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yesman 25-11-2006 00:32

OJ 'confession'
 
Ridiculous news from across the pond.

Quote:

It must have seemed like a good idea to someone. The man most Americans believe is behind their country's most infamous murder agrees to a virtual confession in a book and TV interview. Surely it would be a ratings and publishing smash.
Murdoch looks like he has done a bad bit of business for a change, but how OJ Simpson has not been put back in the dock is beyond belief.....

It would seem that if you are a superstar with a large deposit in your bank account, you can pay for good lawyers to get you off the hook...

After reading the press at the time of the murder, all reports seemed to point to Simpson as the guilty party, (it would appear that the majority of Americans think that too), so why has this book been allowed to be published along with a TV interview about his assumptions of what might have been if he had commited the murder so soon after the event.

American law seems more like a soap opera to me, especially in this case, and I am heartened that most Americans are of the same opinion.

Link

Damien 25-11-2006 00:44

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
It has been cancelled now though

kronas 25-11-2006 01:12

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Damien (Post 34166251)
It has been cancelled now though

yep, fox wanted to air it, but murdoch stepped in after the media and public started turning against the idea :erm:

Gareth 25-11-2006 01:16

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
How bizarre... not about Murdoch or Fox, but that Simpson would do such a thing. Very strange :(

punky 25-11-2006 02:06

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by yesman (Post 34166245)
how OJ Simpson has not been put back in the dock is beyond belief.....

Not really. Protection against double jeopardy is in the US constitution.

---------- Post added at 02:06 ---------- Previous post was at 01:45 ----------

Also isn't beyond belief is the Guardian's usual stance of telling what to believe (we should hate Murdoch, in case noone noticed), in what's really a straight forward story, which is supposed to be about Simpson, instead of Murdoch.

Jules 25-11-2006 13:32

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
He was as guilty as sin, I watched the case and how they could find him not guilty is beyond me, even one of his lawyers looked shocked when the verdict was announced!

TheNorm 25-11-2006 13:38

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jules (Post 34166413)
He was as guilty as sin, I watched the case and how they could find him not guilty is beyond me, even one of his lawyers looked shocked when the verdict was announced!

If I remember correctly, the jury were instructed to ignore some of the evidence, as the people giving the evidence had lied under oath about something else.

Jules 25-11-2006 17:23

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Yeah and it didn't help that one of the policemen giving evidence was proved to have lied and was known to have used racist comments in the past :(

timewarrior2001 25-11-2006 18:38

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
I personally think it was the fact the damned glove didn't even fit him.

Yeah you would have thought they would have discovered that BEFORE getting to court.

hatedbythemail 25-11-2006 21:15

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by punky (Post 34166282)
Not really. Protection against double jeopardy is in the US constitution.

indeed

---------- Post added at 02:06 ---------- Previous post was at 01:45 ----------

Quote:

[Also isn't beyond belief is the Guardian's usual stance of telling what to believe (we should hate Murdoch, in case noone noticed), in what's really a straight forward story, which is supposed to be about Simpson, instead of Murdoch.
not sure i follow you but it was a murdoch imprint whioch was to publish the book, murdoch's fox to broadcast the interviw and murdoch radio franchies to boot - though some refused which may have been the last straw for rupes. the story is then about both oj and murdoch, murdoch having provided a multi-media platform which began with the advance for the book.

TheNorm 25-11-2006 21:19

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by timewarrior2001 (Post 34166535)
I personally think it was the fact the damned glove didn't even fit him....

Quote:

During the June 15, 1995 court session, Simpson put on the gloves and they appeared to be too small. The prosecution contends that the gloves, once drenched in blood, have shrunk.
http://www.cnn.com/US/OJ/evidence/glove/

timewarrior2001 25-11-2006 21:23

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TheNorm (Post 34166642)

Theory that has never been proven, iirc

TheNorm 25-11-2006 22:45

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by timewarrior2001 (Post 34166644)
Theory that has never been proven, iirc

Professor Herbert MacDonell, director of the Laboratory of Forensic Science in New York, testified about an experiment he performed on a pair of extra large Aris light gloves smeared in blood.

Quote:

...And I would say simply that it goes from a man's size to a lady's size. It's very much smaller. But either way, it's incredible shrinkage.
http://simpson.walraven.org/sep18.html

punky 25-11-2006 23:12

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34166636)
not sure i follow you but it was a murdoch imprint whioch was to publish the book, murdoch's fox to broadcast the interviw and murdoch radio franchies to boot - though some refused which may have been the last straw for rupes. the story is then about both oj and murdoch, murdoch having provided a multi-media platform which began with the advance for the book.

