Saturday, August 6, 2011

Goodbye Cruel (News of the) World as we Knew It

Breathtaking. The sheer mad genius of the thing.
Journalists bribing security guards. Tapping cell phones. Hacking computers. Spying on emails.
And not just once in a while, like the Cincinnati newspaper’s Chiquita banana episode in 1997, or the Chicago Mirage Bar sting of 1974.
But permanently, as part of an ongoing operation, with an A-list of targets including British prime ministers, rock stars, crime victims, even the royal family. Like Watergate in reverse gear.
The unprecedented, unmitigated gall of News Corp. and its cheesy tabloid: To run a private spy agency and dress it up as a newsroom.
This week The Nation magazine quoted Dan Cooper, formerly of Fox:
Deep in the bowels of 1211 Avenue of the Americas, News Corporation’s New York headquarters, was … the Brain Room. Most people thought it was simply the research department of Fox News. But unlike virtually everybody else, because I had to design and build the Brain Room, I knew it also housed a counterintelligence and black ops office. So accessing phone records was easy pie.
This is fairly well unprecedented in media history, but there are a few interesting flashbacks. The Guardian probably did the best job explaining similar behavior of Lords Northcliffe, Rothemere and Beaverbrook, late of Britain’s Fleet Street.
But for my money, the most grandiose vision was William T. Stead’s 1886 idea of “government by journalism.” Stead once said:
The telegraph and the printing-press have converted Great Britain into a vast agora, or assembly of the whole community, in which the discussion of the affairs of State is carried on from day to day in the hearing of the whole people…
So why not, Stead asked, just go ahead and replace the House of Commons with the press? Stead’s vision went nowhere, probably because of a lack of technology. The mercurial editor turned to other projects like world peace.
Rupert Murdoch’s vision is similar to Stead’s, and like Northcliffe, Rothemere and Beaverbrook, he has tried to rule government with journalism. Using inside information, Murdoch pulled the strings in the world’s second largest news empire, helping the rise and fall of politicians and keeping public discourse tightly inside his own narrow boundaries.
If you’d asked Murdoch and his editors, they might well have compared their operation to Stieg Larssen’s Millenium epic. In that three-part story about investigative journalism in Sweden, first published in 2004 and made into a terrific film trilogy in 2009-2011, a brilliant but abused young woman named Lisbeth Salander has an almost superhuman ability to hack into cell phones, emails and computers files. The exact details of all private lives, even Sweden’s secret service, are at her fingertips. She shares them with editor Mikael Blomkvist, who uses the power to track down serial killers.
But how did News of the World use its “Brain Room?” To spy on the Prime Minister and learn what he was bidding for a townhouse; to find out how many pounds the Dutchess of York had gained; to spy on 911 victims; to write malicious celebrity sob stories.
It’s an astounding abuse of power gone awry, almost like a science fiction experiment. Imagine mad scientist TV’s Frank proposing an experiment: Hey, let’s give a few media bimbos a major national publication, along with their own private spy agency, and see what they do with it while they paste in the Page 3 cheesecake girl.
In one of those weird life -imitates -art -imitating -life coincidences, the big item is flying around the UK blogosphere recently was that former News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks insisted that a reporter covering a Harry Potter press conference dress up like a wizard. The date was Sept. 12, 2001 — the day after the 911 attacks. The reporter checked with the boss, who backed Brooks up. Then he called in sick.
Yes, Britain’s tabloid press is a sick piece of work. And if you’re under age 21, you grew up knowing it. One of its prime victims, J.K. Rowling, is the author of the Harry Potter books. And as any 12 year old reader will tell you, journalism is a profession where you will find disreputable characters without the slightest sense of personal honor or common decency.
Just as Britain’s News of the World and the US Fox News became famous for playing “gotcha” as a blood sport, Rita Skeeter, reporter for the Daily Prophet in the Harry Potter books, proudly wears the mantle of sensationalistic arrogance. In one book, Skeeter is looking for an angle to skewer Potter. She asks him:
Speaking of your parents, were they alive, how do you think they’d feel? Proud? Or concerned that your attitude shows, at best, a pathological need for attention? The worst, a psychotic death wish?
Rita Skeeter has her own personal eavesdropping technology — She can magically transform into a bug in order to overhear private conversations.
But she gets caught. In Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Hermione Granger catches Rita spying on the Quiddich match and threatens to expose her if she doesn’t stop. Later Hermione tells friends:
Rita Skeeter isn’t going to be writing anything at all for a while. Not unless she wants me to spill the beans on her… I found out how she was listening in on private conversations when she wasn’t supposed to be coming into the grounds…
A 2008 study in American Communication Journal observed with alarm that the Potter series had:
… three main frames in which media is viewed: Government Control of Journalism, Misleading Journalism, and Unethical Means of Gathering Information. Based on these frames, researchers argue the Harry Potter series does not put the media in a positive light.
Unethical information gathering? Like … the News of the World?


