The commercial departments of Brexit-supporting newspapers know the damage being caused to the UK economy, and newspaper advertising revenues, by Brexit. Their editorial colleagues continue to support it anyway.
ARCHIVE ▸ Raymond Snoddy
A pause for due process over the BBC presenter scandal is needed, but the Corporation can rightly be blamed for its slow response to allegations.
While the decision not to privatise was the right one, the recent move to drop ‘The Andrew Neil Show’ while spending on US-owned dramas doesn’t bode well for the broadcaster.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s wooden appearance on the BBC’s Sunday morning political talk show drew criticism from unexpected corners.
Johnson is back working in the press, but the press wants to focus on other matters.
Who will emerge to buy The Telegraph and The Spectator, and what will it mean for one former columnist and editor, asks Raymond Snoddy.
Tabloid values have creeped into the rest of British media, with the latest over-focus on Schofield an example of deflecting audiences from more important stories.
Phillip Schofield is the latest breakfast TV presenter to fall foul of a scandal. But is the press focussing on the right thing, asks Raymond Snoddy.
We are only now beginning to regulate the negative manifestations of the internet. That mistake should not be repeated with generative AI.
Rather than schadenfreude at the fate of Vice News, traditional media and advertisers should take key lessons from its trajectory.