Friday, July 13, 2012

John Pilger : Breaking The Mirror - The Murdoch Effect. (1998)



Uploaded by on 14 Jan 2012

The British public were told that the new information technology, heralded by The Sun's move to Wapping, would bring a greater variety of newspapers and a more diverse media. But it produced a contracted press controlled by ever fewer proprietors. John Pilger describes the downfall of his old paper and the all-pervasive influence of Rupert Murdoch.

The Daily Mirror was the mother of all tabloids, and they were good at what they did. It was also 'tabloids' in the best sense of the word: they cared about their subjects and their listeners and earned their trust and affection...This film is a personal tribute, but it's also the story of what happened to the once popular Mirror. How did it change? What happened? And how it explains the descent and cutthroat social bloodbath that has become modern media. The Murdoch Effect will shatter your conceptions of how ruthless the media has become -- and how it doesn't have to be that way.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Piers Morgan 'Charlie Potatoes' Comes Head To Head With Baretta Star Robert Blake.

Baretta star Robert Blake let rip at Piers Morgan during a sensational interview last night where he finally opened up about being acquitted of his wife's murder.
The 78-year-old actor was in full combat mode as he launched into a profanity-laden tirade against Piers - who questioned him about how truthful he was being about the incident.
Blake was acquitted of wife Bonnie Lee Bakley's murder in 2005 following a spell in prison - and four years after the killing, in which Bakley was shot in the head while sitting in a car outside a Los Angeles restaurant they had just dined at.
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Breaking his silence: Robert Blake appeared on the Piers Morgan Tonight show yesterday after keeping a low profile for several years, opening up about his acquittal of his wife's murder
Breaking his silence: Robert Blake appeared on the Piers Morgan Tonight show yesterday after keeping a low profile for several years, opening up about his acquittal of his wife's murder
But the actor was found liable for her wrongful death by a Californian court in the same year and ordered to pay $30m as part of a civil action taken by Bakley's children.
Firing at Morgan, Blake said: 'You want to get to the truth if you can. Does that mean I'm lying to you? Tell me where I'm lying.
Morgan retorted: 'I'm not saying you're lying.'
Blake then went on: 'But you say you don't know if I'm telling the truth, what the hell's the difference?'
Pulling no punches: The 78-year-old actor laid into Piers after the host questioned him about how truthful he was being. He also called Piers 'Charlie Potatoes' and referred to him as 'Pierce'
Pulling no punches: The 78-year-old actor laid into Piers after the host questioned him about how truthful he was being. He also called Piers 'Charlie Potatoes' and referred to him as 'Pierce'
'I'm saying I've met you for, what, 20 minutes?' Morgan replied, before, asking the In Cold Blood actor: 'Why are you being so defensive?'
Things then got even more heated, with Blake spitting back: 'Because you just insulted me … nobody tells me I'm a liar
Killed: Bonnie Lee Bakley was gunned down outside a Los Angeles restaurant in May 2001
Killed: Bonnie Lee Bakley was gunned down outside a Los Angeles restaurant in May 2001
'You said I might not be telling the truth. What the hell is the difference?  … I've never allowed anybody to ask me the questions that you're asking. I allowed you to do that because I trust you.
'And I would have assumed that you and that guy in your ear would trust me. And if you don't, then we'd better start talking about The Little Rascals.'
Blake grew angrier still, attempting to dismiss the murder case as 'boring' and irrelevant.
And in the second part of the show he called Morgan 'Charlie Potatoes,' and continued to refer to his as 'Charlie' until the end of the interview when he called him 'Pierce'.
Blake, who maintained a low profile since his acquittal and filing for bankruptcy, was on Pier's CNN Tonight show to plug his new memoir, Tales of a Rascal: What I did for Love.
Elsewhere in the interview he opening up about his feelings towards his second wife, who died aged 44, ultimately blaming the murder an unknown person from her past.
Describing her as a con artist, he said he believed someone she had 'burned' tracked her down and shot her.
He described his relationship with Bakley - who he was married to for just six months before her death - as 'not bad' (Bakley's marriage to Blake was her tenth).
But he went on: 'I think she came to Hollywood to con her way into show business.
Portrait of a couple: Robert and Bonnie pictured on holiday in Sequoia National Park, California, in April 2001, just a month before her death
Portrait of a couple: Robert and Bonnie pictured on holiday in Sequoia National Park, California, in April 2001, just a month before her death
'I felt sorry for her sometimes because God never gave her that little piece of sunshine that he gave me.'
Blake went on to say he didn't know Bonnie 'well enough to know her'.
'I love her - well, I love you as a human being. You're my brother in arms,' Blake described.
'We're all in this thing together. But we were not dramatically in love or things like that.'
He also didn't pull any punches against the law enforcement officials who dealt with him during his spell in custody.
Looking and pointing into the camera, as if addressing them, he raged: 'I was supposed to die in that cell, wasn't I?
Off the hook: Blake seen breaking down in tears after being acquitted of this wife's 2001 murder in a 2005 criminal court hearing
Off the hook: Blake seen breaking down in tears after being acquitted of this wife's 2001 murder in a 2005 criminal court hearing
'But I didn't die. And you didn't get your book deals, you mothers! I wrote a book about you.'
His story: The actor was promoting his memoir, Tales of a Rascal: What I did for Love
His story: The actor was promoting his memoir, Tales of a Rascal: What I did for Love
Admitting he was bankrupt and friendless these days, Blake said  the only thing that will 'cure' him would be to 'get back on that bull that bucked me off and ride him'.
He added: 'If I can go out in front of the camera, making the most beautiful film that I ever made, that's all I really want from life.'
Bakley was shot in the head on May 4 2001 after Blake took her to Vitello's Restaurant on Tujunga Avenue in Studio City.
She was sat in the car, parked around the corner from the restaurant at the time of the incident.
At the time, Blake told police he had gone back inside the restaurant to retrieve the gun he had left at the table - and came back to the car after the shooting.
His gun - a .38 caliber pistol - was tested and determined not to be the murder weapon.
Bakley had an obsession with pursuing celebrities and even had a fling with rock legend Jerry Lee Lewis. 
She had one child with Blake - Rose Lenore Sophia Blake, now aged 12.
Rose was initially named Christian Shannon Brando as Bakley first believed Christian Brando - the son of Hollywood great Marlon Brando - was the father - but a DNA test disproved this.
Heyday: Blake was best know for his role in the Seventies TV show Baretta
Heyday: Blake was best know for his role in the Seventies TV show Baretta


