Wednesday, 13 January 2010

The Express and the McCanns (cont.)

Thursday's Express leads with - surprise, surprise - Madeleine McCann:

Yes, it's that Express favourite 'fury' again.

The McCanns are in Portugal trying to stop a police chief having an injunction against his book on the case overturned. Their 'fury' is explained by the Express:


Gerry McCann angrily dismissed Portuguese detectives’ claims that his daughter Madeleine is dead as he arrived at court today.

Senior officers involved in the case told a hearing in Lisbon yesterday of their belief that Maddy died in her family’s holiday flat and that her parents faked her abduction.

Hmm. But wasn't that allegation also repeated on the front of a certain newspaper yesterday?


Ah yes. That's the one.

Of course the sub-head does clarify it, slightly, but if the Express really wanted to make that clear, they could have put the whole headline in quote marks and not just one word.

And, the article by Nick Fagge doesn't really begin in a way that makes the claim sound so 'amazing':


Madeleine McCann died in her family’s holiday apartment as the result of a tragic accident and her parents concealed her body, a police chief told a court in Portugal yesterday. Kate and Gerry McCann neglected their children and lied to detectives investigating Madeleine’s disappearance, a senior government lawyer also claimed.

So there is the Express repeating a claim one day, then reporting on the McCanns' 'fury' about that claim the next. It's exactly what they did in 2007 when Madeleine went missing, and means they keep the story running, while pretending such are claims nothing to do with them.

And the Express has been good at changing its mind on this case from one day to the next. Take this front page from 9 October 2007:

And the very next day:

But given the front page apologies on all of Richard Desmond's newspapers (Express, Star and their Sunday editions), plus the substantial pay-outs to the McCanns, Robert Murat and the Tapas Seven you would think they might stop running such stupid, hysterical front pages on this story and be a bit more careful.

Tuesday, 12 January 2010

It's 'PC gone mad' on gritting and knife-wielding popstars

The front page of the Sunday Telegraph from two days ago hasn't entirely held up under scrutiny.

The main story - a classic bit of health and safety gone mad nonsense which also appeared in the Mail on Sunday - suggested that if you try to clear the snow from outside your house, and then someone slips on it, you will be sued.

This was, they said, the 'warning' from the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH).

Alas, before Sunday was over, the IOSH issued a statement denying this:

This is not the IOSH position on gritting public areas. Neither has IOSH issued this as guidance.

Ah. And:

The words are, in fact, taken from a Croner contribution to the 'Just Ask' column of SHP magazine, in February of last year.

The IOSH Communications Director Ruth Doyle added:

'To lift this wording from an outside contribution to SHP magazine, published nearly a year ago, and pass it off as ‘IOSH guidance’ is completely irresponsible.'

Not content with that, they issued a second statement on Monday, which began:

The leading body for health and safety professionals is urging businesses and communities to do the right thing by clearing snow and ice from public areas.

Blasting the 'irresponsible' and 'inaccurate reporting' of the Mail on Sunday and the Sunday Telegraph they repeated - in bold - that the papers' claims were:

not the IOSH position on gritting public areas.

And yet, both articles remain online, exactly as they were.

(Another Mail on Sunday story has also been challenged by the person quoted in it. Climate expert Mojib Latif has said he 'cannot understand' the paper's interpretation of his views on climate change).

The Sunday Telegraph's other main story was about Myleene Klass apparently being 'warned' by police for waving a knife at some intruders who appeared in her back garden. The story rocketed around the media (including two articles in the Guardian) as commentators lined up to dismiss the police for their political correctness gone mad.

Even David Cameron spoke out about it, despite admitting he:

did not know the full facts of the case.

Yet something just didn't seem quite right.

For one thing, Hertfordshire Police issued a statement saying:

'Officers spoke to reassure the home owner, talked through security and gave advice in relation to the importance of reporting suspicious activity immediately to allow officers to act appropriately,' says a spokeswoman.

'For clarification, at no point were any official warnings or words of advice given to the home owner in relation to the use of a knife or offensive weapon in their home.'

