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Brian Cathcart

Brian Cathcart

Articles by brian cathcart

Results 41 to 50 of 113

The Sun comes out in Bournemouth

  • 27 September 2007
  • 1 comment

Our top-selling daily seems to have taken against Gordon Brown. But does it matter any more what the Sun says?

For the benefit of Mr Al Fayed

  • 20 September 2007
  • 1 comment

The ultimate media circus is about to begin, featuring jewellers, lawyers, embalmers, spies, doctors, lost boxes and of course the proprietor of Harrods. This one will run and run

The greening of Greenland

  • 13 September 2007

As the Arctic ice retreats, some communities find that a new way of life beckons. Greenlanders are getting their place in the sun at last, reports Brian Cathcart - but for how long?

Our world of rough-and-ready ethics

  • 06 September 2007

Journalists in the US agonise about the smallest details, but here we prefer to use the broad brush, telling ourselves that's how the readers like it. Soon we will have to change

Men of principles

  • 30 August 2007

Faust in Copenhagen: a Struggle for the Soul of Physics
Gino Segre Jonathan Cape, 320pp, £20

A spiral of excitability

  • 23 August 2007
  • 4 comments

It was a month when we might have expected things to calm down in the McCann story, but instead editors and reporters have been furiously barking up all the wrong trees

Let's hear it for Stumpy, Keano and the zorse

  • 02 August 2007

Animals are the unsung heroes of the news agenda

The social acceptability of fake goods

  • 26 July 2007

There is something false in the outrage about deception by television. Mostly we turn a blind eye to dodgy production ethics because after all, it's just entertainment...

There's nothing so strange about Conrad

  • 19 July 2007

The disgraced Telegraph proprietor is an extraordinary figure - until you put him among his historic peers, the mad, bad, sad people who owned papers

A paper that might even deserve Murdoch

  • 12 July 2007
  • 1 comment

His $5bn move for the Wall Street Journal provoked outrage and a desperate rearguard action, but the daily hymn-sheet of the free market was hardly in a strong position to complain

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