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2172598/Robert-Blake-launches-bizarre-tirade-Piers-Morgan-interview-sensationally-acquitted-wifes-murder.html#ixzz20SMewdya

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Leveson: Matt Sprake ex -met - part of his agency’s website is devoted to its “surveillance photography”, offering a menu of services, including “covert foot follows”, “covert vehicle follows” and ”remote technical surveillance”.

Police and other public officials are still being offered thousands of pounds for information about the private lives of celebrities, The Independent can reveal.
An investigation by Exaro, the investigative website, www.exaronews.com, found that officials such as probation and prison officers are being targeted by a former Metropolitan Police forensics and surveillance officer now running a news agency selling pictures and stories to newspapers.

This is despite the current police investigation into the alleged bribing of public officials by journalists, and the Leveson inquiry into media ethics.

Today a prison officer and two other people were arrested in connection with the police probe into corrupt payments to officials by journalists.

So far a total of 37 people have been arrested in connection with Operation Elveden, the investigation into suspected corrupt payments to public officials.

But despite this Newspics, a press agency based in Shenfield, Essex, still appears to be offering four-figure sums for ‘scoops’ through its website.

The agency claims endorsements from the picture desk of The People, the red-top Sunday tabloid, OK magazine, the celebrity title, and the Press Association, the national news agency. The Independent has published legitimate photographs taken by Newspics photographers.

“Do you know of a story, a scandal, something that made you interested, chances are that a newspaper will pay for that information.  Do you know where a prominent person is living or what they get up to, is a celebrity having an affair that you know of, do you know anyone who’s on reality TV?  You can earn yourself good cash now by calling.

