Hugh Cudlipp lecture: Poised for journalism's golden age
Channel 4 News Presenter Jon Snow gave the Hugh Cudlipp lecture at the London College of Communication. You can read the full text of his speech here.
267 items found
The police officer leading the investigation into illicit payments by the Sun says there was a network of corrupt public officials receiving money, as Home Affairs Correspondent Andy Davies reports.
Newspaper tycoon Rupert Murdoch tells staff at The Sun he is planning to launch a Sunday version of the newspaper. It follows the demise of the News of the World last year.
Channel 4 News Presenter Jon Snow gave the Hugh Cudlipp lecture at the London College of Communication. You can read the full text of his speech here.
Former deputy prime minister John Prescott and actor Jude Law are among several public figures who have settled damages claims in connection with News of the World phone hacking.
It’s been one of the most dramatic days yet at the Leveson inquiry into press standards and ethics – as the owner of the Daily Express and Daily Star, Richard Desmond, gave evidence.
The Leveson inquiry into press ethics hears from former News of the World and Daily Mirror editor Piers Morgan, who denies listening to “illegally obtained voice messages”.
A former News of the World editor has said that he feared there were “bombs under the newsroom floor” in the form of a history of illegal practices at the paper, following his appointment.
The NoW’s former legal manager Tom Crone says he showed James Murdoch an email containing transcripts of conversations about phone hacking which proved the practice went beyond a “rogue” reporter.
New evidence suggests Milly Dowler’s voicemails could have been deleted automatically rather than by News of the World journalists, the Leveson Inquiry hears.
As Alastair Campbell tells the Leveson inquiry elements of the press have become ‘putrid’, a former investigator claims data chiefs refused to take action against newspapers on illegal information.
Singer Charlotte Church tells the Leveson inquiry into press standards that she agreed to turn down a £100,000 fee to sing at Rupert Murdoch’s wedding in exchange for favourable publicity.
Channel 4 News Chief Correspondent Alex Thomson on the steps that could be taken post-Leveson to tackle corrosive UK journalism.
They said they were besieged, lied about, and spat at – the Leveson inquiry hears more accusations of press harassment from JK Rowling, Max Mosley and Sienna Miller.
On the third day of the Leveson inquiry Mark Lewis, the solicitor who represents alleged victims of phone hacking, has been giving evidence.
James Murdoch resigns as director of the companies which publish the Sun, the Times and the Sunday Times.