133rd out of 139 books
—
44 voters
Dial ‘M’ for Murdoch – News Corporation and the corruption of Britain
Dial M for Murdoch uncovers the inner workings of one of the most powerful companies in the world: how it came to exert a poisonous, secretive influence on public life in Britain, how it used its huge power to bully, intimidate and cover up, and how its exposure has changed the way we look at our politicians, our police service and our press.
Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers had...more
Rupert Murdoch’s newspapers had...more
Hardcover, 350 pages
Published
April 19th 2012
by Allen Lane
(first published April 1st 2012)
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I have been posting on Facebook about this outstanding non-fiction book for weeks now. This carefuly researched book outlines the numerous investigations in Britain of Rupert Murdoch, his heirs and underlings, his various holdings and the long lines of corruption at almost all areas of British society for the past 42 years. This all erupted in public in July 2011. I accidentally was able to watch all of the hearings in the Culture subcommittee of Parliament in live broadcast and have been follow...more
This was a good book but I only gave it three stars for two reasons. Whereas it was a fantastic round up of all the events that have happened so far, and certainly a good read, I unfortunately felt that it was far too biased. Sure it's hard not to be biased on the way the Murdoch clan handled this, and as a trainee journalist myself I cannot at all advocate the issue of phone hacking - but to present Tom Watson as a totally honourable knight in shining armour whereas the Murdoch's were totally b...more
I think, for those interested in corporate media and more precisely Murdoch's empire, this book is of great value. "Dial M for Murdoch" illustrates how a "toxic" media Corp managed to accumulate too much power to the extent that it became "untouchable".
The book, written by [British MP] Tom Watson and [journalist] Martin Hickman exposes the "dirty arts" at Murdoch's News Internatioanl in Britain. For years, Murdoch's newspapers had been hacking phones and computers, intruding into people's privac...more
The book, written by [British MP] Tom Watson and [journalist] Martin Hickman exposes the "dirty arts" at Murdoch's News Internatioanl in Britain. For years, Murdoch's newspapers had been hacking phones and computers, intruding into people's privac...more
A must-read for anyone who has Rupert Murdoch owned media in their country. An easy to read, but absolutely frightening expose of the corruption, and the methods Murdoch and his cronies were prepared to go to to cover-up that corruption. No-one was immune - past and present Prime Ministers, Cabinet Members, the Police from the most junior to the most senior, prison officers, even members of the Intelligence Service. From celebrities to the most abhorrent - a murdered teenage girl - Rupert Murdoc...more
For a book about journalists behaving badly, this sure earns a lot of ethical side-eye. Tom Watson underwent some horrific things at the hands of News International and legitimately has an axe to grind. But he should have written a memoir, not something that claims to be investigative journalism. The endless third-person praise of Watson (by Watson!) gets gross after 50 pages as does his conviction that NI was responsible for everything horrible that has happened in the UK. There's also his and...more
I thought this was one of the most important books to be published over the last few years. As an ex-journalist (who resigned on moral grounds) I know how much of what we read in The Daily Rag is written with a hidden agenda or is just plain old lies. I'm glad that there is a book out there that can highlight the moral bankruptcy of the world of tabloid journalism.
I found the book compulsive reading and I would recommend it to anyone who has ever read a newspaper.
As Watson quotes one senior jour...more
I found the book compulsive reading and I would recommend it to anyone who has ever read a newspaper.
As Watson quotes one senior jour...more
I'm probably going to have to go back later and re-read this just to get the full story straight in my head - a simple chronological timeline of the key events would make a useful appendix for future editions, if the author ever reads this?
I thought I already knew enough about the phone hacking scandal from following the news stories, but I still found plenty in this book to make my jaw drop. Currently out on loan to a friend, because it's the kind of book you just can't leave sitting on a shel...more
I thought I already knew enough about the phone hacking scandal from following the news stories, but I still found plenty in this book to make my jaw drop. Currently out on loan to a friend, because it's the kind of book you just can't leave sitting on a shel...more
" 'Mr [James] Murdoch, you must be the first mafia boss in history who didn't know he was running a criminal enterprise.'" (p. 287)
Pretty much sums it up really.
Some parts appear to be a little biased as one of the authors, Watson, was someone who was directly affected, but that still does not take away the severity of the situation.
These events go right back to the days of Thatcher and have been covered up and deliberately ignored since this time by the Murdochs, the UK governments and the poli...more
Pretty much sums it up really.
Some parts appear to be a little biased as one of the authors, Watson, was someone who was directly affected, but that still does not take away the severity of the situation.
These events go right back to the days of Thatcher and have been covered up and deliberately ignored since this time by the Murdochs, the UK governments and the poli...more
A very, very interesting read. It was eye-opening to see how truly awful the Murdoch clan is: the way in which they find news stories illegally, tail and harass their enemies, lie with psychopathic conviction about their public motives. Everyone who cares about democracy should read this book, even if only to take a very skeptical view of its future prospects. It is gratifying that Rupert Murdoch is no longer the uncrowned King of England. But will he be the last to covet such a position? One do...more
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Tom Watson is a British Labour Party politician who has been an MP for West Bromwich East (London) since 2001. Deputy Chair of the Labour Party, he has spoken out on organ donation, against the Digital Economy Act and is a key member of the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee that helped to bring the News of the World's phone hacking to light.
More about Tom Watson MP...
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