Hmm. The fact that her agent Jonathan Shalit had fed the story to the media raised an eyebrow. Klass then said she had 'no regrets' - given the amount of free publicity she's had, no wonder.

A local paper tried to get some clarification from her agents following the police denial, but all they got was this:

'We are not making any comment on this as the police are now backtracking on what was said so we are leaving it there.'

Which could be read as: blanket coverage got, job done. Because, as Glen McNamee noted, a new TV singing contest (yes, another one) is about to start on ITV and she's co-hosting it with Alan Titchmarsh (appealing, isn't it?).

And perhaps the main reason to be sceptical that all might not be as it seems?

Richard Littlejohn was using it as an example of how PC the police have become these days. Needless to say, he made no mention of the police's statement but he did manage to spew out the hilarious 'Mind How You Go' and 'Yuman Rites'.

He's imaginative that way.

(Hat-tips to Liberal Conspiracy, Enemies of Reason, Glen McNamee)

More fact-free mud-slinging from Littlejohn

The final section of Richard Littlejohn's latest column reads:

The equalities commission is within its rights to prosecute the BNP for dragging its feet over lifting the ban on non-white members.

But these Toytown Nazis need to be beaten at the ballot box, not in court. Sending Nick Griffin to prison on a technicality will only feed their sense of victim-hood and martyrdom.

Especially when other overtly racist organisations - the Black Police Association, for instance - are free to carry on with impunity.

It's funny, isn't it, that whenever Littlejohn wants to pick on a Police Association he always goes for the Muslim, Black and Trans ones and never the Christian one.

But Littlejohn has just called the Black Police Association 'overtly racist' and compared them to the BNP.

His 'overtly racist' claim seems to be based solely on the fact that the organisation has 'black' in its name.

Because if he'd bothered doing even the smallest bit of research and gone to the homepage of the National Black Police Association website, he would see clearly that:

The NBPA is open to all in policing on application and there is no bar to membership based on colour.

And from the homepage of one of the regional BPA's, Merseyside:

membership is open to all police officers and police staff and organisations and individuals of any rank or grade, irrespective of ethnic origin... we have a number of white full members, one of whom is currently an MBPA [Merseyside Black Police Association] Executive Committee member.

As the NBPA is a registered charity, Littlejohn should write to the Charity Commission with all his evidence about how and why they are 'overtly racist' and let them investigate.

But he won't. Why find out facts when you can get paid huge amounts for lying and myth-making?

An immigration story you won't read in the tabloids

In today's Independent, a feature from Paul Vallely about children in immigration detention centres:

The thundering knock came early in the morning. It was 6.30am. Without waiting for an answer the security chain across the door was smashed from its fittings. Feet thundered up the staircase. The five children, all under the age of 10, were alarmed to be woken from their sleep by the dozen burly strangers who burst into their bedrooms, switched on the lights and shouted at them to get up.

This is not a police state. It is Manchester in supposedly civilised Britain in the 21st century. There is a clue to what this is about in the names of the children: Nardin, who is 10; Karin who is seven; the three-year-old twins Bishoy and Anastasia, and their one-year-old baby sister Angela.

Their parents, Hany and Samah Mansour, are Coptic Christians who fled to the UK after a campaign of persecution by a group of Islamic fundamentalists in Egypt whose friends in the secret police tortured Hany. But even though six Coptic Christians were shot dead by Muslim extremists only last week in a town not far from their home, the British Government has decided that it does not believe them. And so Britain's deportation police have launched another of their terrifying dawn raids on sleeping children.

Another Star front-page lie, another Desmond pay-out, another PCC failure

The Daily Star has agreed to pay substantial libel damages to Peaches Geldof after a front-page story implying she was a prostitute.

The always-busy lawyers at Richard Desmond's Express Newspapers acknowledged the paper had suggested she:

'provided services of a personal sexual nature for the payment of a fee'

but now:

'accepts that there is no truth in the allegation made in the article, and apologises to the claimant for any distress caused by the publication.'