Well, how relevent is Murdoch to the article? Not at all. It doesn't matter who's publishing or not publishing it. Its interesting to know who publishing it, but it shouldn't constitute the major direction of the article. It should be about OJ, shouldn't it?

I just think its ridiculous and makes The Granuiad look stupid. Its not even subtle. I am not saying most other media outlets are better, as people read what they want to read. I don't think TG should be so holier-than-thou about it though.

Caff 25-11-2006 23:41

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by timewarrior2001 (Post 34166535)
I personally think it was the fact the damned glove didn't even fit him.

Yeah you would have thought they would have discovered that BEFORE getting to court.


Has anyone ever tried to slide on their leather gloves over surgical ones?
Ermm- for a laugh at the ridiculousness of the 'test' my friend did. 'tis difficult to say the least. That test convinced me that he was guilty. It was a farce.

hatedbythemail 26-11-2006 00:58

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by punky (Post 34166695)
Well, how relevent is Murdoch to the article? Not at all. It doesn't matter who's publishing or not publishing it. Its interesting to know who publishing it, but it shouldn't constitute the major direction of the article. It should be about OJ, shouldn't it?

I just think its ridiculous and makes The Granuiad look stupid. Its not even subtle. I am not saying most other media outlets are better, as people read what they want to read. I don't think TG should be so holier-than-thou about it though.

much as i admire your tenacity in suggesting that the guardian is simply promoting an anti-murdoch agenda:

1. the story is about the publication of a controversial book, one which has been condemned universally. the publisher of that book is clearly a significant part of that story. if al jazeera broadcast images of beheadings (which they havent) would that be part of the story?
2. murdoch himself felt compelled to make a statement pointing out he felt there was an error of judgement. isn't that rather telling.
3. try searching on googling news under "oj simpson murdoch". the 3000+ links do not i'm afraid all go back to the guardian.co.uk

punky 26-11-2006 02:54

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34166755)
much as i admire your tenacity in suggesting that the guardian is simply promoting an anti-murdoch agenda:

1. the story is about the publication of a controversial book, one which has been condemned universally. the publisher of that book is clearly a significant part of that story. if al jazeera broadcast images of beheadings (which they havent) would that be part of the story?

Thanx for the compliment. I think.

Anyway, not sure what you're trying to say. Whats more important, the terrorists or Al Jazeera choosing to broadcast them? If so, then the terrorists, I would have thought. I am not saying Murdoch shouldn't have been mentioned, but this story (which is supposed to be about OJ, not Murdoch) isn't supposed to be stepping stone to give them an excuse to launch into a diatribe of him. I am suprised the author even leaves it until the 4th sentence to start. Actually, look at the title and preface. Before the article has begun, the author is setting the tone and direction (i.e. bias) by addressing Murdoch directly. Why address Murdoch, when OJ Simpson is actually writing the damn thing, I don't know. Shouldn't it be "now US turn on OJ", as its his book? About OJ's words and events in OJ's life? The publisher is quite irrelevent here, as its the contents that matter. If it was published by anyone else, would it make its contents any less repulsive? Caused less of a reaction?

And there's the second thing - why the diatribe? Why not just punish fact and let the reader decide? Rather than coercing them down an ever-narrowing thought-corridor. Ironicly Bill O' Reilly gets criticised for doing precisely that.

And thirdly, why the "what liberals have failed..." part? Why the divisive us-and-them mentality? Hardly the attitude of unity which the left are supposed to espouse. Incidently interesting turn of phrase. I class liberalism as allowing people to do things without hinderance from the government. Doing things like, I don't know, spending some of the money you've earnt into a TV station.

Quote:

2. murdoch himself felt compelled to make a statement pointing out he felt there was an error of judgement. isn't that rather telling.
Telling of what? A major book and TV deal had been scuppered, so the very least i'd expect is a comment from the companies involved. However, that doesn't give the author an excuse for point 1 above.

Quote:

3. try searching on googling news under "oj simpson murdoch". the 3000+ links do not i'm afraid all go back to the guardian.co.uk
Again, Murdoch is involved in this, but should not be hijacked the way it is. He's a very peripheral character in this at best. OJ should be the main focus here.

hatedbythemail 26-11-2006 14:12

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by punky (Post 34166799)
Thanx for the compliment. I think.

Anyway, not sure what you're trying to say. Whats more important, the terrorists or Al Jazeera choosing to broadcast them? If so, then the terrorists, I would have thought.

my point is that al jazeeera would be condemned for broadcasting as i'm sure you can imagine; in fact i think they may have been condemned for broadcasting such stuff when they didnt.

