Opinion
Matthew Norman: The Fry affair was Twitter's first JFK moment
Which of us will ever forget where we were when we heard that Stephen Fry had resigned from Twitter?
Inside Opinion
Stephen Glover: The Guardian's phone-tapping scandal sunk by lack of evidence
Monday, 9 November 2009
I can still remember the exultant, almost mystical, look on Kirsty Wark's face as she announced that The Guardian was about to reveal a major scandal involving phone tapping and Rupert Murdoch.
The Feral Beast: Cameron proves his Blair genes
Sunday, 8 November 2009
Proof that Cameron is the heir to Blair. When Tony Blair held press conferences he would almost always ignore Mail on Sunday columnist Peter Hitchens, who would keep his hand up throughout, just to make the point he was being ignored.
Stephen Glover: Let's send more reporters to Brussels and lift the muslin veil
Monday, 2 November 2009
The President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Klaus, has almost been run to earth, and will soon sign the Lisbon Treaty. It will then become law, and nothing an incoming Tory government has up its sleeve is likely to change that.
Stephen Glover: The sound and fury of the mob can never be a substitute for measured and reasoned debate
Monday, 26 October 2009
Last week was not a happy one for the media. It was a week in which the voice of the mob tended to drown out the voice of reason. First there was Jan Moir, and then there was Nick Griffin.
Edward Barker: Who won in the BNP publicity war?
Friday, 23 October 2009
What has the Green Party been up to this week? You probably don’t know because its opponents have not been breaking into BBC studios, writing letters to the BBC demanding its censorship nor has it had a high profile national campaign launched against it.
Stephen Glover: This injunction shows a real lack of respect for the freedom of the press
Monday, 19 October 2009
Super-injunctions are much more oppressive than a traditional court order
Matthew Norman: Unlike Jan Moir, I'm nearly lost for words
Monday, 19 October 2009
Diary: Even by Mail standards, Jan's censoriousness is astonishing, and the instant response has been spectacular
Stephen Glover: Not biased, just too nice: Is Davis quite the right man for Today?
Monday, 12 October 2009
Evan Davis's questioning of Michael Gove was described as "disgracefully feeble," and his grilling of George Osborne as "wholly feeble and biased".
Most popular
Read
1 What were they thinking? Football fashion disasters
2 The Ten Best Seduction Techniques
3 The worst divers in football
4 Youth trapped on ice floe forced to shoot polar bear
5 Schoolboy confronts Griffin at memorial
6 The Magnificent Seven for whom life has changed forever
8 'Deluded' Jedward getting worse, says Cowell new
9 Kerching! When sport sold out
12 Last Night's Television - Collision, ITV1; The Execution of Gary Glitter, Channel 4
13 The mystery of rising house prices
Emailed
1 Lord Chief Justice turns on super-injunctions
2 Haud mea culpa, domina! (As they say in primary school)
4 Global warming: Death in the deep-freeze
5 What did you Puritans ever do for us, Oliver?
7
9 10 new nuclear power stations named
10 Madresfield: The Real Brideshead, By Jane Mulvagh
11 Benitez calls for 'realism' at Liverpool
12 Time machines: Our chronic obsession with watches
13 Esther Rantzen: You Ask The Questions
Commented
1'Big Brother' database cancelled by ministers
2Labour forces secret inquests Bill through the Commons
3Demands grow for 'weapon dogs' to be brought to heel
4Last Night's Television - Collision, ITV1; The Execution of Gary Glitter, Channel 4
5Dominic Lawson: The only options are to double up in Afghanistan or leave
6Leading article: A vicious and unfair personal attack
7Brown pays tribute to troops killed in Afghanistan
8Tensions grow as Chavez masses troops on border