Published in September 2008, the front-page read 'Peaches: Spend night with me for £5k' while the page five continuation ran under the headline 'Hire Geldof babe or her pal for just £5k a night.'

The Star published an apology five months later, in March 2009. But as Geldof's lawyer Jonathan Coad told the court:

'The defendant refused to publish a retraction and apology on its front page but instead published it on page two.

'As the publication was substantially smaller, the claimant considered this to be unacceptable as it was not, in her view, adequately prominent.

'The Press Complaints Commission adjudicated upon the prominence and found it to be proportionate.

'It is for this reason that the claimant now wishes to make this statement in open court to make the falsity of this allegation a matter of public record.'

Which is a damning verdict on the PCC. The Editor's Code of Practice states:

A significant inaccuracy, misleading statement or distortion once recognised must be corrected, promptly and with due prominence.

There's no doubt this was a significant inaccuracy given that it has resulted in libel damages, but that was clear even before today's ruling. So how can the PCC possibly think a tiny apology on page 2 can possibly be justified for a front page splash?

While the PCC continues to appear as if it is on the side of the newspapers, there's no way it can function as the regulator the press - and more importantly, the public - actually needs.

And while libel trials may be easy for celebrities, members of the public who don't want - or can't afford - to take a legal option are stuck with this useless body.

One step to make it slightly-less useless: the PCC must accept that serious front page errors must result in front page apologies.

Sex, lies and Georgina Littlejohn

Two actresses are going to kiss in a soon-to-be-released film. Yes, it's the Mail website's latest shameless attempt to boost visitor numbers by attracting the dirty mac brigade.

And it's yet another example that shows Mail Online Editor Martin Clarke's statement that 'news is far more important to us than showbiz' may not be entirely believable.

She could be your Mamma! Amanda Seyfried, 24, in lesbian scene with Julianne Moore, 49 contains five screenshots from the film, two mid-kiss, and one of Seyfried naked. This from the same organisation that was pretending to outraged by a bit cleavage the other day.

And who is the star journalist behind this masterpiece?

Georgina Littlejohn, of course.

She adds in such search-engine-friendly terms as 'girl-on-girl action', 'Megan Fox', 'naked', 'lesbian' and 'steamy lesbian scene', just to make sure it'll get lots of hits.

She also includes this clunking segue:

But the buzz surrounding her steamy scenes seemed to have gone over Amanda's head yesterday as she was seen leaving a medical centre in Los Angeles last night.

Ouch.

But they've got a pap shot to use and they are determined to use it.

It's not the only clunker. Earlier in the piece, Littlejohn writes:

In these never-seen-before screen shots from the film, which is released in March...

It's an interesting use of the word 'never' when the Huffington Post was running them yesterday.

Sunday, 10 January 2010

When 1p is too much

I know this is not the most appealing start to a blogpost but...Richard Littlejohn's latest book is coming out soon.

The book - Littlejohn's House of Fun: Thirteen Years of (Labour) Madness - is available for pre-order. According to Amazon, it's released on 1 April 2010.

Yes, apparently Littlejohn's book is coming out on the day when you can never be quite sure that something you are reading, seeing or hearing is true.

Imagine that.

As if the fact it's been written by Littlejohn wasn't enough to put any sane person off, just look at the horrific cover:


It does look like such 'fun', doesn't it?

There's Littlejohn, in a suit and open-necked shirt, looking a bit smug, arms out, master of all he surveys. The cover implies there's going to be 'hilarious' stories about wheelie bins, cameras (CCTV) and bureaucracy.

This is, of course, in stark contrast to Littlejohn's last book cover:


In this one, Littlejohn, in a suit and open-necked shirt, looks a bit puzzled, arms out, master of all he surveys. The cover implies there's going to be 'hilarious' stories about wheelie bins, cameras (speed) and the London Eye.

Seasoned Littlejohn watchers know he writes the same old cliches about the same old subjects over and over again, so it shouldn't be a surprise his books look the same outside as well as inside.

You can't help but think these are books you can quite easily judge by their cover.

