Saturday, November 5, 2011

never met many publishers and theatrical debate beyond "criminals" newspaper

is truly remarkable that the national newspapers published on Friday morning. Most publishers of past normal business hours on Thursday attended the opening night Lord Justice Leveson.

Never have so many publishers and editors first met to discuss their craft seriously. It was a benefit to the judge. It was, even if it could be a problem with the description, to an audience of high quality.

Leveson

to make a brief opening statement said that the words of the participants are not part of his report, and quickly left the scene on the left. The good judge and then watched the "wings".

modesty is for you. Few stars never leave the stage and let the best lines to others.

mind, most publishers, but it seems ad lib, tend to repeat the script repeated over the years. There were a few ideas, not a lot of laughs - though I think the editor of People, Lloyd Embley, won the award for the best stand-up routine. Embley said that on one occasion, a discussion group, at a butcher shop in Sale, Cheshire, discussing why some newspapers to read. One group of 10 said he bought the Daily Express strong, although I hated, I thought the Daily Mail was better but was still the Express

Embley then had the decency to acknowledge the former journalist Richard Peppiatt Daily Star, who delivered a monologue the most explosive of the seminar.

Peppiatt, who resigned from the star because of his (alleged) Islamophobia, he began by saying he would tell me what could employ journalists. Then she had a rant about a culture in which journalists are forced to write in a diary, their jobs depend on it. "Journalism ideological imperative appears before you," he said, noting that the journalists were expected by the new publishers "to defend the presentation fantastic and uninformed statements."

done listening, it was clear that a line has been emerging through what we always tend to call Fleet Street. Is an extension of the initial defense used by News International to quell speculation about the extent of telephone hacking scandal: the e-mail the old line to intercept the voice work of a lone "rogue journalist"

Now, apparently, the editors are trying to distance themselves from the black magic of the New World, urging the public to regard it as a mere "common criminals". No publisher has used that expression, but is implicit in everything he says.


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