The Sun

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The Sun

The Sun is a UK-based tabloid newspaper published by News International. The current editor is Rebekah Wade.

History

The Sun along with its Sunday version The News of The World is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s organisation News International.

Rupert Murdoch moved production of the newspaper away from its traditional home in Fleet Street to new premises in Wapping East London in 1986. The move was designed to modernise production practices, reduce costs and perhaps more importantly remove the influence of the powerful Fleet Street print unions.

The move to Wapping, according to journalist Nick Davies, "Released a chain reaction of internal changes which have had a devastating effect on truth-telling journalism". [1]

Controversies

The Falklands

In May 1982 The Sun reported the sinking of the Argentine Navy Cruiser The Belgrano with the headline “Gotcha”. The sinking of the Belgrano caused 323 deaths, more than half of the Argentine deaths in the entire conflict.

Hillsborough

In April 1989 The Sun under the headline “The Truth”, reported that during the Hillsborough stadium football disaster Liverpool football fans had attacked policemen while they tried to help injured victims of the crush. The sub-headlines on the piece read: "Some fans picked pockets of victims"; "Some fans urinated on the brave cops"; "Some fans beat up PC giving kiss of life".

Kelvin MacKenzie who was the editor at the time apologised publicly when the Press Complaints Commission condemned his paper's descriptions of Liverpool fans urinating on the Hillsborough dead and stealing from their bodies. He undermined the sincerity of his apology at a business lunch in Newcastle, where he said "I was not sorry then and I'm not sorry now,", he went on to say "All I did wrong there was tell the truth". The Sun printed a full-page apology in July 2004 for what it called "the most terrible mistake" in its history.[2].

David Blunkett and asylum seekers

In August 2003 The Sun printed a full week of coverage dedicated to criticising asylum-seekers. David Blunkett wrote an article for the paper supporting The Sun's stance. He said, "I am not in dispute with the Sun on this week’s coverage". According to journalist Peter Oborne, the campaign was the result of a co-ordinated effort between The Sun and the Government. Oborne explains, "Sun readers never knew that Blunkett had quietly agreed to meet the paper and knew about the campaign before it had even started."[3].

Media monopoly

MPs protested against Murdoch's acquisition of The Times and The Sunday Times because of the effect a media monopoly could have on democracy in the United Kingdom. This was because Murdoch already owned The Sun and The News of The World. A report by the Labour Government in 2001 said, "A healthy democracy depends on a culture of dissent and argument, which would inevitably be diminished if there were only a limited number of providers of news"[4].

The main concern with Rupert Murdoch's media monopoly is that he could use it to manipulate public opinion and therefore put pressure on politicians who oppose his business interests. In October 2003 in the United States a study by the nonpartisan Program on International Policy Attitudes showed that 60% of U.S. citizens believed either that: clear evidence had been found of links between Iraq and Al Qaeda; W.M.D. had been found in Iraq; world public opinion favored the U.S. going to war with Iraq. 80% of the people who believed these falsehoods received their news primarily from Rupert Murdoch's Fox News.

The media interests of News International in the United Kingdom include:

In the United States Rupert Murdoch's Newscorp owns:

[5]

Journalists

A-L

M-Z

Nick Parker, Chief Foriegn Correspondent

ABC and readership figures

The Sun has an average daily net circulation of 2,899,310, according to the latest figures from ABC. These figures cover the period from the end of November 2008 to the end of December 2008.[6]

According to The National Readership Survey, 38% of Sun readers belong to socio-economic group ABC1, with the other 62% belonging to socio-economic group C2DE. 52% of Sun readers are over 44 and 48% are aged between 15-44. The male-female divide amongst Sun readers is 56% male and 44% female. This data was captured over one year from October 2007 to September 2008.[7]

References

  1. Nick Davies, Flat Earth News (2008), London: Chatto & Windus
  2. Ian Herbert, MacKenzie's Hillsborough - 'The Sun told The Truth', The Independent, 2-December-2006, Accessed 24-June-2009
  3. Peter Oborne, Politicians and journalists are in a conspiracy against the public, The Spectator, 4-December-2004, Accessed 24-June-2009
  4. Department for Culture Media and Sport,Media Ownership Rules, November-2001, Accessed 19-January-2009
  5. Richard Wray, Murdoch faces scrutiny over media influence, 25-May-2007, Accessed 19-January-2009
  6. Audit Bureau of Circulation, ABC Figures for The Sun Nov-Dec 2008 Accessed 19-January-2009
  7. National Readership Survey Figures, NRS Figures October 2008-September 2009, Accessed 19-January-2009