And notice the quote at the bottom from the Mail on Sunday, calling Mail-columnist Littlejohn's book 'wise' and 'funny'. Amazing. The other quote comes from - ahem - Jeremy Clarkson.

When Littlejohn's Britain first came out in May 2007, it actually had this cover:

Re-released in October, it had the quotes added. And more white...

If the £11.69 price tag for the new book seems a bit steep, you can always buy his older books from Amazon Marketplace.

Littlejohn's Britain is currently available for the still-a-bit-steep price of 1p:

Or if you want the hardback...well, that's 1p too:

In total, there are 59 copies of Littlejohn's Britain waiting to be snapped up for 1p.

Or maybe you would like to buy his 2001 novel To Hell in a Handcart, also available for a lot more than it's worth:

And if you are a real glutton for punishment, how about his mid-90s effort You Couldn't Make It Up? Obviously, time has made this classic more collectable than the others. It's available for 9p:


So expect Littlejohn's House of Fun to be coming to a bargin bin near you very soon.

Saturday, 9 January 2010

New year, same old BBC-hating Mail

On Saturday 2 January the Daily Mail made clear it had no intention of changing anything for the new year.

Bullying the BBC, claiming Muslims are taking over, and a lack of good journalism were all present and correct in Lynda La Plante attacks BBC, saying Corporation would take a Muslim boy's script over hers - a classic headline to get Mail readers drooling.

Factually, the article is accurate. In an Telegraph interview, La Plante did say:

'If my name were Usafi Iqbadal and I was 19, then they’d probably bring me in and talk,' said La Plante. 'But... it’s their lack of respect that really grates on me.'
...
La Plante, who is 63, said: 'If you were to go to the BBC and say to them, ‘Listen, Lynda La Plante’s written a new drama, or I have this little Muslim boy who's just written one’, they’d say: ‘Oh, we’d like to see his script.’'

Her use of 'little Muslim boy' is incredibly patronising and to criticise the BBC for looking for new talent makes no sense.

But of course, her words were carefully chosen. It doesn't take much to work out why she choose 'Muslim' rather than someone from another religion.

To be fair to both the Telegraph and the Mail, they didn't stick the counter-quote, from the BBC controller of drama, at the end of their stories. It is quite revealing:

Ben Stephenson said: 'I don’t quite understand these points because Lynda had two pieces in development with us. She has one piece at the moment, and one piece that we paid fully for the script development.'

So she's involved with two projects at the BBC and is complaining she can't get noticed at the BBC because of all the 'little Muslim boys'. That makes perfect sense.

The problem is that the Mail didn't question whether what she said was even accurate, and that is why it is shoddy journalism. In the Independent, Susie Mesure spoke to several Muslim writers who were rightfully dismissive of La Plante. Sarfraz Mansoor said:

'I would love to meet the Muslim writers whose output is currently clogging up the television schedules: can she name any of these mythical individuals or are her comments simply a headline-grabbing way to yet again bash the BBC and blame Muslims?'

It's an obvious question, but one the Mail had no interest in asking.

And the people leaving comments got the point exactly as the Mail intended:


And all voted positive. Whereas this retort was massively rejected:


A few days later, the Mail noted (twice) that the BBC Trust was to undertake a review of its science coverage over claims it is biased on issues such as climate change.

The Mail, of course, has outstanding science coverage. Just a few days ago, it published an article critical of previous Mail health articles. EvidenceMatters has pointed out a recent miracle milkshake to tackle Alzheimer's article bears little resemblance to reality. And in August last year, Mail Science Editor Michael Hanlon pointed out:

one soon forgets that zombies, so far, exist only in the imagination.

The Mail's 'Case Against the Corporation' includes the following on wi-fi:

The BBC exaggerated the dangers of wireless computer networks in schools needlessly panicking parents, children and teachers.

Not that the Mail would ever publish scaremongering articles about wi-fi:
And those are just from the first page of the 90 results for wi-fi found on the Mail's site.

On climate change, the Mail says:

Critics say the BBC has gone beyond reporting the science of climate change...

