Some of those who scrabble around the dunghill that is
Grubstreet are able to restrain their urge to kick anyone who has expressed an
interest in properly independent press regulation when the target is engaged in
genuinely worthwhile or charitable work elsewhere. Sadly, this restraint does
not extend to the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre, for whom nothing is off
limits.
Who says I can't f***ing kick Coogan, c***?!?
So it was when actor and writer Steve Coogan, who, like Hugh
Grant, makes no secret of his support for Hacked Off, an organisation which has
been accused of indulging in such crimes as ordering takeaway pizza with malice
aforethought – for Dacre, worse than walking on the cracks in the pavement –
took time out from his busy work schedule to help promote the Philomena Project.
This group was formed to campaign on issues covered by the film Philomena, and seeks to raise
awareness of forced and illegal adoptions, a practice widespread in Ireland in
the past. The Magdalene Laundries, where many young women who had fallen
pregnant were forcibly separated from their babies, were recently described by
the Taoiseach, Enda Kenny, as “the
nation’s shame”.
Coogan played journalist Martin Sixsmith in the film,
opposite Judy Dench, and is promoting it in Los Angeles and London prior to the
Oscars and Baftas. His journey to Rome
with Philomena Lee, on whose experiences the film is based, was not part of
this. Much of the press understood: the
Maily Telegraph report, focusing
on giving women the closure of knowing what happened to their children, was
typical.
The
Guardian went further, stressing that
actor and film inspiration were not in Rome, where they met Pope Francis, as
any kind of film spin-off or promotion. Not the Mail. In a typically mean-spirited
and judgmental hatchet job, Dacre’s obedient doggies raked over Coogan’s
past in the usual style, sparing not even family and friends (although the few
comments to get through are hostile to the Mail).
The piece asserts he “travelled
to the Vatican to promote his new film”, then calls him a “celebrity sinner”, before introducing a
note of unintentional hilarity by telling “how
a man of the cloth once helped [Coogan] overcome
his daemons”. Serves the Mail right for hiring former Unix
programmers. But this is small respite from the smearing and righteous tone.
And there’s only one reason for that.
That reason is Leveson. As with the
grotesque smearing of David Bell, anyone who ventures near the subject of
press regulation is, for Dacre, fair game. Hugh Grant was
given the treatment recently, and anyone suspected of sympathising with
Hacked Off gets the same kicking. It is dishonest, it is deliberate, it is
plainly malicious, but in Paul Dacre’s twisted world, it is somehow legitimate.
But there is, ultimately, a problem with this approach: it won’t work.
The daemons, off doctor who?
ReplyDeleteThe Ancient Greeks believed that your creativity was a daemon that might visit you with inspiration or otherwise. Dacre would appear to have attracted some of the "or otherwise" ones.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the forced adoptions that were carried out in Ireland in the past, perhaps you would like to do some research about what happened in this country? Not only forced adoption but entire families of children would be taken from their parents on false pretenses and sent to Australia to work as cheap labour on farms.They were subjected to all sorts of abuse.This didn't end until 1967.
ReplyDeleteNo we didn't have the laundries here, we just locked up girls and young women in mental hospitals and left them there. For the rest of their lives.
All those who like to look down on Ireland (and the church for that matter) for things that happened in the past, should first look closely at their own backyard.
Doesn't make what happened in Ireland right even though it did happen here. I think you will find that
ReplyDeletemany people are aware of what happened to children in Australia and women being locked up in mental hospitals. Ive seen various documentaries on both and there have been calls for those who were affected and who are still alive to be given compensation and apologies. People are not looking down on Ireland or the church. They want them to accept they did something wrong, just as those abused in Australia and locked up in mental hospitals want justice too.