Quote:

I am not saying Murdoch shouldn't have been mentioned, but this story (which is supposed to be about OJ, not Murdoch) isn't supposed to be stepping stone to give them an excuse to launch into a diatribe of him. I am suprised the author even leaves it until the 4th sentence to start. Actually, look at the title and preface. Before the article has begun, the author is setting the tone and direction (i.e. bias) by addressing Murdoch directly. Why address Murdoch, when OJ Simpson is actually writing the damn thing, I don't know.
it really is simple - the pr machine kicked in for the book. the pr machine instigated by the murdoch imprint which paid a $3.5m advance (i think) for the book. the pr machine stumbled when the world went "ay up, don't like this idea much", indeed that process started at fox news. murdoch is inextricably intertwined in this story. take another example. if a british newspaper were to pay ian hunter or some such for is memoirs do you not think that paper would be a big part of the story?
Quote:

Shouldn't it be "now US turn on OJ", as its his book? About OJ's words and events in OJ's life?
of course oj is at the heart of this but we are all familiar with his trial etc - the angle on who and why is publishing and why they decided not too is very much the story. murdoch recognised the damage to his businesses going ahead with publication which is why he halted them and made a statement.
Quote:

The publisher is quite irrelevent here, as its the contents that matter. If it was published by anyone else, would it make its contents any less repulsive? Caused less of a reaction?
the contents would remain the same; the story is in why any sane publisher would want to touch them with a bargepole. it would not have had to been murdoch for this to have been a story but i concede that the fact that it is murdoch makes it a stronger one. he's high profile, the world's biggest media magnate and elements of his empire effectiveltytold him where to shove the oj book

Quote:

And there's the second thing - why the diatribe? Why not just punish fact and let the reader decide? Rather than coercing them down an ever-narrowing thought-corridor. Ironicly Bill O' Reilly gets criticised for doing precisely that.
what's not factual? has there not been a masdsive outcry about publication of this book in the us? (and pardon my ignorance, but dunno who bill o'reilly is :) )

Quote:

And thirdly, why the "what liberals have failed..." part? Why the divisive us-and-them mentality? Hardly the attitude of unity which the left are supposed to espouse.
well a lot of liberals take issue with way fox, for example, reports things - you'll be aware of the allegations - so if the planned publication of this book has hurt his empire then they have succeed where liberals have failed. but there is a touch of hyperbole there.

Quote:

[Incidently interesting turn of phrase. I class liberalism as allowing people to do things without hinderance from the government. Doing things like, I don't know, spending some of the money you've earnt into a TV station.
not my definition. he can spend money on tv sations, radio, publishing - that doesnt mean he cant be criticised for the content those media bring to the public eye. (funnily enough, you're criticising the guardian which, in a libertarian way, is free from proprietal influence courtesy of the scott trust)

Quote:

Telling of what? A major book and TV deal had been scuppered, so the very least i'd expect is a comment from the companies involved. However, that doesn't give the author an excuse for point 1 above.
telling of murdoch's understanding that as his company commissioned the book it bore responsibility. they paid the man millions of dollars. also telling that he saw the potential damage to his empire which is he and not the head of the publishing firm* made the statement



* bet she's polishing up her cv right now though ;)



Quote:

Again, Murdoch is involved in this, but should not be hijacked the way it is. He's a very peripheral character in this at best. OJ should be the main focus here.
to quite jim royle, peripheral my -rse. incidentally, do you think another publisher would have touched this book?

---------- Post added at 13:12 ---------- Previous post was at 12:48 ----------

ps. i did a little experiment and searched google news again under "oj simpson murdoch". i ignored the first result because it was from the uk, and more pertinently the independent who's agenda I figure you would think too close to the guardian. so, the first non uk result: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald...n/16091634.htm

second sees ebay cominbg into the story http://www.actressarchives.com/news.php?id=2978 and an allegation by oj that regan books came up with the titel and that he didnt pitch the book to them., not sure how authoritative actressacrhives is mind ;)

third result, from lafayette indiana: http://www.jconline.com/apps/pbcs.dl...NION/611260310

fourth from salem oregon: http://159.54.226.83/apps/pbcs.dll/a.../61124038/1048

should I go on? :)