This from a paper that has Richard Littlejohn droning on (and on) about polar bears and how climate change isn't happening, and providing not one iota of actual scientific evidence to back up his argument. In his 8 January column, he said the difference between weather and climate was purely a semantic one, and that because it was a bit nippy in his Florida home at the moment, global warming can't possibly be happening.

Other columnists have spoken of climate change 'hysteria' and 'superstition'. This is, apparently, just 'reporting the science'.

Most astonishing of all, the Mail draws attention to the BBC coverage on MMR. With a straight-face, it says:

Some critics say the BBC gave too much publicity to anti-measles, mumps and rubella vaccine campaigners at the height of the MMR-autism debate ten years ago.

Last April, Editor Paul Dacre tried to pretend the Mail never had a problem with MMR, dismissing that as an 'urban myth'. The articles listed here prove otherwise, a list which includes the fairly unequivocal:

Vaccine is poisonous substance

Oh, and there was this:
But don't expect the Mail to launch a review of its science coverage any time soon.

Next, the Mail was giving prominent coverage to 143 complaints that had been made about the Christmas episode of Doctor Who.

Tardis fans see red over Matt Smith's ginger joke explained:

It was an unexpected introduction to the 11th Timelord... and has prompted a flood of complaints from viewers. ‘I’m still not ginger’ Dr Who announced following his regeneration at the end of the New Year’s Day special which saw Matt Smith, 27, replace David Tennant, 38, as the TV's most famous time-traveller.

Unfortunately, the off-kilter comment was perceived by many as a sign of relief from the new arrival. As a result, it quickly led to complaints from outraged viewers that Dr Who and, by proxy the BBC, were anti-ginger.


Parents of red-headed children were particularly upset by what they perceived to be an insult. They claimed the programme, which was the second part of a Christmas special and was seen by 11 million viewers, would encourage victimisation.

The remark 'I'm still not ginger' was actually an expression of disappointment, a running-joke from David Tennant's first appearance as the Doctor ('Aww, I wanted to be ginger. I’ve never been ginger.')

So the 143 complainers simply misunderstood a joke. And it takes the Mail a long time to point this out (in the seventh paragraph and below a photo) because it wants to make it seem like the BBC is in real trouble again.

And, in the same vein, one day later, this:


The news that women have boobs shouldn't really be a shock to the Mail, given the amount of half-naked women it has on its website every day. Indeed, they had no problem showing Hugh Grant on TV with this bikini-clad woman.

The Mail, however, is highlighting this one just because it is the BBC. And they have usefully taken three screenshots so you can see just how much cleavage was on show.

Which, incidentally, was not very much.

One pic includes a ludicrously pervy caption:


And notice the 'enlarge' option, just in case you want a closer look at 'the very top part of her cleavage'.

With some class, Reid herself replied:

'...after breastfeeding three children, I'm amazed that people think I still have a cleavage worth complaining about.'

There is the odd anti-Reid comment, including the staggering:


But most of the 233 comments the Mail has allowed to be published rightly point out that these complaints - and the Mail's story - is pathetic.

So how can the headline claim she is 'under fire'. Here's how it goes.

Mail hack needs a story attacking the BBC. She scans the Points of View messageboard on the BBC website, finds some wafer-thin complaint about a bit of cleavage and turns it into a 'BBC under fire' story.

Well, a non-story.

A non-story that was lead picture story on the Mail website for many hours.

And the Mail hack in question? Georgina Littlejohn. She really is her father's daughter. The quality of her stories and her writing is just as dismal as his. Her recent gems - all of which are the most inane celebrity bullshit imaginable - include actor has a beard, former popstar goes to Tesco, current pop star smokes a cigarette, another pop star drinks a smoothie, singer has two hour plane delay and actor kisses girlfriend.