It then adds: “All sorts of people have been paid thousands of pounds by us for giving information that leads to a picture being sold or a story being written, are you a doorman, police worker, civil servant, probation officer, prison officer, nurse? Make some extra money without anyone ever knowing…”

Newspics is run by Matt Sprake a former forensics and surveillance officer for Scotland Yard who carried out anti-terrorism duties during his 10-year police career.

Sprake runs the agency with his wife, Marion, a banker who has been working for Barclays. He claims to have a network of 35 photographers, and a discreet studio “just 20 minutes from the City of London” for celebrity client portraits.

Part of his agency’s website is devoted to its “surveillance photography”, offering a menu of services, including “covert foot follows”, “covert vehicle follows” and ”remote technical surveillance”.

“You can utilise the very same skills that are used by the security services and the police,” clients are promised.  

“Our surveillance team has worked for and been trained by various police and government surveillance agencies within the UK. If you need it photographed without being seen, we are your experts.”

When contacted by Exaro, Sprake defended himself, saying that he had never paid a police officer or “anyone in authority” for information.

He said that he had wanted to remove the wording discovered by Exaro, but he was unable to do so because the website was “broken”.

“I wish I could change this website,” he said. “It was by three different companies and when one of them went bust, we could not change the website. It was a pain.”

But he told Exaro that he exercised caution with tip-offs: “I would not touch anything that is operational or compromising. We had people contact us on stories like the royal family, for example. My first question was, ‘How do you know that?’

“‘Well, I have heard it in a briefing.’

“‘Sorry, can’t touch it.’”

Sprake said that the wording on his agency’s website was “just advertising” aimed at the “general public”.

On the social-media website, Myspace, he puts his income at between £100,000 and £150,000 a year.

Sprake continued: “I used to work for a specialist department at the Met in Scotland Yard looking, basically, at terrorism work. The level I was working at involved very covert stuff.

“I got out after 10 years. You are limited on the number of years you are allowed to do, so I am now doing other work. But I have still got all that training that is very handy to have.”

He says that police officers contact him to “moan” about their conditions.

He also claims that his agency is “monitored by some departments in the Met for where some of our stories have come from.”

“You have got to be very careful whenever you get information from a police officer.

They are not going to be paid because it is obviously illegal.

The story will only be put forward if they have obtained that information through something that would be general information.

“If they ring up and say I have seen this bit of paper and this story is going on, well, we do not touch that because that would be highly illegal. So we are very careful.”

He said that most of the agency’s press work came directly from newspapers rather than information given by sources.

Mr Sprake said that he “adhered” to the code of conduct of the Press Complaints Commission (PCC), which is a claim made by his agency on its website in relation to its surveillance work.

However, a PCC spokesman said that the code did not apply to picture agencies or freelance photographers. “This highlights the same issue that Lord Leveson has already raised: whether agency photographers or the paparazzi, as well as editors, should be covered by the code.”

Leveson: Could The Guardian Close Before Hackgate Scandal Is Resolved?

by Nicky Woolf

The Guardian's media desk heard about the death of the News Of The World at about 4.15pm, but, reeling in disbelief, didn't run the story immediately. They were still trying to verify it a little less than 20 minutes later, when News International chairman James Murdoch's statement was released to the press. That was Thursday 7 July 2011. The previous Monday, after nearly two years of painstaking digging and a slow drip-drip of stories that failed to gain much widespread traction, the Guardian published the story that private investigators in the pay of the News Of The World had hacked the voice mail of a murdered schoolgirl: Milly Dowler. The public was appalled.


The trail the Guardian had been following stretched from Fleet Street to Downing Street and Scotland Yard. It had implications of corruption, bribery and influence, yet had failed to gain widespread attention. But this was the breakthrough the Guardian had been working towards. With one thunderous headline, editor Alan Rusbridger had destroyed one of the jewels in Rupert Murdoch's crown....read more


http://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/comment/articles/2012-07/03/interview-with-the-guardian-newspaper-editor-alan-rusbridger-on-hacking

Leveson : Operation Elveden The Corruption Continues - Public officials still offered thousands of pounds for scoops

Ex-police surveillance officer who had access to No 10 exposed in ‘bribes offer’

By David Hencke | | 2 Related pieces
Police and other public officials are still being offered thousands of pounds for information about the private lives of prominent people, Exaro can reveal.

