Journal Entries
So farewell then MOTD..
Posted Jun 15, 2000
A dark day for those few people who don't have cable, digital or satellite TV. BBC lose Premiership highlights to ITV. Forget Hansen, Laurenson & Brooking. Now we get the glamour of.... erm... Bary Venison & his migrane inducing wardrobe. Okay there's Des but there's also ad breaks and the inevitable annoying sponsorship.
The worst thing? Ron Atkinson. More footballing cliches than you can shake a stick at. Bad enough to switch off? If only it were that simple.....
Discuss this Journal entry [2]
Latest reply: Jun 15, 2000
The Sun Newspaper
Posted Jun 6, 2000
In the heirachy of informative current affairs sources, The Sun comes somewhere between the Daily Mail and Roger Hargreaves's Mr Men books. It is designed to provide the reader with a sense of having bought a newspaper without actually having to find anything out about the world in which they live.
Frequently what The Sun calls news bears no resemblance to what is currently going on in the world. On a day where an earthquake ravages Mexico and leave 3,000 dead with a further 200,000 homeless, The Sun is likely to lead with a story involving the break up of a soap star's marriage or a picture of a cloud which resembles a recently dead celebrity. After 4 pages of intrusive photos, a topless 20-something lissom beauty and news of other petty beaurocracies and infidelities, the earthquake might just warrant a footnote on page 12. Providing there were no fashion events to report on, anyway.
When The Sun does grudgingly cover a current affairs topic in some depth, the reader can be guaranteed a selective view on the subject with frequent xenophobic leanings, lots of moral high-ground taking and a view so blinkered as to make a racehorse feel claustrophobic. In The Sun, the European Union are "mad Euro-crats" who inevitably want to impose the "will of Brussels" to govern the size, shape & length of our cucumbers. Members of Parliament are frequently "Ministers For Sleaze" or linked with top class, cocaine snorting call girls. All professional sportsmen have, at one time or another, strayed from the path of fidelity with a "busty sex kitten". And possible her mother, sister, drugs dealer or any combination of the above.
The Sun caters for and reflects the views of the "hard working honest Brit" to the hilt. Bearing in mind The Sun's daily content, this says a worrying amount about the British people. Some of its headlines have passed into folklore - the morning after the sinking of the General Belgrano during the Falklands War, The Sun prompted outrage and earned condemnation by summing up the contentious loss of life with the succinct "Gotcha!". It later followed with the unforgettable "Up Yours Delors", reflecting the mood of many Britons. Granted, the mood of many Britons was being formed by only hearing one side of the argument, but it's a headline that we still remember some 10 years later.
Laugh as we might, The Sun is read by millions of impressionable souls each day, with its Sunday incarnation, The News Of The World, read by similar numbers. For many of these people, The Sun forms their opinions on current affairs and is possibly the only voice they hear & trust before they enter a polling booth to decide how their country is run.
If The Sun doesn't like you, a significant amount of people hear about your failings & your task is made correspondingly more difficult. On the day of the 1994 general election The Sun gave over its entire front page in a request for the last person leaving Britain to turn out the lights. If the Labour party won. Not so much a supportive act for the Tory party as opposed to a destructive act which helped lose Labour the election. At present The Sun is fighting a long running campaign against Britain's entry into the single European currency and the single European market, coincidentally a view shared by Rupert Murdoch, the owner of News International, who in turn own The Sun.
So many people with only one side of the argument. Which begs the question; why do so many people buy The Sun? There are a number of options. Firstly that they discovered it when they were much younger and bought it for the daily flash of cleavage on page 3 and it later became a habit. Or they really do feel that it provides a supportive voice that they lack on such issues. If the latter is true it means two things: that we will never be short of mutton and that the British public may always be viewed with some suspicion by out European counterparts. Still, at least we'll have our kebabs to keep us company whilst we sit in splendid isolation, peering sceptically across the English Channel........
Discuss this Journal entry [2]
Latest reply: Jun 6, 2000
Lucan
Researcher U130290
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."