And when not writing mindless drivel, she's writing mindless drivel that is nasty and petty, such as this attack on Lucy Davis, who Littlejohn abuses simply because she had the audacity to emerge from an eleven-hour Trans-Atlantic flight without make-up and posh clothes on:

A word of advice for any female celebrity getting off a long-haul flight - don't forget to apply your make-up first... she didn't look too happy to be facing the flashbulbs dressed in unflattering casual clothes and sporting blotchy skin and bags under her eyes. The only thing she had appeared to have applied to her face was a smudge of lip balm which was smeared haphazardly across her lips.

It's typically charming stuff from the Littlejohn clan, isn't it?

But back to the BBC and, of course, Jonathan Ross.

The idea that Paul Dacre and many other people at the Mail would be smiling with smug satisfaction at forcing Ross out of his job is a horrible thought.

Enough has been written about Ross' decision to quit the BBC already. Lots of it in the Mail. They were desperate to rub it in. He'd been 'humiliated' and 'humbled', he was 'infantile' and 'immature'. They made it clear the BBC had got fed up with the criticism Ross attracted, thus patting themselves on the back for a job well done.

With his Radio 2 show being pre-recorded in the wake of the overblown Sachsgate affair and the Mail making excessive fuss about any risque joke or comment Ross made and using it to attack the BBC, it's little wonder he had had enough. And, with the BBC likely to come under scrutiny in an election year, his statement that:

'It's a good time for me to move on and probably not a bad time for them either'

seemed understandable. But the Mail wouldn't have that. They just wanted to imply that Ross quit because he couldn't get his hands on any more of your money:


You can't help but hope he does as much to offend the Mail in the remaining six months of his contract as possible.

Needless to say, there have been a staggering number of comments on the staggering number of stories about Ross in the last couple of days. Curiously, the Mail have not even been moderating these comments. Why not?

When Jan Moir wrote another woeful column on 1 January (about David Tennant), comments were moderated and after 154 had been published - most of them lambasting the endlessly uninteresting Moir - comments were no longer accepted.

But when it comes to Ross, moderation is switched off and over 1,000 comments are published, the majority highly critical of him and the BBC.

You would almost think that was deliberate so as many insults could be thrown at him as possible.

Some of them are worth highlighting, because it's not just him that cops it, but also his kids (aged 12, 15 and 18):


And, worst of the lot:


Sachsgate was about people making poor-taste comments to someone based on something a family member did.

Good to see that the Mail and its readers are still outraged by such behaviour...

Mail implies man is flirting with 'stunning' under-age girl

Sometimes, the tabloids can still make your jaw drop, even when you think you have seen it all:

For the record, Laura Robson is 15.

One of the captions says:

Game, set and matched

And the article is quite clearly suggesting something is going on between the two biggest stars in British tennis - one of whom is 22, the other 15:

Andy Murray is not usually known for beaming smiles on the tennis court. But the quick wit and even faster feet of Laura Robson, the 2008 Junior Wimbledon champ, appear to have sweetened his mood.

What?

the pair have giggled their way to the final of the Hopman Cup

Ummm...

And their rapport on-court has continued after the end of each match at the press conferences.

This really shouldn't go any further...

Newly single Murray, 22, said...

Please stop, Daily Mail Reporter.

And Sportsmail Reporter is not much better. A couple of days before, the headline:

London calling: Andy Murray makes a date with Laura Robson for 2012 Olympics

also clearly implied this was more than just a tennis partnership.

A couple of years ago, when Robson won the Wimbledon Junior title, the Mail described her as 'stunning':


Then, Laura Robson was 14.

But it seems they don't care. On another recent article about Robson, they actually approved this comment:


Laura Robson is 15.

Friday, 8 January 2010

A very minor 'story'

On the Express' news homepage today (actually their 'news/showbiz' homepage, which gives some indication of their priorities) is this story, that is so important it is highlighted in a break-out blue box:

'English actress in car accident' could be considered a showbiz story, of sorts, but when they say 'minor' in the headline, they really do mean 'minor':

Actress Emily Blunt was involved in a minor car accident on Wednesday...when she reversed into a curb while driving in California.

'Reversed into a curb'? Wow. Hold that (website) front page.

Do you think this is an appropriate question?

