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Reactions to the end of the News of the World

Well, the reactions to the decision by Rupert Murdoch to shut the News of the World, and try and halt his empire collapsing, continue. Fraser Nelson, editor of the Spectator, used to have a weekly column for a paper once known as “News of the Screws” (for non-Brits, this paper was obsessed by the sex lives of the rich, powerful and celebs). Nelson has thoughts about it at the Spectator’s own website. I think he gushes a bit too much and as the comments suggest, readers are not happy at Nelson’s defence of much of what the NoTW stood for over the decades. But never mind that. The great thing about the Spectator commenters is that they are often splendidly barmy, if not quite as consistently rude as over at the Guido Fawkes site.

This one, by a “David Lindsay,” wins the prize for me. I quote it all, for its genuine insights and wrong-headed, state-worship of a kind that might make an old Soviet functionary blush (although it is entirely possible that Lindsay is a certain kind of “High Tory” who sentimentalises working class life). This comment reminds me of a piece of dialogue of that brilliant Peter Sellers film, “I’m All Right Jack”, when Sellers, playing the union shop steward constantly at loggerheads with “the bosses”, is praising life in Stalin’s Russia. Take it away, Mr Linsday:

“In the farewell souvenir edition [of NoTW ed], it was heartbreakingly easy to trace the decline in the writers’ educational and cultural expectations of their readers. Murdoch is not solely to blame for this. But he is hardly blameless of it, either.”

As the praise for the News of the World from George Orwell on its own final back page indicated, this was a paper of the wider culture of working-class self-improvement underwritten by the full employment that was itself always guaranteed, and very often delivered directly, by central and local government action: the trade unions, the co-operatives, the credit unions, the mutual guarantee societies, the mutual building societies, the Workers’ Educational Association, the Miners’ Lodge Libraries, the pitmen poets, the pitmen painters, the brass and silver bands, the Secondary Moderns (so much better than what has replaced them, turning out millions of economically and politically active, socially and culturally aware people), and so much else destroyed by the most philistine Prime Minister until Blair, who in her time as Education Secretary had closed so many grammar schools that there were not enough left at the end for her record ever to be equalled.

For the first hundred or more years of its domination of the Sunday market, that domination coincided with a high degree of weekly churchgoing in this country. Its strongly working-class readership must have contained a well above average proportion of what are now called traditional Catholics, but in the days when there was no other kind.

Well, with no more competition from what the News of the World lately allowed itself to become, why not one or more People’s Papers again, affordably hooking people in with a bit of entertainment in order to educate and inform them on the premise that they deserve nothing less than the human dignity and respect of education and information? Central and local government, the trade unions, the co-operatives, the credit unions, the mutual guarantee societies, the mutual building societies and the Workers’ Educational Association all still exist. Just for a start.

What are they doing “to give to the poorer classes of society a paper that would suit their means, and to the middle — as well as the rich — a journal which due to its immense circulation would demand their attention”?

I loved the patronising lines about brass and silver bands. I wish Peter Sellers were still alive now; how he would have loved this sort of comment and used it for his material. I am not sure if Mr Lindsay would get the joke.

7 comments to Reactions to the end of the News of the World

  • AndrewWS

    The “David Lindsay” is a lecturer at the University of Durham and has a blogpost on the same subject:

    http://davidaslindsay.blogspot.com/

    He tends to repeat himself but is fun to read.

  • AndrewWS

    The “David Lindsay” is a lecturer at the University of Durham and has a blogpost on the same subject:

    http://davidaslindsay.blogspot.com/

    He tends to repeat himself but is fun to read.

  • Sam Duncan

    The “David Lindsay” is a lecturer at the University of Durham

    You don’t say. What a surprise.

  • David Lindsay is a very odd character- he wants to be taken seriously so he leaves these long screeds which usually are tangential to the original post to force people to read it.

    He also creates sock puppets to agree with himself and in one case even used the alias “Martin Miller” to write to the editor of the Guardian’s “Comment is Free” telling her about what a wonderful addition to the CiF team he would be.

    He is quite loopy.

  • I remember Oliver Kamm giving him a bashing in the days when his blog was free. He linked to Lindsay being interviewed on some Midlands local radio station saying his new political party – which consisted of he alone and was based on traditional working class Catholicism or somesuch rubbish – would field a candidate in every constituency in the 2010 general election. Needless to say, he didn’t.

  • bobby b

    I don’t live in England and have never seen a copy of News of the World, but I’m getting confused about something.

    Was it a big, high-selling successful sort of paper? Lots of circulation, and ad revenue? That had been my impression.

    But, just judging from the huge volume of comments about it all over the ‘nets, and the tone of those comments, it seems like absolutely everyone over there hated it passionately, always and forever, with no second thoughts and certainly without ever buying or reading it.

    So, then, who WAS buying it?

  • Paul Marks

    The News of the World – often left around security sites (which is why I know it well).

    A mixture of sex (and other such celeb) stories – much like the Mirror and People (who also “hack” and “blag” but that is O.K. because they are not owned by Murdoch) with actually quite good news and current affairs coverage (which the Mirror and People lack – being leftist).

    For example, F. Nelson (editor of the Spectator) wrote for the News of the World every week.

    The political team of the Sun (also owned by Murdoch) are also first class.