Thursday, October 30, 2008

'Call me biased and I'll sue'?

I posted the other day about DB's attempts to comment on Justin Webb's blog. If you remember, Webb referred to his comment in a post last Saturday, but it had been referred to the moderators, which made it a bit tricky for readers to know what he was on about. Anyway, as a further demonstration of their ineptitude, it seems the blog moderators have now reinstated the comment (it's number 6), but only after emailing DB to inform him that it was removed for being "defamatory". This is, well, interesting from a legal perspective, but more so in the context of the Beeb's accountablity (which they're dead keen on). Don't forget the Beeb says one of the benefits of its blogs is that they help boost accountability to the audience but not, it seems, if you want to take them to take to task for failing to meet their Charter commitments – or in fact even if you want to remind them to do so.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

From the Sun

VIDEO SPECIAL:
WILL Tess get
her happy ending
in last episode of
Tess of the D'Urbervilles?

Monday, September 15, 2008

Very concerning



I'm a bit late picking up on this Age Concern advert. It points out that old people can miss their meals while in hospital because their food trays are placed out of reach by staff, leading to malnourishment, and suggests using red trays to alert them to those patients that need help. Am I alone in thinking that another solution would be to ensure at the outset that you employ people who have a passing interest in doing their job? Quite frankly I think Age Concern are being a bit too charitable.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Something for the home-workers


From Anorak.

The end of the world is nigh

Oliver Kamm has some fun with the conspiracy nuts and doom-mongers over at his blog. I particularly like this quote he takes from a professor Brian Cox regarding the “Big Bang experiment” later this week, as well as his comments afterwards:

Professor Cox clearly has a way with pungent summary, for in an article for The Telegraph he adds: “The LHC [Large Hadron Collider] has captured the public imagination, which is wonderful because scientific exploration on this scale is a prerequisite for our survival as a species in this dangerous and challenging universe, and yet a significant fraction of the population would usually rather watch The X Factor. A slight irritant is that a small but vocal faction of nutters with a Frankenstein complex and membership of the "Relativity is a Zionist conspiracy" forum on the internet think that banging two hydrogen nuclei together will fulfil Nostradamus's prophecy (Century 4, Quatrain 67) that everyone should leave Geneva in the year that the air becomes very dry. He obviously never visited Manchester."

Nostradamus, of course. (But it's interesting that Professor Cox makes no mention of the Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission and the Freemasons. What's he trying to hide? Who's paying him?)
The Daily Mail, meanwhile, covers the same story with a headline that might feature in a series of "Great Historical Questions to Which the Answer is No". The report is entitled "Are We All Going to Die Next Wednesday?"

Friday, September 5, 2008

More lookalikes

India's Richard Branson, says the Telegraph, but more discerning readers will immediately recognise Switzerland's most famous export.

Calm down dear

Swedish MEP Eva-Britt Svensson is pushing for an EU-wide ban on advertising that portrays women as sex objects or reinforces gender stereotypes, reports the Telegraph. Well, maybe she has a point, but she's not much to look at is she? The lass should make a bit more of an effort if she wants us to take her ideas seriously.