[Update at end of post]
The news that Derek Jameson, who edited three national newspapers when they really were Fleet Street titles, had passed yesterday at the age of 82 closes the door that bit further on the last of the ranks of those who worked their way up through the business and built circulations through a natural ability to connect with readers. Only Paul Dacre of the Mail is left from that category.
The news that Derek Jameson, who edited three national newspapers when they really were Fleet Street titles, had passed yesterday at the age of 82 closes the door that bit further on the last of the ranks of those who worked their way up through the business and built circulations through a natural ability to connect with readers. Only Paul Dacre of the Mail is left from that category.
Man with sense of humour
And the two were very different characters: Jameson was
considered fair and even handed by those who worked for him, while Dacre is
notorious for his bullying and foul mouthed tirades. After he had been removed
from the editor’s chair at the Screws
– he had previously run the Daily Express
and Daily Star – by the less than
benign actions of Rupert Murdoch, he made a new career in broadcasting.
Jameson fronted the BBC show “Do They Mean Us?” which took a sideways look at the portrayal of
the UK by foreign broadcasters. It was amusing and, yes, rather chummy: Jameson
would sign off by saying to camera “Do
they mean us? They surely do” in that distinctive London voice, which was
reassuring to many TV and radio viewers and listeners, but hated by Private Eye.
The way the Eye
treated Jameson is another reminder that the magazine, under the editorship of
Richard Ingrams, took a very public school attitude towards those with regional
accents and those it considered less educated and less well travelled. So it
was no surprise at all to see Jameson characterised as Sid Yobbo, especially as
it was sensed that he had a thin skin where his background was concerned.
Whether it was an urban myth or not, the characterisation of
Jameson as being so ignorant that he thought “erudite was a kind of glue” would not go away. But his affable and
natural approach endeared him to millions of Radio 2 listeners, and for many
years, so ultimately he had the last laugh. He had climbed to the top of the
greasy Fleet Street pole and successfully reinvented himself afterwards.
They really don’t make them like Derek Jameson any more: the
days when every national newspaper had reporters in every major city,
journalists who had learnt their trade the hard way, and sub-editors who were
ferociously knowledgeable and able to save many a hack’s poor research or dodgy
prose, are long gone. So farewell then, Sid Yobbo. This time they really did
mean you.
Derek Jameson 29
November 1929 – 12 September 2012
[UPDATE 20 September 1645 hours: the Eye has remembered Derek Jameson - a week later than Zelo Street, as it only comes out once a fortnight - with blank verses from the otherwise anonymous pen of Eric Jarvis Thribb.
And guess what? The Thribb tribute begins with the exact same words as mine. As Jameson might have asked, "Do they read me? They surely do"]
[UPDATE 20 September 1645 hours: the Eye has remembered Derek Jameson - a week later than Zelo Street, as it only comes out once a fortnight - with blank verses from the otherwise anonymous pen of Eric Jarvis Thribb.
And guess what? The Thribb tribute begins with the exact same words as mine. As Jameson might have asked, "Do they read me? They surely do"]
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