TheDaddy 26-11-2006 14:23

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34166959)
it really is simple - the pr machine kicked in for the book. the pr machine instigated by the murdoch imprint which paid a $3.5m advance (i think) for the book. the pr machine stumbled when the world went "ay up, don't like this idea much", indeed that process started at fox news. murdoch is inextricably intertwined in this story. take another example. if a british newspaper were to pay ian hunter or some such for is memoirs do you not think that paper would be a big part of the story? of course oj is at the heart of this but we are all familiar with his trial etc - the angle on who and why is publishing and why they decided not too is very much the story. murdoch recognised the damage to his businesses going ahead with publication which is why he halted them and made a statement. the contents would remain the same; the story is in why any sane publisher would want to touch them with a bargepole. it would not have had to been murdoch for this to have been a story but i concede that the fact that it is murdoch makes it a stronger one. he's high profile, the world's biggest media magnate and elements of his empire effectiveltytold him where to shove the oj book

---------- Post added at 13:12 ---------- Previous post was at 12:48 ----------

:)

Isn't OJ keeping that $3.5 million, so what was the error of judgement then, rewarding a murderer?

hatedbythemail 26-11-2006 14:27

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TheDaddy (Post 34166979)
Isn't OJ keeping that $3.5 million, so what was the error of judgement then, rewarding a murderer?

he's spenty the money allergedly. the error of judgement was clearly in commissioning the book (and related broadcast spin offs) in the first place. the advance paid just adds insult to injury.

TheDaddy 26-11-2006 14:33

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34166985)
he's spenty the money allergedly. the error of judgement was clearly in commissioning the book (and related broadcast spin offs) in the first place. the advance paid just adds insult to injury.

I wonder if he used it giving his victims families compensation? No, thought not :td:

Jules 26-11-2006 14:47

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
The man should have been locked up and the key thrown away!

punky 26-11-2006 15:59

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Firstly, I just saw a mistake in my post. It said: "Why not just punish fact and let the reader decide?", when it should be "Why not just publish fact and let the reader decide?" :dunce: Although I guess most knew what I meant.

Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34166959)
<snip>

With all due respect, I think you're really stretching the argument thin to try and take an issue abour OJ and wrap it around Murdoch.

Let me ask you this... If you were a reporter, would you write a different article if it was another PR firm that wasn't backed by Murdoch? Because surely if you did, then that's bias. I could only speculate that if it didn't involve Murdoch, then the article would have a completely different spin on it, but if it could be proven, i'd stick money on it.

I am not going to say any other media outlet is better, because I don't think any are, but, I really do resent Guardian's holier-than-thou attitude of itself, but also some of its readership, when to me at least, its far from that.

Incidently, its odd you seem to hate Fox News but don't know who Bill O' Reilly is. He's a commentator for Fox News, who's punished for having an opinion different to the far-left which is unacceptable in the day-and-age. Although I think he is an a******e about it, but he's still entitled to it.

hatedbythemail 26-11-2006 16:34

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
punky, your argument would hold so much more water if it was only the guardian taking this line. as it is the good ship punky is holed below the waterline on this one ;) :)

just scroll through those 3000+ news stories and see how many say pretty much exactly the same thing.

incidentally you should maybe read the monday media guardian section to see if the paper is as anti-murdoch as you suggest. they've been quite nice to young james of late and admiring of the he boldness and business acumen which lead to snaffling up those itv shares - albeit with coverage of those who criticise the move as anti-competitive (which is the way i see it ;) )


ps. i didnt say i hated fox news (but i did discover who bill o'reilly was as soon as i'd replied to your post)

---------- Post added at 15:25 ---------- Previous post was at 15:04 ----------

pps. if the guardian article got your goat just look what this well known pinko lefty broadsheet published on the story: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...amurdoch22.xml :)

---------- Post added at 15:28 ---------- Previous post was at 15:25 ----------

ppps and these anti rupe commies http://entertainment.timesonline.co....9-2463103.html ;)

---------- Post added at 15:34 ---------- Previous post was at 15:28 ----------

pppps as for these pinko liberal bedwetters they even quoted a loony left fringe publication, broadcast and cable, saying "Fox should cancel this evil stunt" http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/liv...n_page_id=1773 :)

timewarrior2001 26-11-2006 16:49

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
OJ keeping 3.5 million is nothng compared to the greediness shown by the famlies of the dead who seemed to think that suing OJ for the deaths and receiving 33million would make matters better.

**** them **** them all.

TheDaddy 26-11-2006 18:15

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by timewarrior2001 (Post 34167072)
OJ keeping 3.5 million is nothng compared to the greediness shown by the famlies of the dead who seemed to think that suing OJ for the deaths and receiving 33million would make matters better.

