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Grey Cardigan: Allan Prosser on those hated hubs

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 28 November 2010 at 12:11
Tags: Evening Beast

Great piece by Allan Prosser from InPublishing magazine on the problem with those hated hubs and those brilliant reporters who can’t actually write (and we’ve all known them). Via Jon Slattery.

“Part of my youth was spent as a sub-editor, toiling away like Graham Greene, on a regional evening paper. Because of my eagerness, I was often given the copy from the paper’s star reporter, a man who would count it a bad week when he didn’t deliver three or four exclusives, at least two of which would be page one leads. His stories won national awards, were regularly followed up on regional TV and radio, and by competitors.

“He couldn’t write for toffee. Word count, grammar and syntax were alien concepts. The intro was frequently in the fifth par. He wrote as he spoke, all Estuarine English. My job was to mine that seam for gold.

“At the end of one particularly long week, emboldened by bitter ale, I taxed the editor, an ex-Fleet Street veteran and the best man I have ever worked for, and suggested I deserved a modest pay rise. He fixed me with a hideous stare and said: “His job is to provide the words, but your function is to provide the music. Now piss off.”

“Under the cloned, one-size-fits-all, cross-platform, multi-media, tweet it, blog it, have-you-got-the-geo-tags-sorted, regime espoused by 2010 publishers, that star reporter would be unemployable. Writing directly to a template? Forget it. Put your own headline on? Send it to the web first? Disasters in the making. But, boy, could that guy get a story and provide distinctive content. What price that?”

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Grey Cardigan: Daily Star - truth or spoof?

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 16 October 2010 at 10:12
Tags: Evening Beast

This is yesterday’s Daily Star front page.

This appears to be the source of the story: “The President of Chile Uno Gomez has announced the mining disaster site will be preserved as a theme park for tourists to discover ‘the spirit of Chile’

“Once the miners have been rescued, Sidney World Entertainment Co. (Chile) will move in and commercialise the site as a Theme Park to boost the Chilian tourist industry.

“Members of the public will now be able to ride the Pegasus 2 capsule down to the mine floor and see how the miners lived for the last 70 days. 

“The interest around the world has been incredible, I’m glad we are going to preserve the site as a monument to Chile and heroism of the Chilian people” - President Gomez.

“Already, there is a Chilian Miner Diet book in publication after the 30 miners collectively lost 750kgs in 2 months.”

Unfortunately, it was published on a Daily Mash-style website of spoof news stories - http://www.thespoof.com/

You would have thought the name of the site might have given the game away, but hey, newsdesks are undermanned and very busy these days…
 

 

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Grey Cardigan: I made writers wrestle grizzly bears

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 29 September 2010 at 17:32
Tags: Evening Beast

Brilliant interview with outgoing Loaded editor Martin Daubney in this months’s Press Gazette.

“I shot radioactive wolves from a helicopter, rode a powerful motorcycle past Bucko House dressed as a duck, was chased by Cuban cops on an illegal motorbike while dressed as Che Guevara, flew burgers to David Blaine in a little helicopter, and paid dwarves to race donkeys while we drank iced gin.

“I set fire to writers, bailed them from Russian jails, shot them from cannons, threw them in ice pools, blew them up with napalm, made them wrestle grizzly bears and had them commit all manner of foul sex acts in the tireless pursuit of our readers’ entertainment.

“It was a perpetual adolescence, and, for a while, nodody ever told us to stop…”

Brilliant stuff, and an object lesson in how a publication should reflect the personality of its editor. And, hopefully, its potential readers.

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Grey Cardigan: Extract from the September column

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 20 September 2010 at 17:24
Tags: Evening Beast

TO NUMBER 10 Downing Street, for a reception for regional newspaper editors in our group.

 

Now while I understand the need for security, is it absolutely necessary for the hard-faced copper on the gate to frisk leading members of the Fourth Estate with quite such vigour? If the editor of the Evening Beast really wanted to assassinate the Prime Minister, he would do it with words, not a fucking Kalashnikov.

 

Once inside the rather unprepossessing building we’re relieved of our mobile phones, which have a Post-It note with our name on it stuck to them and are then deposited on a desk inside the door. I’m running late (Ukranians on the line at Peterborough) so there are a dozen or so phones already on the desk. And, because of a group purchasing deal, each one is identical. The opportunity is too good to miss.