The offer comes from an agency run by a former forensics and surveillance officer for Scotland Yard who carried out anti-terrorism duties during his 10-year police career.

As the picture taken from his Facebook page shows, Matt Sprake also had access to the cabinet room in Downing Street in the 1990’s. He is photographed posing in the prime minister’s chair.


http://www.exaronews.com/articles/4468/public-officials-still-offered-thousands-of-pounds-for-scoops

H/T Mark Watts on Twitter

https://twitter.com/#!/MarkWatts_1

Monday, July 2, 2012

#Leveson: #Murdoch Takes On Tom Cruise And His Creepy Evil Scientology.

News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch took a swipe at Tom Cruise on Sunday in a series of tweets that labelled the Hollywood star a No 2 or No 3 person in the hierarchy of Scientologists, a group the media mogul called “creepy”.
 
Cruise, a star of the Mission: Impossible movies, has long been a prominent member of the Church of Scientology, which some have described as a cult. The actor made headlines on Friday when it was revealed his wife, actress Katie Holmes, had filed for divorce and is seeking sole custody of their daughter, Suri.
 
“Scientology back in news. Very weird cult, but big, big money involved with Tom Cruise either number two or three in hiearchy [sic],” Murdoch posted on Sunday on his official Twitter feed.
Later in the day, he tweeted: “Watch Katie Holmes and Scientology story develop. Something creepy, maybe even evil, about these people.”

http://gulfnews.com/arts-entertainment/celebrity/rupert-murdoch-takes-on-tom-cruise-creepy-scientology-1.1043354

#Leveson: #Murdoch On Creepy #Scientology. If Murdoch Suggests Cruise Is Gay he Will Sue His Pants Off!

Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch took to Twitter today urging people to ‘watch’ Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise’s divorce, even labelling Scientologists as 'creepy and evil’.
The outspoken octogenarian tweeted: ‘Watch Katie Holmes and Scientology story develop. Something creepy, maybe even evil, about these people.’
His warning comes as Ms Holmes claimed that her every move has been tracked by a team of mystery men - who she believes have been sent to spy on her by the cult
Murdoch also posted that Cruise was ‘number two or three’ in the ‘very weird cult’.

Rupert Murdoch
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes 
Evil Creeps: Rupert Murdoch, left, took to Twitter on Sunday telling people to 'watch' the divorce between Scientologists Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes saying there was 'something creepy, maybe even evil, about these people'
The News Corporation chief executive sparked an immediate backlash with his controversial tweets.
He first tweeted this morning: 'Scientology back in news. Very weird cult, but big, big money involved with Tom Cruise either number two or three in [hierarchy].'
Murdoch was quickly attacked for his comments with one user throwing the ‘creepy and evil’ insult right back at the 81-year-old tycoon.

However, Murdoch refused to back down tweeting later: 'Since Scientology tweet hundreds of attacks. Expect they will increase and get worse and maybe threatening. Still stick to my story.
After one user asked Murdoch for his views on Mormonism, he replied: ‘Mormonism a mystery to me, but Mormons certainly not evil.'
Katie Holmes, 33, filed for divorce from 49-year-old Tom Cruise, her husband of five years, in New York on Thursday.
Meanwhile, unknown people in two cars have been seen tailing Ms Holmes since before she filed for divorce, prompting speculation they are rogue Scientologists, it was claimed yesterday.
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Controversial: The outspoken octogenarian first tweeted this about the Top Gun's position within Scientology

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Backlash: Murdoch faced online attacks after posting this tweet but later refused to back down saying that he was 'sticking to his story'


