The Mail On Sunday
has made a name for itself of late with a series of front page splashes which
had next to nothing to support the headlines. The claim that so-called “Jihadi John” had
been at least wounded was not supported by the accompanying article, and
the idea that Cliff Richard was
to sue the BBC sadly lacked a single word of comment from him.
This less than illustrious campaign continues
with today’s offering, with the headline thundering “Thatcher ‘Murder’ Is BBC’s Book
At Bedtime”, with readers then informed “Radio 4 ignores protests to give author’s ‘sick and perverted’ fantasy
a coveted broadcast slot”. The main headline may sound familiar: this is
because the Mail titles have been
here before.
The reference is to Hilary Mantel’s recently published
collection of short stories, one of which is an alternative reading of recent
history called The Assassination Of
Margaret Thatcher – August 6th 1983. This is clearly a work of fiction.
Back in September, the Mail lined up
The Usual Suspects in
an effort to build its campaign of faux outrage against Ms Mantel, partly
because she is a successful author.
And, as it was in September, those suspects are the same: Tim
Bell, attempting to occupy the moral high ground despite being caught openly,
er, stimulating himself by hand in full view of passers-by, Tory MP Conor
Burns, a professional nonentity who once met Mrs T., and of course (yes, it’s her again) Nadine Dorries. To this is
added the usual tired accusation of left-wing bias by the Corporation.
Readers are told “The
broadcast on January 9 will increase tensions between the BBC and the
Government after David Cameron and George Osborne accused the Corporation of
bias in its coverage of spending cuts”. Andthe Radio 4 executive who may
have commissioned the work also gets a kicking: she “came under fire after critics claimed there was overt Left-wing bias in
the station’s comedy programmes”.
But then a thought enters: despite all the adverse views
expressed, what exactly is the fuss over, and what protest has been made? The
broadcast is a single 13-minute slot – the other three programmes will feature
other Mantel short stories – and the MoS
does not show one instance of anyone making representations to the Beeb. All
they have is responses to their journalists’ contact.
The thought also enters that the audience for Radio 4’s Book At Bedtime may not reach the same
number of people at the BBC’s TV channels, but then, that is not the point: the
MoS is merely trying to gain maximum
outrage for minimum outlay, and indeed for minimal factual backup. The only
reason the Corporation, and Ms Mantel, have been targeted is because they are
not the Mail’s kind of people.
Meanwhile, in the real world, people are generally getting a
life. Hint, Mail hacks.
4 comments:
It's pathetic, isn't it? They've quoted Norman Tebbit, who I can understand might feel somewhat uncomfortable with this considering what he and his wife went through in Brighton thirty years ago, but this is no more that a "What If" story in the Alternate History genre.
If Thatch was still with us, I suspect she wouldn't have given two hoots about it. And furthermore, if it was called The Assassination of Gordon Brown, the same Mailites who are commenting that this should be banned would be volunteering to pull the trigger.
‘An exhilarating, if dark, collection … ‘The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher’ is a small triumph: a lesson in artfully controlled savagery’ Sunday Times
‘The best stories in the collection … combine sharp observation and sly wit with a subtle burrowing into the recesses of her protagonists’ heads. The darker stories recall both the metaphysical speculations of Jorge Luis Borges and the trickery of Roald Dahl’ Mail on Sunday
Late April 2013 BBC Radio 4 Book Of The Week: Margaret Thatcher: The Authorized Biography and on BBC 2 TV:Young Margaret:Love, Life And Letters. Added to this the rose tinted relationship between Dorothy Hodgkin and Margaret Thatcher portrayed in the Radio 4 Afternoon Play in August this year: The Chemistry Between Them.
Biased BBC – only when it suits.
It's fiction!!
Post a Comment