Pictured: Raymond Snoddy chaired the debate among the
panellists
Higher education took a leading role in the debate around the
Leveson Inquiry on Tuesday as Coventry University hosted a public
discussion on the phone hacking scandal with a panel of leading
journalists and media activists.
The occasion also marked the launch of a new book - The Phone
Hacking Scandal: Journalism on Trial? - which brings together
expert comment from top academics and media professionals to
present a fresh perspective on the biggest scandal to hit the UK
press for decades.
Hosted on Coventry University's London Campus, the event and saw
veteran media commentator Raymond Snoddy chair a debate with a host
of well-known commentators including Richard Peppiatt, recovering
tabloid journalist; Kevin Marsh, former Today programme editor; Bob
Satchwell, executive director of the Society of Editors; journalist
and author, Glenda Cooper, and Paul Connew, former deputy editor of
the Daily Mirror and the News of the World.
The debate sparked some impassioned comments and ferocious
criticism aimed at the tabloid press, with panellists condemning
the "lazy" and "outrageously arrogant" writers and editors who have
"lost sight of the fact that they are doing journalism".
Richard Peppiatt kicked off proceedings with a searing
indictment of Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre's comments on freedom of
expression this week at the Leveson Inquiry:
"There's an agenda in tabloid journalism that journalists don't
know they've signed up to. A lot of words are banded around like
'freedom of expression'. Paul Dacre said "I would die in a ditch to
defend my columnists' rights to say whatever they wish". Well I can
find the ditch. I don't care if I end up dying because of it, as
long as it's not in the same ditch. Put me on the other side of the
road at least.
"All they are doing is giving the information that shows their
opinion. I left the Daily Star because of its Islamaphobic nature.
I wasn't doing journalism; I was telling stories to entertain. I
picked the facts that most entertained the reader. Newspapers have
lost sight of the fact that they are doing journalism."
Kevin Marsh echoed Peppiatt's sentiments, calling into question
the conduct of members of the paparazzi press and of the editors
who publish their photos:
"Sienna Miller was being chased down the street at midnight, and
the people she was being chased by were licensed only by the
cameras they held. They were given authority to do what they were
doing by their editors. What the hell kind of organisation is it
when we think it's okay for tough, grown men to earn their living
in this way?
"If the tables were turned and it was another very powerful,
rich organisation, we in the media would be demanding it had a much
stricter code of conduct. And yet because it's the press, and
because of this thing we cherish - 'freedom of speech' - we let it
happen. We let it happen for so long we ended up with the hacking
scandal."
Paul Connew responded to this by offering a different
perspective on the culture of celebrity journalism:
"I share Kevin's views, but they are a sledgehammer. I was based
in Hollywood and New York for ten years and it was commonplace for
paparazzi and celebrity agents to set up snatch photographs. So
when Ms X was coming out of a nightclub with her puppy in tow she
might well be wearing a low cut dress and would feign shock horror
at being photographed.
"In recent years, though, there has become a problem with
paparazzi who have become thugs with cameras. Sienna Miller was
targeted by the wrong end of paparazzi. If I was an editor I would
always want to know where a story comes from. Hacking was down, in
part, to lazy journalism. It was easier to do fishing expeditions
rather than chase down hardcore news stories."
Glenda Cooper directed the discussion towards what she sees as
the media's unscrupulous exploitation of social networking
channels:
"The growth of social media is bringing new issues to the fore.
Is it easier to treat people like collateral damage if you're not
knocking on the door? Is it right that papers take stuff off social
networking sites? Is this not the equivalent of breaking into
someone's house and taking their photo album?
"Take Ian Redmond, who died on his honeymoon. His pictures were
taken off his Facebook page and spread across national newspapers
and on every website. There is a public responsibility that you
must realise people can see your Facebook page, but I think there's
a difference between friends seeing your stuff and seeing it
plastered all over a national paper or TV programme."
Bob Satchwell, former assistant editor of the News of the World,
voiced the view that the Leveson Inquiry will not - and perhaps
should not - provide a lasting solution to the issues exposed by
the phone hacking scandal:
"There was no such thing as a mobile phone when I was at the
News of the World. I felt strongly that the bad end of Fleet Street
behaved outrageously. No one ever gave a damn about privacy; it
hadn't been thought about in those days. We had no human rights
act. I think at that point, the press was outrageously arrogant.
"We can do what the hell we want, we're selling five million
copies, and we can do what we want".
"When I left, I said journalists should behave better. They
should think twice before doing something on the edge of legality.
Lord Justice Leveson says he wants his inquiry to be the end of it,
not just a footnote for academics. But perhaps we have to go
through this exercise every decade or so, because there is an
argument that the press should be drinking in the last chance
saloon all the time. That's where journalists should always
be."
Members of the audience were also invited to ask questions of
the panel, offer their thoughts on the Leveson Inquiry, and
challenge any statements made in the new book The Phone Hacking
Scandal: Journalism on Trial?. The book is co-edited by John Mair
of Coventry University and Professor Richard Keeble of the
University of Lincoln, and is on sale now.
John Mair, senior lecturer in broadcast journalism at Coventry
University, said:
"It was always the intention for this book to be ahead of the
curve in providing cutting edge commentary on the Leveson Inquiry.
In pulling together such a wide range of expert opinion and
perspectives on the hacking scandal, we hope it will make a
significant impact on and contribution to the investigations into
this saga during what is undoubtedly a seminal period for British
journalism."
For more information about Coventry University, please visit
their website here: www.coventry.ac.uk