Taybha
Whalewhine
Edited by Lord Haw Haw
These tabloids have an endgame, like they had with the EU, like with the BBC. The lockdown is going to hurt their proprietors interests over and above how we're all going to be affected economically.
After this is over and we're looking for ways to pay the debt mountain back, the tax havens which so benefit the proprietors are going to come under a lot more pressure.
The papers can't come out and say it now, because of public support for the NHS etc, but you'll see the normal MO come into sight in the coming weeks, of gradually more and more trying to undermine the lockdown.
People queuing for admission to the West Pier.
No, I don't think much of the standard of journalism in The Express. Just amused by the amount of frothing at the mouth induced by an article and headline which appear to be wholly accurate.
The picture is of a crowded promenade, which is exactly what we are told we must not do. Would a picture of broad acres of empty beach been appropriate to the article?
Very good points.
The Mirror was once called The Daily Worker, was it not? Without checking it's history, it never struck me as much of a Labour supporting paper for reasons other than market share. Captain Bob bought it, but he was a 'socialist' for reasons of convenience only, and actually one of the shitter capitalist megalomaniacs of the day (for the benefit of younger readers). When Piers Morgan was editor they ran an Achtung! headline with a drawing of Stuart Pierce wearing a tin hat and carrying a gun just before an England Germany game. FFS. I can very easily see a company running a right wing and a left wing paper at the same time to corner the entire market of thickies who need their news infused with their colour of choice. The Evening Standard is another case in point - owned by the people who own the Daily Fail, but with content packaged to appeal to the metropolitan elite.
However. I don't object to government propaganda. If there is a real need to up the ante on social distancing (is there? I don't go out much these days) then why not manipulate us a bit? The problem here is that anyone with half a brain will know that Brighton sea front is not awash with happy holiday makers, and once the fakery has been rumbled it just makes the paper and their pal Patel look cheap and duplicitous. However, since it will make the paper and Patel look (etc etc) only to people who use social media or browse other outlets that might question the photo, jobza good 'un. Net curtain twitchers everywhere else in the UK will have their prejudices about debauched homosexualist Brighton reaffirmed, and will stay in doors with a sense of indignant and sanctimonious superiority. I have no real problem with that, oddly. But there again I am so used to being lied to (even in the scientific research journals I read) that its water off a duck's back to me now.
Very good points.
The Mirror was once called The Daily Worker, was it not?
Just out of curiosity, is The Express lying? Has Priti Patel not in fact warned people about breaking the restrictions? Just asking ........................
James Cracknell (Olympic rower) made a complaint against the Daily Mail about photo manipulation.
[tweet]1254395457033379843[/tweet]
Oh, so it's not just one bad apple. They're all at it. Who'd have thought it?
No, I don't think much of the standard of journalism in The Express. Just amused by the amount of frothing at the mouth induced by an article and headline which appear to be wholly accurate.
The picture is of a crowded promenade, which is exactly what we are told we must not do. Would a picture of broad acres of empty beach been appropriate to the article?
And this is worse. At least with the Brighton one it was an unedited picture of Brighton. With James Cracknell, they've photoshopped someone into a photo for the sake of creating a news story.
Desperate and contemptuous in equal measure.
Putting the Express bullshit aside that woman is a fvcking moron
Ha, yeh wasn't that the chain peir in the background?
Putting the Express bullshit aside that woman is a fvcking moron
No, it wasn't. You're thinking of the Morning Star. Or possibly the Daily Herald, which turned into the Sun.
The Mirror was Harmsworth-owned and aimed at a middle-class audience until shortly before WWII, when it was sold and turned into a working-class paper.
https://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2011/dec/06/dailymail-oswald-mosley