From the Mail:

Thursday, 7 January 2010

Mail doesn't know its Avatar from its elbow

Like every other media outlet, the Daily Mail wrote several articles about James Cameron's blockbuster Avatar in the weeks before its release last month.

On 4 December, Alison Boshoff's preview carried the headline Avatar cost £300m to make... but is 'Dancing With Smurfs' going to be the most expensive flop ever?

She wrote:

Some believe a movie about an alien culture of giant blue humanoids can never make a profit

and

Someone, rather unkindly, has dubbed this long, po-faced epic Dances With Smurfs

although as she hadn't seen it at that point, she couldn't really call it 'po-faced'.

Two days later, with enviable consistency, Rob Waugh's puff piece on the film asked Is James Cameron's $500m 3D blockbuster Avatar set to revolutionise cinema?

So the Mail was shamelessly hedging its bets - it was either the 'most expensive flop ever' or 'set to revolutionise cinema'.

Five days after that, another Mail hack was on the case. Nicole Lampert's article had the headline Has James Cameron, Hollywood's scariest man, blown £200 million on the biggest movie flop ever?

Ah. Back to that. So the Mail was backing it to fail, although it was now a £200m flop rather than a £300m one.

Avatar was released on 17 December. And how accurate were the Mail's claims it was going to be a box-office disaster?

As the Mail itself reported three days ago:

Avatar takes $1bn to become the fourth biggest movie of all time... in less than three weeks.


Oops.

Wednesday, 6 January 2010

Global warming chaos at the Express

With tiresome predictability, the weather was back on the front page of the Express today. And it's not just any old weather story - that would never do. It's got to be weather 'chaos':


But let's ignore yet another airing of the word 'chaos' (and two days ago, there was more 'taxpayers' fury' - which actually meant TaxPayers' Alliance fury) as it's worth looking at the actual story.

Although it is being quite generous to call it that.

As the sub-head makes abundantly clear, the Express is actually suggesting that because it is snowing in Britain in winter, global warming can't possibly exist.

The article, written by Martyn Brown, begins:

As one of the worst winters in 100 years grips the country, climate experts are still trying to claim the world is growing warmer.

It appears the Express does not know the difference between weather and climate. That's possibly wilful, but probably just ignorance.

Furthermoe, as George Monbiot and Leo Hickman point out in their fisking of Brown's piece:

There's a clue as to where he might have gone wrong in that sentence: 'country' has a slightly different meaning to 'world'.

Quite. Mid-way through the article, Brown is generous enough to quote someone who thinks the Express is talking rubbish:

The Met Office’s Barry Gromett said December and January’s cold weather was 'within the bounds of variability' in a global trend of rising temperatures in which 2009 is set to be the fifth warmest year on record.

Ah. So last year was the fifth warmest year on record and that's still not enough for the Express. The Met Office backed this up with a press release highlighting that in the last week or so:

North-east America, Canada, North Africa, the Mediterranean, and south-west Asia have all seen temperatures above normal – in many places by more than 5°C, and in parts of northern Canada, by more than 10°C.

But look at that sniffy sub-head again: 'And they still claim it's global warming'. The Express clearly doesn't believe a word of it.

But who are 'they'? Who are the mysterious, not-to-be-trusted clique who claim that global warming exists?

Oh:


So three weeks ago, an article by Martyn Brown, on the front page of the Express, claimed that although global warming wasn't caused by human activity, it was definitely happening. Brown wrote:

climate change is natural

and mentioned

the warming we are now experiencing...

And today?

climate experts are still trying to claim the world is growing warmer.

Who needs 'experts' when you have Martyn Brown and the Express?

Did the PCC just transform coverage of trans issues?

The first full adjudication of 2010 from the Press Complaints Commission was encouraging.

A complaint about a Sunday Life article headlined 'Tranny worked in rape centre' was upheld in what the PCC called:

a landmark ruling on the use of terminology in this area.

They ruled:

Taking into account the full context of the piece, the Commission considered that the use of the word ‘tranny' - which was a needless abbreviation, held by many to be offensive - was pejorative. The complaint was upheld on this point.

