I
have to confess, I had an evening of feeling pretty miserable earlier this week
about the News of the World scandal.
As
the week's gone on, I have started to feel that when we return home from our
time in Dubai, for me it will be to an unrecognisable media landscape with far
tighter privacy laws than I'd been used to in the UK thanks to a surge of public
opinion behind harsher controls because of the actions of a few hacks.
Now
it turns out that this alleged problem has been nipped in the bud in a brutal
way and I was right that it will be a different media landscape but not for the
reasons that I thought. There's already claims that thanks to the demise of the
Screws there's going to be a Sunday Sun of some sort in its place so you have to
hope that some of the good people that have lost their jobs will be mopped up by
that.
And,
of course, there's already claims that the evil Murdochs have been planning this
move for a while and it's a way of looking like they're doing something decisive
to get rid of the bad apples in order to protect their BSkyB plans while saving
themselves a bit of cash in the costs of running a newspaper that had to fight
harder and dig deeper and dirtier for exclusives to keep the attention of its
readership.
Still,
it's a shock. I did work experience at the NOTW when I was a green little
journalism student (I had my hair cut and lowlighted especially for the job,
such was the excitement at landing such a placement. Tragic, I know) and did the
odd job for them during my time at a news agency. I also got to the interview
stage of their scholarship scheme, losing out to one Robbie Collin, who I
believe still works there to this day. How different my life would have been if
Robbie, who was frankly far and away more suited and qualified for the job than
I ever was, hadn't applied.
The
stuff I did for them at a news agency was relatively low key. For
example getting the parents of a child sexual abuse victim to agree to support
Sarah's Law, which they did without any pressure from me, I might add, because
they were prime NOTW readership.
While
on work experience, I was sent to get a copy of the birth certificate of a lady
featured in a story from a council office, something I would get used to doing
later in my career. I can't even remember who the lady was but even though it's
public information that members of the public are perfectly entitled to, the
staff there told me there was a two-day wait for it, something which did not
impress the then news editor.
"We
can't have it now, we'll have to wait until tomorrow," I quavered down the phone
at him. "We're the world's biggest newspaper, we can do anything we want," he
said and told me to go and carry on hassling them until they handed it over.
Unfortunately, the "we can do anything we want," attitude, seems to have
permeated through to a few members of staff whose actions have been detrimental
to the hundreds of others who've never been near a phone hack.
I've
never worked full-time for the Screws but it's been a presence on the fringes
for me throughout my career. I know that it appears at the moment that some
staff were, in fact, out of control, but for anyone working in journalism,
it's only bad news when any newspaper rolls off the presses for the last
time.
Thứ Năm, 7 tháng 7, 2011
Well, we didn't expect that, did we?
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