The Sun: from naked breasts to barely-there bikinis
The Sun has waited until the idea of displaying women’s breasts in a family newspaper is so laughable it can’t claim any credit whatsoever for moving with the times.
A pledge card or a culture war? Krishnan Guru-Murthy discusses election strategies with Conservative Equalities Committee Chair Caroline Nokes and former Labour Culture Secretary Ben Bradshaw.
The Sun has been widely criticised for claiming that a fifth of British Muslims sympathies with jihadis. What’s the truth of the matter?
The Sun is backing the SNP in Scotland. Does Britain’s biggest-selling paper still have the power to win elections… if it ever did?
The Sun has waited until the idea of displaying women’s breasts in a family newspaper is so laughable it can’t claim any credit whatsoever for moving with the times.
There’s no topless page 3 girl in today’s edition of the Sun newspaper – but in the age of the internet, didn’t the feature become obsolete many years ago?
The Sun has been accused of stigmatising mentally ill people and reporting statistics inaccurately in a front-page story. FactCheck takes a look.
Former Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie says he has suffered “personal vilification for decades” because of the mistakes of the South Yorkshire Police
Channel 4 News’ Alex Thomson tracks down The Sun’s former editor Kelvin MacKenzie to ask him face-to-face about the Hillsborough lies.
Are former News of the World journalists too toxic to join their sister publication’s new launch? FactCheck wonders if the Sun on Sunday is answering the SOS of the ex-NoW hacks.
Just seen this on New York Times, who have been investigating the News International phone hacking allegations.
It would be unwise for No.10 to pursue the line that the Sun newspaper was behind the recording of Gordon Brown’s phone call to Jacqui Janes, writes Gary Gibbon.
The mother of a soldier killed in Afghanistan attacks Gordon Brown for equipment shortages. Jon Snow blogs on the messy business of war for politicians.
The Sun’s associate editor, Trevor Kavanagh has confirmed that Rupert Murdoch was central to the Sun’s decision to switch horses in British politics. Should we care?
The Sun’s declcaration of support for David Cameron will have really hurt Gordon Brown, who has invested a lot over the years in cultivating the Murdoch empire.