Affairs / Media
Monocolumn
Thursday 14 July
Murdoch – the people’s tyrant
We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of its periodical fits of morality
Thursday 14 July
We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public in one of its periodical fits of morality
Monday 26 April
Most visitors to New York City newsstands began yesterday as they do every morning, choosing between the New York Post and New York Daily News.
Tuesday 19 July
A serious issue suffers from a pie in the face.
Thursday 22 July
A new front has opened up in the ongoing battle between media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation and the rest of the world.
Kiwi PM John Key gets foot-in-mouth disease and Fiji puts up a fight against Rupert Murdoch
Thursday 17 September
Barring the 11th-hour arrival of a press baron in shining armour, tonight will see the team of purple-shirted paper-pushers take their final bow: freesheet, The London Paper is closing.
Wednesday 6 July
The Huffington Post couldn’t have asked for a better day than yesterday for its UK launch.
Sunday 22 November
I’ve spent the past few days tucked away in a secret hideaway in the headquarters of the German publishing house Axel Springer, helping create what the company thinks could be the salvation of newspapers.
Tuesday 5 March
Warren Buffett's love of print newspapers is a refreshing rebuttal to iPad-or-nothing publishers.
Wednesday 9 June
New York is the ultimate “make or break” town and the next few weeks might determine if Richard Attias can indeed make the city his own.
Publishing dynasty MDS is growing faster than at any time in its 205-year history, but the man leading its charge into the digital arena is determined that the firm stays close to its founding principles.
As Australia wakes up, journalists, producers and media executives in its most cosmopolitan city prepare for another day fighting for ratings and readers in a fast-changing business. And it’s here, across the breakfast…
The image-savvy Dalai Lama is this month's style Leader, and we report on Russia's celebration of its Second World War victory over Japan.
News from the islands, a highspeed rail link between Melbourne, Brisbane and Sydney, and fruit prices go bananas in Australia.
In a media world dominated by reality TV and celebrity chat shows posing as news, Milena Gabanelli’s ‘Report’ stands out. Since 1997, her investigations have tackled corruption in Italy head on, criticising politicians…
Monocle meets the founder of London's Museum of Everything as he prepares for his latest eccentric exhibition.
On millionaires’ row in Herat, elaborate palaces are being built by businessmen who have made fortunes from exploiting the needs of the new Afghanistan – or selling heroin. A heady mix of Iranian, Italian and Gulf influe…
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