Main Page Content:
UncategorizedRSS feed
-

Barry George ’scoop’ leaves a bad taste for News of the World

Posted by Axegrinder on 8 August 2008 at 09:12
Tags: Uncategorized

I hear there were red faces (with anger) at the weekend over at the News of the World and smug ones at The Sunday Mirror over their respective Barry George scoops.

The News of the World is understood to have paid £50,000 and Sky News £30,000 for an exclusive interview with Barry George, who was cleared on Friday of murdering BBC presenter Jill Dando.

But unknown to the NoW, The Sunday Mirror had also bagged an interview with George, via author Scott Lomax who had spoken to him on the phone earlier in the week.

The Mirror paid George nothing for the interview, which was released to PA late on Saturday night before the NoW came out with its story and photos.The Sunday Mirror newsdesk is understood to have put Lomax up in a London hotel for three days prior to publication to ensure he did not speak to any other media.

I’m told that the Mirror and Mail titles didn’t even bother bidding for the George interview because they felt that paying him would be inappropriate given his unsavoury past.

-

Taking a stand for a Nosh

Posted by Axegrinder on 8 August 2008 at 09:10
Tags: Uncategorized

The Facebook groups inspired by Giles “porn” Coren come thick and fast, if you’ll pardon the expression.
In the wake of his now infamous email attack on Times’ subs for allegedly ruining a joke in one of his restaurant reviews, a group has been set up called Support Giles Coren’s Stand for A Nosh.

So far it has only five members, including founder Geoff Baker, former PR man for Sir Paul McCartney.
For those readers who have led a sheltered life, “a nosh” is slang for “a blow job”, whereas “nosh” is Yiddish for “food”.

As Baker is a famously strict vegetarian, one is unable to say which use of the word “nosh” fascinated him the most, but he clearly enjoyed Coren’s spat with the subs.

-

Reginald Bosanquet strikes again

Posted by Axegrinder on 7 August 2008 at 08:00
Tags: Uncategorized

Another tale of thirsty News at Ten anchor Reginald Bosanquet reaches Axegrinder.

Ski journalist Arnie Wilson recalls the night Reggie gave him a wonderful scoop. Wilson explains: “I’d worked with him at ITN, and got to know him better at Anglia TV, where I produced a political programme called Probe (known to us all as a Grope).

Reggie and I would travel up to Norwich by train together, and we chatted about his alcoholic image. He would always insist that he needed one drink to perform better on air, but admitted two was too many.

“One night when I was doing a casual shift on the Daily Express, he rang me and said he was burgling his first wife’s London apartment to get back some furniture he regarded as his. I could run the story, he said, as long as I didn’t reveal my source or quote him!

“Well, you can imagine the Daily Express lawyers were a bit jittery about this but they finally accepted that Reggie was a mate and the source. It made a front-page exclusive.

“Sadly, some years later I wrote the front page piece at The Daily Mirror (during another shift) when Reggie died. He’s much missed.”

-

The trouble with 60th birthdays

Posted by Axegrinder on 6 August 2008 at 08:00
Tags: Uncategorized

With Paul Dacre’s 60th birthday on the horizon, media commentators are speculating who will inherit the crown from the great man when he retires. Not surprisingly, the name of his deputy, Alistair Sinclair, is touted by some Mail watchers.

If Sinclair does land the job, it will be further proof that the late Sir David English really was a remarkable talent-spotter. A source at Associated’s Derry Street HQ reminds me that, back in 1990, the Mail’s features department was headed by Sue Douglas, ably assisted by two features executives, Chris Williams and Alistair Sinclair.

Douglas went on to edit the Sunday Express, while Williams later got the editor’s chair at the Daily Express, before eventually returning to the bosom of the Mail family. Might Sinclair make it a hat-trick for English’s “golden generation”?

-

The inside story: our editor’s liver

Posted by Axegrinder on 5 August 2008 at 08:00
Tags: Uncategorized

Axegrinder raises his glass (filled with non-alcoholic German wine, obviously) to Marc Astley, editor of the Express & Echo in Exeter, who is currently putting his booze intake under the spotlight in an experiment for BBC Radio Devon. Astley, who is known to like a drop of red wine and the odd can of Kronenbourg 1664, will be examined by a liver expert at the end of the challenge and told just how much – or how little – damage he is doing to his body.

“If nothing else, this whole process has made me stop, think and question my habits and it has prompted people I know to look at their lifestyles too,” says Astley. “I’ve consumed more than 30 units over a seven-day period – that’s nine more than is recommended for a man.”

We love that sentence, especially the “more than 30 units” bit. Go on Marc, tell us exactly how many “more than 30”. Or are there some things the readers of the Express & Echo are better off not knowing?

-

Colin Myler loses out in tussle for Piers Morgan

Posted by Axegrinder on 4 August 2008 at 08:00
Tags: Uncategorized

Just to add to his woes, we understand News of the World editor Colin Myler is feeling distinctly miffed at Piers Morgan’s decision to sign on with the Mail on Sunday to write a new sports column.

