it from “modern art”), pre-Raphaelite, Romantic (to differentiate between a romantic painting and a Romantic painting) 

barbecue 

billion £3bn, 3bn apples but 3 billion people (and same for million)

bogy (ghost, menace), bogey (golf), bogie (truck)

book titles the Observer retains italics for titles of books etc; guardian.co.uk does not, so subs need to change italics to roman for the web and vice versa (and same for film titles, magazines, newspapers etc)

capitals as Guardian style (see full entry in style guide) - note that prime minister etc now l/c

census

cold war (and most other wars) l/c

dashes the en dash (option-hyphen), as already used by the Observer, will replace both the em dash used by the Guardian and the short dash (hyphen) used by guardian.co.uk

dates as Observer style - note that the week for all our publications now starts on Sunday

decades 80s etc

eg, ie etc no full points

encyclopedia not aedia

foreign names Le/De/Di/Van have initial caps when used without first name, eg Ruud van Nistelrooy becomes Van Nistelrooy on subsequent mentions

Gaddafi is the new style for both Observer and Guardian

hip-hop

Hezbollah is the new style for both Observer and Guardian

job titles all l/c

Kathmandu

Land Rover no hyphen

Luxembourgeois live in Luxembourg

Marrakech

No 10

the Observer not The Observer (and same for all newspapers)

% not per cent (in both text and furniture)

president Barack Obama, the US president, but President Barack Obama

pin number

privy council, privy counsellor

al-Qaida not al-Qaeda

quotation marks use double quotation marks, with single marks inside - “David described this policy as ’sensible’, although not everyone agreed.”

Qu’ran not Koran

register office (until now the Observer has been capping this up)

stock exchange, stockmarket

third world l/c if you must (but developing countries preferable)

verbs end in -ed for past tense (he burned the cakes), -t for past participle (the cakes were burnt)

the west

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Our Christmas party tip for Guardian and Observer hacks – bring a moustache

Posted by Axegrinder on 11 December 2008 at 12:04
Tags: Alan Rusbridger, The Guardian, The Observer

Hacks from The Guardian and The Observer can briefly let their hair down tonight and forget the ordeal of moving to their new King’s Cross offices when GNL holds its Christmas party. 

And Axegrinder would love to be joining the happy throng, if only to see how the refined, piano-playing editorial supremo, Alan Rusbridger, enjoys the entertainment — a Studio 54-themed night provided by the chaps from South London gay club Horse Meat Disco. 

A Farringdon Road insider tells me: “I went there once and it was an eye-opener. That’s why I was mildly surprised when they announced them as the entertainment for the Christmas party. I seem to recall that a sizable part of the crowd was dressed as butchers for some reason, complete with bloody aprons and cuts of meat.

 “They had a specially built venue at Glastonbury this year and there seemed to be a lot of trannies there who were going round shoving poppers under people’s noses, and various other pharmaceuticals. You had to be wearing a moustache to get in, and they were selling them for a quid each at the door.” 

Horse Meat Disco’s website describes its Sunday nights at The Eagle in South London as: “The queer party for everyone; Homos and Heteros, club kids, bears, fashionistas, naturists, guerilla drag queens and ladies who munch.” It also promises “spontaneous acts of exhibitionism”. 

So moustaches and amyl nitrate all round then, Mr Rusbridger.

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