 

While no-one is looking, I quickly swap around the Post-It notes with the names on.

 

The evening is dull. The politicians fail to impress, my colleagues constantly whine about budget cuts and the stupidity of management, and things only liven up when we escape to the Red Lion over the road. And what does every single editor do after taking the top off their first pint? They summon up ‘Newsdesk’ in their phone’s address book and press the button.

 

Unfortunately, due to the Post-It swapping, it isn’t their Newdesk but someone else’s. I stand there, much amused, as puzzled hacks listen to strange editors barking orders at them. You can imagine the thought process: “Is he pissed again? Is it really him? Dare I tell this bloke who’s asking me what we’re doing about a story 150 miles from my patch to fuck off?”

 

It was a most gratifying experience. Almost made the Ukranians on the line at Peterborough worth it.

 

 

This is just an extract. You can get the full version every month by following the ridiculously reasonable subscription offers elsewhere on this site.

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Grey Cardigan: Mr Pot, meet Mrs Kettle

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 9 September 2010 at 09:05
Tags: Evening Beast

The Daily Mail’s take on the Wayne Rooney affair:

Miss Wood, 23, a university lecturer’s daughter, and Miss Thompson, 21, the privately-educated child of a wealthy oil company executive, have turned out to be flag-bearers for the celebrity-mad, lascivious culture that has consumed the nation.

And at the bottom of the piece?

Have you got a story on a celebrity? Call the Daily Mail showbusiness desk on 0207 938 6364 or 0207 938 6683.

Brilliant!

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Grey Cardigan: Strange goings-on at the Daily Sport

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 1 September 2010 at 12:19
Tags: Evening Beast

Yes, I know that isn’t unusual, but advertising for an entire subbing team raises the question of what happened to the current incumbents? Beamed up to a double-decker bus on the Moon perhaps?

CHIEF SUB-EDITOR (NEWS) (£41,101pa)
DEPUTY CHIEF SUB-EDITOR (NEWS) (£37,688pa)

ASSISTANT CHIEF SUB-EDITOR (NEWS) (£35,928pa)
NEWS SUB-EDITOR (DESIGN) (£35,928pa)
SUB-EDITORS (NEWS) (£26,000pa - £33,053pa (performance-related banding)
SUB-EDITORS (SPORT) (£26,000pa - £33,053pa (performance- related banding)

Can anyone enlighten us? (With a big name-check to the Fleet Street Blues website.)

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Grey Cardigan: Letter of the week

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 20 August 2010 at 11:01
Tags: Evening Beast

 

This one has been knocking around for a day or so, but it’s so intriguing it’s just got to be shared. From the Herts & Essex Observer, I think.

 

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Grey Cardigan: What price ability?

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 19 August 2010 at 16:51
Tags: Evening Beast

Having just suffered the guilt of taking on an Evening Beast trainee on a salary of £15k (and that’s out in the sticks), I was most interested in the pay on offer for this London-based job advertised by arch-blogger Iain Dale. And it’s not as if they don’t want much!

Staff/Online Writer. Total Politics:


Total Politics is the UK’s leading monthly political lifestyle magazine and in just two years has established itself as the only magazine read at all levels of UK government and across the political spectrum.

Total Politics prides itself on being unremittingly positive about the political process, publishing agenda-setting interviews with the biggest names in British politics, sparking debate with hard-hitting features, and raising standards by informing readers about the latest in political campaign techniques and technology.

Core responsibilities
• Blog and write articles for the Total Politics website, producing timely and proactive content
• Construct special sections to be included in Total Politics magazine, from ideas through to completion
• Be available and willing to contribute to various sections of the magazine when required, producing well-written and accurate features and articles
• Interview leading political figures
• Attend political events
• Work alongside advertising to produce well researched articles that appeal to commercial interests

Essential attributes
• An undergraduate degree of 2:1 or above
• Experience of writing, including features and interviewing
• Excellent spelling and grammar
• Experience of subbing
• Experience of online journalism
• Ability to write in a descriptive but concise style
• A solid knowledge of British politics
• Ability to grasp concepts quickly
• Excellent computer skills
• Good project management skills
• An ability to work quickly against a constantly changing news agenda

Desirable skills
• A post-graduate qualification in journalism
• An ability to understand basic HTML coding

Desirable personal qualities
• Self-motivated and proactive
• Flexible and adaptable
• Good team-worker with ability to work alone
• Hands-on approach to work
• Quick-learner
• Good attention to detail
• Enthusiastic

Are you ready for this?

