Archive for October, 2008

Off with their heads!

Another week, another lynching mob. The press has effectively hounded Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross out of their highly paid jobs at the BBC after a week of damning headlines.

Kat Faulkner’s blog drew my attention to this article in The Indy, which claims that only two people complained about the pair’s lewd antics on Radio Two after the show. But thanks to press coverage, the number of complaints has risen to 27,000.

This prompted the BBC to suspend Brand and Ross and tonight Brand announced that he would quit his show.

Strangely Gordon Brown may have delivered the final blow by getting involved yesterday. Both the Mail and the Telegraph splashed on Brown’s ‘condemnation’ of Ross and Brand. Brown ventured off piste during a joint press conference with Nicholas Sarkozy in order to criticise the celebs. It’s not the first time that a couple of mumbled lines from Brown have helped to fuel a media frenzy. Last week Brown’s nonsensical call for an inquiry into George Osborne’s dealings with Russia’s richest man helped to keep the scandal going.

In both cases Brown spoke out of turn, but it must be fun for him to play the executioner for once.

How many traffic wardens does it take to book a car?

Five! Or at least that’s how many I spotted crowding around this Volkswagen in Islington the other day…

Bush bombs, Brown bounces

A funny thing is happening in British politics – Brown’s stock is rising as the stock market plummets.

The Independent reports that Brown has cut David Cameron’s poll lead to nine percentage points, reducing it to single digits for the first time since March.

This seems surprising given that Bush continues to languish in opinion polls and remains the most unpopular president in US history.

Both Brown and Bush gave the financial markets freedom to run riot and are now having to foot the markets’ bills.  Yet only Bush is paying a political price for years of economic mismanagement.

The most obvious reason for this is the timing of the crash. The financial crisis has coincided with the US election and is pushing voters away from the Republicans.

In Britain an election isn’t expected until 2010 and so political battle lines are yet to be drawn. However, there’s good reason to suggest that Labour will continue to fare better than the Republicans. US voters appear to be shifting to the left in response to the crash, towards the ‘big government’ policies of Obama. As the so-called ‘left-wing’ party in Britain, Labour may be better placed to deal with the crash than the Conservatives.

Flying in the face of common sense

It seems a bit crazy to start a blog about the media. There’s a hell of a lot of them already.  One of my economics lecturers once preached to us that you should ‘never enter a saturated market’…

But then I was never very keen on economics.  I’ve just started a newspaper journalism course at City University with lots of bright-eyed wannabe hacks – check out some of their new blogs via the ‘blogroll’ at the bottom of the page.


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