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Re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
Local high street. People paid to read my stuff. The mugs. :D
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Reporter Political editor for a newspaper Editor of two local papers Editor of a national magazine Press officer to the leader of a major political party Press officer for the BBC |
Re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
Please stick to the topic which is the scandal at News Corp and throughout the Press and Media Industry, not the origins of individual papers or members skills.
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It's a pity you don't pay more attention to your step father's experience though. If you're still clinging to the idea that the News of the World was essentially just the Sun on a Sunday, you really weren't paying attention at all. |
Re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
Always found it odd that the Sundays have a different staff. How do they fund it all for a once a week paper? Do only a small minority stay exclusive to the Sunday title in order to get the big stories and the rest pitch in with the other content?
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There tends to be a greater emphasis on investigation and feature pieces in a Sunday paper. The NOTW, to take a topical example, was proud of its emphasis on crime fighting. People misunderstand Sunday papers because they assume, from the title, that they are basically an extension of the daily paper. They are more easily understood when viewed for what they are - a weekly publication, with staffing levels and production schedules to match (not unlike the regional weekly title I used to write for, although we came out on a Friday rather than a Sunday). And don't for a minute think that staff at the Sun on Sunday will stand at the water cooler telling the hacks at the daily paper what exclusives they'll be running that week. Competition between the two will be intense. |
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As a matter of fact there may once have been a fair bit of truth in that, but Murdoch put paid to a lot of the old practices. Any weekly paper will have staff levels set at the level appropriate to the pattern of work during the week. There could well be a degree of shared workload when it comes to filing inconsequential bits and pieces of news copy that fill the gaps on the pages in the daily and the Sunday papers, but the bulk of the work on a Sunday paper is the big-hitting investigative stuff and there's no substitute for man hours when it comes to pulling all that together (especially now they can no longer gather their information by simply blagging, or hacking voicemails). ---------- Post added at 23:28 ---------- Previous post was at 22:10 ---------- Breaking: Sun on Sunday launches this coming weekend. ---------- Post added at 23:30 ---------- Previous post was at 23:28 ---------- http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-17092863 |
Re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
Yuk! The Sun is a vile paper.. the last thing we need is a Sunday edition :(
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It's still difficult to tell, but from the article on the Sun website it's looking like they're going for a seventh daily edition rather than a traditional Sunday paper.
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Anyway, The Sun on Sunday will be sold this coming...err..Sunday. I don't really agree with the outrage over it, they are entitled to publish a paper on Sunday. The time since the closure of the NOTW combined with the loss of a big name brand means this wasn't a cynical ploy either.
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Re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
I don't think Murdoch is a fit and proper person to be in charge of any part of his media empire.However I suspect that he'll emerge battered,tainted but uncharged after all the investigations and inquiries have finished.Everyone else will have their reputations shredded though as a sacrifice.
What I am hoping is that politicians have learned the lesson that getting too cosy with any journalist/newspaper/media organisation is not a good idea and that perhaps not sleeping around/having a hand in the public till/committing fraud might actually keep them clear of being manipulated by said media as a consequence. I'm also hoping that the Met and other police forces will get their houses in order and finally sort out the corruption that has crept into their ranks because of the media and that the rest of us will start to take the idea of data protection rather more seriously than we do now. |
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