TOM CRUISE AND THE THETANS: THE TEACHINGS OF SCIENTOLOGY

  • The Church of Scientology was established in 1954 by science-fiction writer L Ron Hubbard
  • It numbers up to 15million members worldwide and likes to cultivate celebrity followers
  • Among its more famed acolytes are the actors Tom Cruise and John Travolta
  • Hubbard claimed that each human being has hidden secret powers required for the lifelong journey towards spiritual freedom and happiness
  • The Church holds that humans are descended from an exiled race of aliens called Thetans
  • Once a worshipper reaches a higher state of awareness called 'the Clear', he becomes an Operating Thetan who can address deeper psychological dilemmas of his own existence

The church insists the men have nothing to do with it, with the lawyer for the Church Gary Soter told TMZ that the Scientology movement is 'not following Katie or conducting surveillance on her in the wake of her divorce with Tom Cruise'.
But it has been claimed this tracking has been going on for weeks - even before Friday's shock announcement the pair will divorce.
According to TMZ, 'there have been several 'mysterious' men and vehicles around Katie's New York apartment and following her when she's out.
'Specifically ... a white Cadillac Escalade and black Mercedes SUV have been seen near Katie's NYC apartment for the past week.'
The site claims sources believe these cars' occupants are not journalists, but their identity has never been established.
The Dawson’s Creek star is seeking for sole custody of Suri, the couple’s 6-year-old daughter. This would enable her to remove her daughter from the Church of Scientology, which she is alleged to dislike and distrust.
With a financial pre-nuptial already in place, it is thought that Holmes purposefully filed for divorce in New York state and not California because New York dislikes giving warring parents joint custody.
However, the divorce will not be recognised by Scientology, according to the church's doctrines.
The religion offers little advice to those for whom divorce has become the only option, preferring to focus on providing couple's therapy to fix relationships.

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Sticking to his guns: The media mogul refused to back down when he was attacked on Twitter about his controversial remarks
There is a belief in the church of Scientology that marital problems come from 'withholds' or 'overts' - undiscussed issues or problems.
According to the official website, marriage is considered essential to family life along with the  belief that the religion will strengthen bonds between partners.
Scientologists also claim that people who follow the religion are more likely to stay married.
If a couple runs into a problem, they can take courses on how to improve their marriage or speak to counselors.
However Stephen Kent, a religion professor at the University of Alberta, told ABC: 'There's no real annulment in the church. Many members have been divorced, even founder L. Ron Hubbard was married three times.'
Murdoch also used Twitter today to criticise Mitt Romney’s campaign.
'Met Romney last week. Tough O [Obama] Chicago pros will be hard to beat unless he drops old friends from team and hires some real pros. Doubtful.'

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'Weird cult': Murdoch alleged that Top Gun actor Tom Cruise was number two or three within Scientology's hierarchy

He followed it up with a second tweet: ‘US election is referendum on Obama, all else is pretty minor.
If members of the church are tracking Ms Holmes, it would not be the first time that Scientologists have turned on those who have left the cult.
The church refers to people who leave the group but practice independently as 'squirrels.
Last year, bizarre footage emerged of a group of 'squirrel busters' who fitted cameras to their heads to 'stalk' one of its defectors.
Marty Rathbun, once one of its highest-ranking members, left the church a few years ago but continued to practise independently.
He was reported to be in on the secrets of the church and 'audited' some of its high-profile members - including Tom Cruise.
And last April a group of four men wearing skyblue T-shirts and black caps with the words 'Squirrel busters productions' turned up at his door and said they were there to look at his 'PC meters' - a piece of scientology equipment -  and check his 'tack'.
The T-shirts bore the image of a squirrel with Mr Rathbun's head superimposed onto it.
During the standoff, which lasts a couple of minutes and a video of which was on YouTube, Mr Rathbun asks the men if they are going to 'stick around' at his house and Mr Allender answers: 'Yeah, Marty, we are here for weeks. Weeks and weeks.'
Another added: 'As long as it takes.'
Mr Rathbun apparently called the police, and a deal was struck where he agreed not to bring harassment charges against the 'SquirrelSquad' and they would not peruse assault charges for grabbing a microphone.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2167406/Katie-Holmes-Tom-Cruises-divorce-develop-says-Rupert-Murdoch-brands-Scientologists-evil.html#ixzz1zSBBpz3H