Myler and his team had thought they had come to an agreement with Morgan that he would write a sports column for the NoW.

But they reckoned without the determination of MoS editor Peter Wright. When he learned of Morgan’s proposed link up with the NoW, sources say he told him he’d match or top whatever they were paying. Not surprisingly, Wright got his man!

-

A lesson in anger management from Giles Coren

Posted by Axegrinder on 31 July 2008 at 08:13
Tags: Uncategorized

Just when this column thought it might go two weeks without mentioning Giles “porn” Coren, the Times hack and would-be TV star decides to raise his profile in a most unfortunate way.

As anyone who has visited any media gossip website in the past week will know, Coren has let rip with another of his ballistic emails to the subs’ desk. This time he was unhappy with a change made to his copy in a restaurant review.

We won’t bore you with the details (it all comes down to blow jobs and the Yiddish word “nosh”) but will give you a flavour of his incredibly long and abusive email.

“I don’t really like people tinkering with my copy for the sake of tinkering … This was shit, shit sub-editing … There is no length issue. This is someone thinking ‘I’ll just remove this indefinite article because Coren is an illiterate c**t and I know best’ Well, you fucking don’t … I mean, fucking christ, don’t you read the copy? I am sorry if this looks petty … but I care deeply about my work and I hate to have it fucked up by shit subbing.”

Axegrinder wondered how this went down with the wider subbing community. A visit to online forum Subs UK provided a clear answer. “What a disgusting example of a man,” (Stephen Cunningsworth); “I think he had a point, if expressed in an extremely rude, long-winded and badly typed way,” (Kirsten Foster); “Decent subs lose their jobs when people throw their toys from the pram like this,” (Matthew Glasby); “I love his column, and perhaps he’s worth keeping happy, but what a sad specimen of a character,” (Sarah Richardson); “How unbelievably precious and self-important. If subs had to check every amend with the writers, newspapers and magazines would never would never get published,” (James Pringle); “I’ve given up expecting to be treated like a human being and only do minimal changes because I can’t be bothered with the egos,” (Chloe Chapman); “What he probably doesn’t realise, the Daddy-was-a-columnist-too little chap is that the subs must give about 1,000th of a fuck about his copy compared with him,” (Simon Busch).

Coren is not the first writer to send scathing missives to subs. When Julie Burchill was in her prime she did a similar thing to Mail on Sunday subs, accusing them of massacring her copy. They hit back by producing their own badges which proudly declared “I butchered Burchill”.

Perhaps Times subs should respond with their own badge and slogan. How about “We’re the c**ts that cut Coren”?

-

Business as usual, thank you very much

Posted by Axegrinder on 31 July 2008 at 08:09
Tags: Uncategorized

Young Henry Deedes tells readers of The Independent’s media diary that Press Gazette is not commissioning work beyond the 15 August edition.

A curious suggestion that would have been scotched as “complete bollocks”, to use the patois of his boss Roger Alton, if he had bothered to call anyone at PG ­towers to check it out.

Press Gazette is currently commissioning away for September.

-

Challenging times just got more challenging

Posted by Axegrinder on 16 July 2008 at 08:35
Tags: Uncategorized

Just four days after announcing that eight people from editorial were being made redundant, management at The Press in York have displayed a curious way of attempting to lift spirits.

Axegrinder has seen a memo sent to all reporters by Scott Armstrong, head of content. He writes that:

[L]evels of creativity and productivity being displayed at this current time need to be improved. By way of example, the prospects for tomorrow’s paper have all, but a couple, been sourced by the newsdesk (including the splash) or are ring-ins handed out by the desk. Very little is being brought in or created by yourselves.

This is not the standard we as a professional newsroom should be reaching. We should be more than simple press releases and ring-ins. You have all been given patch days and FoI Fridays,  which should have helped bring in exclusives,  but I have seen little result from patch days, and FoI Fridays just seem to have been forgotton [sic] weeks ago.

I know these are challenging times but I urge you to remember that finding your own exclusive material has to be more satisfying than turning around something handed out by the newsdesk. That isn’t journalism – it is the so-called churnalism.

-

News values? What news values?

Posted by Axegrinder on 16 July 2008 at 08:00
Tags: Uncategorized

On the NCTJ’s website is a page of “career advice” that poses the question: What do newspaper editors look for? It then lists the qualities would-be journalists must demonstrate to convince an editor they are worth appointing. Top of the list is “an interest in current affairs at all levels“.

But is that still the case? What are school-leavers to make of this lead item in a recent column by The Daily Mirror’s Polly Hudson: “I’m not exactly up on current affairs. I never watch the news because it’s far too depressing and the clothes are awful.”

Does this mean Trinity Mirror is now more interested in finding the next Polly than the next Pilger?

Next Posts Previous Posts

-

Advertisement

E-mail Newsletter Signup

-

Advertisement

-

Advertisement