Archive for September, 2011

Alex Hughes’ view

By Tribune Web Editor /Friday, September 30th, 2011

Cartoon by Alex Hughes. More at TribuneCartoons.com

Old Young can still show them

By Joe Cushnan /Friday, September 30th, 2011

On the eve of his 90th birthday, Sir Jimmy Young reminisced with Ken Bruce about his life and career – or, to be specific, his two careers. First, he was a very popular ballad singer and then he morphed into a disc jockey, evolving eventually into a more serious political interviewer. Throughout the 1950s, he enjoyed chart success, including two consecutive number one hits with “Unchained Melody” and “The Man From Laramie”. But the arrival of Bill Haley and the Comets and “Rock Around The Clock” sounded the death knell for balladeers.
After his recording career stopped in 1960, Young was given a chance to present the Housewives Choice radio request show on the Light Programme and he reckoned he took to it like duck to water. He moved to Radio Luxembourg, where he gained more DJ experience and then, in 1967, at the age of 46, he joined the fledgling BBC Radio 1 – a move that astonished him because he thought he was far too old to appeal to young listeners. In fact, his morning show – “the JY prog” – became a huge success, switching to Radio 2 in 1973. He developed a winning formula of music, chat and, with some originality in those days for popular radio, current affairs.
In the three decades prior to his enforced retirement, Young interviewed royalty and politicians, including Prince Philip and Margaret Thatcher. His show seemed to be a magnet for influential people clamouring for guest spots – assuming, quite wrongly, that they would be given the kid gloves treatment. Fellow presenters in so-called more serious political broadcasting were rather sniffy about Young and he was accused of asking soft questions. In his defence, referring to his calm, polite, genial style, he explained that it did not follow that his questions to the great and good were soft. “You catch more flies with sugar than vinegar”, he said with a knowing chuckle.
He spent 42 years behind a BBC microphone before he was ousted, causing outrage among his millions of loyal listeners. His departure was even raised in Parliament, such was the measure of his standing as both a popular entertainer and a current affairs interviewer. I apologise if this sounds patronising but, at 90, Sir Jimmy Young came across as alert, articulate and not too different from his heyday as one of radio’s most successful broadcasters. I reckon that, even in the louder, more aggressive world of current popular radio, he could still give politicians a run for their money.
Stephen Nolan on Radio Ulster can be an interesting listen, especially with “hot potato” items. One of his better recent shows tackled the subject of Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness’ candidacy for the presidency of Ireland. McGuinness declined to be interviewed on the show to answer detailed questions about his past involvement in IRA activities and atrocities when he was a senior figure in the organisation during the Troubles in the 1970s and beyond. During his Irish presidential campaign, it will be fascinating to see how much ducking and diving, or candid and remorseful he is about his paramilitary years.
Nolan fielded a variety of pro and con callers to his show with firmness and fairness, but it would have been electrifying radio to hear him jousting with McGuinness. Hopefully, this will happen at some point. Norman Tebbit, whose wife was very badly injured in the 1984 Grand Hotel, Brighton bombing, carried out by the IRA, spoke deliberately and movingly to Nolan and urged McGuinness to repent publicly repent for any and all of his past wrongdoing, rather than just concentrate on what a good guy he is now following his involvement in the Northern Ireland peace process and subsequent role as Deputy First Minister. This is one to monitor but, in the meantime, as the remarkable Jimmy Young would sign off, “BFN – bye for now”.

Good Grief’s painful portrayal of disappointment

By Aleks Sierz /Friday, September 30th, 2011

Grief
National Theatre, London

The left will not be brought to book by the purple people

By Paul Anderson /Friday, September 30th, 2011

When was a book last published that was a real game-changer for the left in Britain?

Murder is murder – and that includes murder by the judiciary

By Ian Aitken /Friday, September 30th, 2011

The execution in a Georgia prison earlier this month of Troy Davis, a black man who had spent nearly 20 years on death row for a killing he insisted he hadn’t committed, caused worldwide revulsion.

Conservative conference countdown for Cameron fight back

By Jon Craig /Friday, September 30th, 2011

Not surprisingly, in his rather good speech at the Labour Party conference in Liverpool, Ed Miliband reflected at some length and with some emotion on the riots that scarred Britain in August.

To the surprise of no one, Putin announces he will seek to regain the Russian presidency next year

By Marcus Papadopoulos /Friday, September 30th, 2011

Vladimir Putin, Russia’s pre-eminent politician, is set to return as the country’s President in 2012

Ed’s Hogwarts Moment and the return of Barbara Castle.

By Tribune Web Editor /Thursday, September 29th, 2011

To the Conference hall for the first, and almost certainly last time this year, for Ed’s speech, with all the apprehension of a parent watching their child in a Nativity play. Have the hotel room rehearsals paid off? Will he make it through without fluffing his lines? We have to wait until page 3 for the first sustained applause. We’ll have to wait a lot longer before we discover whether his plea for trust with the economy is heard beyond Conference.
Like everyone he is outraged by the recent riots, but manages to refrain from describing the kids who took part as ‘feral’, instead praising the ‘young people with brooms’ who came out the next morning to help clean up. ‘Young people with brooms’ ! A collective raising of the eyebrows, perhaps in the hope of a Harry Potter fly-past.
Silence as Ed’ praises Eighties tax-cuts and the Right to Buy, but by page 17 he’s back on track and announces a policy. Government contracts will only be awarded to companies who offer decent apprenticeships. Excellent. Towards the end of his speech Ed is finding his feet. A joke featuring the line ‘the computer says No’ would have been delivered with comic flair by Blair, complete with funny voice. But the laughter would have drowned out all belief and meaning. Ed is right  to stick to being himself, and by the end of this speech we are finally beginning to find out who that is, although the final over-annunciated talk about ‘bargains’, (the word was used 6 times in one paragraph) does make it sound as though he would like to turn Britain into a Poundshop.
On the way to the Tribune Rally, I am impressed to see Christine Blower manning the NUT stand in the exhibition hall. A few hours giving away pencils should be compulsory for all Trade Union General Secretaries.
The Rally itself was a feast of thought provoking speeches. Emily Thornberry’s diatribe against Tory gerrymandering deserved a fringe event all to itself. Definitely an issue that needs to be placed at the heart of a national debate. Ed Balls ‘warmed-up’ nicely for Tom Watson who is deservedly enjoying his moment, and then up-stepped my fellow Tribune columnist Lisa Nandy to deliver a barnstorming performance at the podium. For me her speech, recalling a young Barbara Castle was the most believable ten minutes of Conference. All in all an excellent few days. Never in the years that I have been attending conference have we been so welcomed by our host city. From waiting staff, to train drivers (and even a policeman) it seems that Liverpool is anxious for a Labour party victory. Now it’s up to us to convince the rest of the country that we deserve it.
CG

Hack by Matt Buck

By Tribune Web Editor /Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

This week’s cover – Labour Party Conference edition

By Tribune Web Editor /Wednesday, September 28th, 2011