**** them **** them all.

I think it would, if they can't deprive him of his liberty, why not deprive him of his cash? No one say's they have to keep it or spend it on themselves, they could set up a memorial fund for their dead children for instance.

punky 27-11-2006 00:02

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34167050)
<snip>

Good post, I have to say. Although I have said throughout this thread that no other papers are better. Although I was suprised by the Telegraph's article, I didn't think The Times & Daily Mail weren't bad at all. The Times, I thought got the article about right. It mentions Murdoch where it has to, but has the balance right. Daily Mail wasn't as good but not as bad as the Guardian.

Do you know what I find interesting though? Most people of a certain political persausion (and Branson) keep up this pretense that all his media outlets are sole mouthpieces to Murdoch and we are all just intellectual lemmings that just accept and go along with everything that Murdoch's companies want to say/andvote for (which I find very insulting, actually), but surely the much-trumpetted reaction by prominent people within Murdoch's organisations, must put very big holes in that paranoid theory.

hatedbythemail 27-11-2006 10:04

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by punky (Post 34167407)
Good post, I have to say.

well , i think we can end this there ;) :D cheers for that

Quote:

Although I have said throughout this thread that no other papers are better. Although I was suprised by the Telegraph's article, I didn't think The Times & Daily Mail weren't bad at all. The Times, I thought got the article about right. It mentions Murdoch where it has to, but has the balance right. Daily Mail wasn't as good but not as bad as the Guardian.

Do you know what I find interesting though? Most people of a certain political persausion (and Branson) keep up this pretense that all his media outlets are sole mouthpieces to Murdoch and we are all just intellectual lemmings that just accept and go along with everything that Murdoch's companies want to say/andvote for (which I find very insulting, actually), but surely the much-trumpetted reaction by prominent people within Murdoch's organisations, must put very big holes in that paranoid theory.
bit more complicated than that i'd venture. this was an extreme case of particularly poor judgement by senior management. but the overall agenda is hardly going to change. but equally i accept your comment that a lot of people dont just believe what they see or read. a lot do though too. and one of the biggest issues is not so much what we read and watch as what we dont get to read and watch. this is a whole new debate though................

hatedbythemail 27-11-2006 20:43

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
hery you are punky, one from the guardian to cheer you up :) http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...957931,00.html


and last letter here to bring you back down :( ;) http://media.guardian.co.uk/mediagua...957599,00.html

punky 27-11-2006 21:49

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by hatedbythemail (Post 34167878)
hery you are punky, one from the guardian to cheer you up :) http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...957931,00.html


and last letter here to bring you back down :( ;) http://media.guardian.co.uk/mediagua...957599,00.html

Cheers for that. Couldn't read the bottom one, but the top one really shocked me, just unbelievable, that that letter could grace the pages of the Guardian. Guardian readers call The Sun unprofessional?

(Someone should tell Mr Brooker has 2.8 million registered users (and who knows how many anonymous ones), not "a few hundred").

So yeah, it did cheer me up, in a sort of immature sadist way.

hatedbythemail 27-11-2006 22:21

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by punky (Post 34167930)
Cheers for that. Couldn't read the bottom one, but the top one really shocked me, just unbelievable, that that letter could grace the pages of the Guardian. Guardian readers call The Sun unprofessional?

(Someone should tell Mr Brooker has 2.8 million registered users (and who knows how many anonymous ones), not "a few hundred").

So yeah, it did cheer me up, in a sort of immature sadist way.

i'm lost again but not an usual state. this is the letter though:


What a depressing week for journalism. In a lecture on the way different papers treat stories, I asked a young undergraduate how the Sun had played OJ Simpson. I should have known. There wasn't a line in the Murdoch tabloid. It matters little whether the spiking of a story, that in other circumstances might have merited a splash, was the result of a direct edict or a case of supine news executives second-guessing The Boss. The effect was the same - proprietorial censorship.
All in the same week which saw Kremlin-critic Alexander Litvinenko fighting for his life for investigating the murder of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, herself an outspoken critic of Vladimir Putin, shot dead at her Moscow apartment building last month, most likely by the same gang of thugs. Thus, state censorship at its crudest. Against this, I suppose the demise of the Press Gazette was merely sad.
Paul Charman, head of journalism, London College of Communication


:p: :D

yesman 12-01-2008 00:02

Re: OJ 'confession'
 
Is it me, or is this guy trying very hard to turn himself in?
I get the feeling that he feels guilty about something, and is trying his hardest to see if he will ever get convicted of a crime...............the trouble is........he keeps on getting away with it :confused:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7184361.stm


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