News of the World writes own obituary as it publishes last issue; was plagued with hacking scandals


A laid-off staffer's T-shirt summed it up: "Goodbye, cruel News of the World."
The muckraking British tabloid ran its own obituary, publishing a final edition after a phone-hacking scandal led owner Rupert Murdoch to end its 168-year run.
"THANK YOU AND GOODBYE" read the simple front page message as some 200 newspaper employees worked their final shift in the London newsroom.
Media magnate Murdoch was due in London on Sunday to face the massive, mounting criticism over the newspaper's hacking into the cell phones of murder and terrorist victims, along with politicians and celebrities.

Final edition of Britain's News of the world printed

BRITAIN'S best-selling Sunday tabloid the News of the World has signed off with a simple front page message in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal: "THANK YOU & GOODBYE".
Journalists crafted the newspaper's own obituary before sending the tabloid's final edition to the printing presses overnight, apologising for letting its readers down but stopping short of acknowledging recent allegations that staff paid police for information.
"We praised high standards, we demanded high standards but, as we are now only too painfully aware, for a period of a few years up to 2006 some who worked for us, or in our name, fell shamefully short of those standards," reads a message posted on the tabloid's website.
"Quite simply, we lost our way. Phones were hacked, and for that this newspaper is truly sorry."
For the final edition the newspaper's front and back pages were covered with a collage of images of past exclusives and scoops.
The front page bore an epitaph, "the world's greatest newspaper 1843 - 2011" and a smaller headline with the words: "After 168 years, we finally say a sad but very proud farewell to our 7.5m loyal readers."
Throughout the day, journalists at the tabloid expressed their sadness and pride in working for an iconic news brand.
Video of the newsroom showed journalists tapping away at keyboards, one wearing a T-shirt reading: "Goodbye, cruel News of the World, I'm leaving you today."
The paper's editor, Colin Myler, offered words of encouragement and sympathy to his staff on a "very difficult day".
"It's not where we want to be and it's not where we deserve to be," he said in a memo to staff seen by Britain's Press Association. "But I know we will produce a paper to be proud of."
Helen Moss, a news and features editor who offered refreshments to journalists camped outside the tabloid's headquarters, described an "extremely emotional" newsroom.
The decision to close the tabloid was made this week amid shocking new claims of wrong-doing that saw advertising pulled.
It was reported that the News of the World had hacked the mobile phone of 13-year-old murder victim Milly Dowler in 2002 while her family and police were desperately searching for her.
News of the World operatives reportedly deleted some messages from the phone's voicemail, giving the girl's parents false hope that she was still alive.
The revelations ignited public outrage far beyond any previous reaction to press intrusion into the lives of politicians and celebrities, which the paper has acknowledged and for which it has paid compensation to some prominent victims, including actress Sienna Miller.
Revelations that journalists paid police for information added fuel to the fire, prompting calls for a boycott and causing dozens of companies to pull their advertising from the paper amid fears they would be tainted by association.
James Murdoch responded by saying this Sunday's edition of the tabloid would be its last and all revenue from it will go to "good causes".
The closure was seen by some as a desperate attempt to stem negative fallout and save a $19 billion deal to take over satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting.
But the British government has signalled that deal will be delayed because of the crisis and the scandal has continued to unfold with the announcement of three arrests linked to the matter this week.
Andy Coulson - a former News of the World editor and ex-communications chief to Prime Minister David Cameron - was arrested, as was Clive Goodman, an ex-News of the World royal reporter, and an unidentified 63-year-old man. All three have since been released on bail.


Read more: http://www.news.com.au/business/breaking-news/final-edition-of-britains-news-of-the-world-printed/story-e6frfkur-1226091576115#ixzz1UGyHEVCM