 

Go on, have a guess.

 

 

 

Salary:
£18,000

Is it just me, or is that crap?

 

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Grey Cardigan: Those sexy A-level pictures…

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 19 August 2010 at 14:28
Tags: Evening Beast

Remember the A-level triplets? While we’re unlikely to see their ilk again, newspapers across the country have been taking advantage of happy 18-year-old girls today.

Now there is a blog “exploring the hypothesis that UK newspapers believe that only attractive white girls in low cut tops do A-Levels.”

Enjoy.

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Grey Cardigan: The death of the knock

Posted by Grey Cardigan on 16 August 2010 at 12:53
Tags: Evening Beast

YOU NEVER forget your first door knock – and certainly not your first death knock. They are fraught with uncertainty. You never know if you’re going to be punched in the chops by a porn merchant’s minder, or invited in for tea so the grieving family can ‘pay tribute’ to the deceased before departing with a pocketful of pictures swiped from the mantelpiece.

 

In a well-run newsroom, you’d be sent out on your first couple of dodgy jobs with an experienced pro and ‘his’ snapper. The cricket box down the pants, the timing of the knock, the techniques for getting the target out from behind the front door so the requisite picture can be taken, the safe escape back to the car – all essential skills that had to be learnt.

 

On my first solo job – fronting up an unruly and violent neighbour creating havoc in his street – I had the door slammed on my fingers and was then chased down a row of junk-littered front gardens, hopping over fences, trench coat flapping in the wind, by a large, angry man with a baseball bat and his equally grumpy Alsatian dog. At least we got the picture, even if the snapper only got off a couple of shots before being overcome by a fit of the giggles.

 

A colleague suffered the indignity of having a bucket of piss tipped over him from a bedroom window while banging on the door of a suspected brothel. And perhaps it wasn’t altogether wise to once send our latest, rather naïve, Oxbridge graduate into an area known locally as The Bronx – and make him take a company van branded with the Evening Beast logo because there were no pool cars available. It had been petrol-bombed by resentful youths before he was even halfway back down the garden path, pursued, as seems customary, by a large, angry man with a baseball bat and his equally grumpy Alsatian dog.

 

These days, in our experience-starved sweatshops, a poor trainee is often sent out alone onto the mean streets of our violent, inner-city council estates, left to brave the mob with only his Dictaphone in his hand. But hey, at least he got to leave the office and get away from that screen full of illiterate and irrelevant press releases. And isn’t this sort of thing the making of the man; sorting out those who are going to see the job through from those who’ll run home to Mummy and Daddy when the going gets tough?

 

Perhaps no more. I was having a pint or ten the other day with a former colleague who is now news editor (sorry, content manager) on another regional daily when he pulled from his pocket a little notebook labelled ‘Dynamic Risk Assessment Hazard Checklist’.

 

“Have a look at this Grey,” he said. “We’ve just been issued with them. The troops are supposed to fill one out before they go out on a job.”

 

It was a booklet of forms, with spaces for name and date, followed by a list of a dozen or so questions with Yes and No tick-boxes. I’ll give you a small sample.

 

Does the task you are about to undertake involve working:

… in places where there are slip, trip or fall hazards?

… in crowds or hostile situations?

… with or near moving vehicles?

… with or near animals?

… in bad or extreme weather?

… with or near harmful substances?

Do you believe that you are safe to proceed with this task? If you are in any doubt, answer NO. Please return this form to your line manager.

 

And there was more, much more.

 

So there we have it: the potential death of the door knock, and many other ‘interesting’ jobs as well. Ask a cosseted college kid to go out on a job involving any of the above ‘perils’ and they’ll be quite within their rights to tell you to stick it. Health and Safety Rules OK?

 

Is there anything else the suits can come up with to stop us producing a passable newspaper?

 

This is an extract from the August column in the print version of Press Gazette. Check out subscription offers elsewhere on the site.

 

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