David Cameron
Down with Murdoch: Rebekah Brooks is gone, but now it's Parliament that's in trouble
In an interview with The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Rupert Murdoch was hanging tough.
He said that in the massive phone-hacking scandal that has embroiled British Parliament, shuttered his biggest British newspaper and scuttled his $14 billion bid to take control of British satellite broadcaster BSkyB, his company had lost "nothing that will not be recovered."
"We have a reputation of great good works in this country," he told the Journal, and added that his reaction to the press surrounding the controversy was that he was "just getting annoyed." More
(1)This is what Rupert Murdoch looks like before he resumes the attack
We don't know yet what the future holds for Rupert Murdoch and his media empire. What we do know, though, is that he's acting a lot less worried than the non-Murdoch media world thinks he ought to be.
Yes, he's just absorbed another setback, ducking out of a bid to take over the remaining shares in British satellite broadcaster BSkyB, of which he presently owns a minority stake. More
Catastrophic 'News of the World': Some salvage jobs are impossible, even for Rupert Murdoch
We've seen scandals before at News Corp. properties, and in normal circumstances, the obsession with the fates of these editors would be a matter of forgetfulness. Do we not already know that top editors and executives in Rupert Murdoch's international media empire, like naughty nephews of the Caesar, need only to be assigned to a lush manor in a remote province for a time before their behavior there necessitates their return to Rome, their old sins in the capital long-forgotten? More
(1)Wrap me in the Union Jack and send me back to England!
Each day, the New York tabloids vie to sell readers at the newsstands on outrageous headlines, dramatic photography, and, occasionally, great reporting. Who is today's winner? More
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