If the PCC regard 'tranny' as 'needless', 'offensive to many' and 'pejorative' - as they should - then context should not matter.

The PCC added that this was the first ruling under a change to the Code which occurred in 2005 after representations from community organisations:

Individuals who are undergoing or have undergone treatment for gender reassignment will be included in the categories offered protection from prejudicial or pejorative references.

All of which should mean that the word 'tranny' is effectively banned, along with other offensive slang terms on race and homosexuality.

But if this change has been in effect for over four years, how has the Sun published stories such as:
And those are just ones where 'tranny' is used in the headline in the last year.

In all, there appear to be over 50 results found for 'tranny' on the Sun website, although a couple of these are about transisitor radios.

Press for Change, a lobbying and educational organisation for 'equal civil rights and liberties for all transgendered people in the United Kingdom' produced Transsexual People and the Press in 2004, which said:

Expressions such as 'gender-bender', 'sex change', 'tranny' or 'she-male' are considered inappropriate ways to describe persons experiencing a medically recognised condition.

And, unsurprisingly, there are several references to 'gender-benders' in the Sun archives too (for example, here, here and here).

The Sun isn't the only one - the Star also uses 'tranny' needlessly, and the Mail seems to have a policy that has renamed Trinny and Susannah 'Trinny and Tranny'.

But if the PCC thinks the word 'tranny' is pejorative and offensive, why has it taken four-and-a-half years for them to issue a ruling against the use of the word? Why has it ignored the repeated use of it by the Sun, and others, for so long?

And can we expect the PCC to challenge any future use of the term?

Tuesday, 5 January 2010

Mail says: Don't be taken in by health stories in the Mail

Don't be taken in by the celebrity quacks, says charity is the headline on an irony-free article by Fiona MacRae on the Mail website. It is reporting on Sense About Science's latest case file of celebrities talking about health and science without any evidence to back up their statements:

Every year we review celebrities’ dodgy science claims - from special diets and ‘miracle’ cures to chemicals, vaccines and evolution - and ask scientists what they should have said instead.

So MacRae looks at some of the weird claims made by celebs which Sense About Science have highlighted. One is from Roger Moore who:

claimed that eating foie gras can cause Alzheimer's, diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis, or 'a tasty way of getting terminally ill'.

In the section of MacRae's article titled 'How their theories fail to stack up' Moore's claim is totally dismissed:

FACT: There is no scientific evidence to prove that eating foie gras is responsible for any of the above diseases.

How strange then that Moore's claim originally appeared in an article he wrote for the, err, Mail.

Then there is Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty, stating that:

The carbon dioxide in fizzy drinks causes wrinkles.

The Mail retorts:

FACT: The amount of the gas in soft drinks is dwarfed by levels naturally produced by the body. In any case, scientists cannot see how it would age the skin.

But they failed to make that point back in April when Shetty said it in an interview with Mark Anstead. In the Mail.

And what about Denise Van Outen's suggestion that:

Deodorants contain chemicals linked to breast cancer.

MacRae writes:

FACT: The link has not been proven and suspect compounds are too large to enter the body.

But back in June, the Mail was too distracted by the half-naked publicity shots of Van Outen to notice what she was saying. So they mindlessly repeated her claims anyway.

Indeed, of the 14 articles that Sense About Science highlight in their latest bulletin, ten come from different publications ranging from the New York Times, Cosmo Girl, Observer, Guardian, New York Post, Telegraph, Daily Record, US News & World, Good Housekeeping and the Reading Chronicle.

The other four were all in the Mail.

MacRae writes:

From Megan Fox's ideas about vinegar (a weight-loss tonic, apparently) to Gwyneth Paltrow's warnings on pesticides, all have been lapped up by an adoring public.

And by 'adoring public' she means lazy Mail churnalists re-heating any old crap uttered by a sleb.

'Don't be taken in by the celebrity quacks', said the headline. That's advice the Mail should take onboard more than anyone.

For everyone else - don't get your health advice from the tabloid press.

(Many thanks to Tim Chapman for the tip)