Difference between revisions of "Media House International Limited"

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==People==
 
==People==
*[[Lois Boyle]]
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[[Lois Boyle]]
*[[Tom Cassidy]]
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:| [[Tom Cassidy]]
*[[Andrew Connell]]
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:|[[Andrew Connell]]
*[[Christine Dick]]
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:|[[Christine Dick]]
*[[Caroline Gordon]]
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:|[[Caroline Gordon]]
*[[Allan Hogarth]]
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:|[[Allan Hogarth]]
*[[Lorna Inglis]]
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:|[[Lorna Inglis]]
*[[Jack Irvine]]
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:|[[Jack Irvine]]
*[[Gordon Robertson]]
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:|[[Gordon Robertson]]
*[[Lindsay Smith]]
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:|[[Lindsay Smith]]
*[[Ramsay Smith]]
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:|[[Ramsay Smith]]
  
 
==Clients==
 
==Clients==

Revision as of 10:56, 11 October 2011

Scotland badge.png This article is part of the Scotland: Portal project of SpinWatch.

Media House International is the PR and lobbying agency created by Jack Irvine, a former editor of the Scottish Sun. Media House came to national attention when running the 'Keep the Clause Campaign' (against the repeal of Section 28 / Clause 2a, preventing local authorities teaching school children about the acceptability of homosexuality) on behalf of Stagecoach tycoon Brian Souter in 2000.

Background

Media House advertise themselves as specialising in Public Relations, Crisis Management and Public Affairs.[1] They have offices in London, Edinburgh, Glasgow and New York.

Media House define Public Relations as

'the systematic attempt to influence people's beliefs, attitudes, opinions or behaviour towards an organisation, its people, products or services, or an issue or cause'[2].

Keep the clause

Media House targetted their campaign at the tabloid press in Scotland (supported by an expensive billboard advertising campaign across the country), almost entirely avoiding television news and current affairs, as they believed staff at both BBC Scotland and STV to be sympathetic to liberal, politically correct, causes. The campaign was a political success in that it forced the Scottish Executive to issue a policy u-turn and promise that official guidance would be given to local authorities on how homosexuality could be treated within the curriculum.

A public relations company has been forced to withdraw claims that several celebrities were backing the campaign to retain the law banning the promotion of homosexuality in schools. The climbdown followed the formal launch in Edinburgh of the Keep the Clause campaign, which is being funded by millionaire Stagecoach chairman Brian Souter. Media House, a PR firm run by former Scottish Sun editor Jack Irvine, has been hired to organise the drive to retain Section 28 in Scotland. At the launch, the firm's David Macaulay read out a list of celebrities and well-known business people who he said supported Section 28. These included:
But a short time later, Mr Macaulay was forced to admit publicly that some of those he had named, had not given their backing. He blamed a malicious fax sent to his office, from which some of the names had been taken. The names had not not been verified with the individuals concerned and its source is not clear.[3]

Media House also ran the campaign on behalf of the Countryside Alliance to resist the fox hunting ban in Scotland.[4]

Media House have not always worked in opposition to Scottish government. At the behest of the former Secretary of State for Scotland, Michael Forsyth, Media House handled the Scottish Office's PR and public affairs campaign to secure the release of two Scottish nurses accused of murder in Saudi Arabia.[5] In 1996, Media House recruited David Whitton from Scottish Television to head its public affairs division. Whitton's later appointment as Donald Dewar's official spokesman, and thereafter his return to PR consultancy is symptomatic of the connectedness of the worlds of media, politics and advocacy in Scotland.[6]

Jack Irvine described his approach to Scottish political campaigning in 2001 as:

'Because the media is a very, very closed shop up here and [Media House] are fortunate or unfortunate enough to have been involved in it for all our lives, and you cannot do one [campaigning]without the other [contacts]. I mean you could present the most brilliant public affairs case you want, but if you can't get the editors convinced of it, you'll lose it ... I go into clients now and say we come at it from two levels, the political/intellectual level and we have the guys who go in with the boots on and kick politicians brains out.'[7]

Clients and regulation

Whilst Media House do not name DuPont, Dell, L’Oreal, Revlon and Estee Lauder as their clients, their 2005 report EU REGULATION: A CHALLENGE FOR US BUSINESSES[8] lists them by name as being affected by EU regulation. Whilst this is not conclusive, it does draw attention to the possibility that they are potentially connected to Media House in some form or another.

In the 2005 report EU REGULATION: A CHALLENGE FOR US BUSINESSES [9], the Media House Commercial Intelligence Team write of how they are concerned at how 'Europe’s stringent environmental standards entail a substantial financial and bureaucratic burden' for many American Companies. They voice a resistance to new regulations designed to protect our environment stating that 'Europe has been under intense pressure to stem the flow of new environment laws' They go on to add that 'there is a hope, given the economic downturn, the issues over expansion and the constitution that the appetite for new legislation may be blunted. Indeed the European Commission President Jose Manual Barroso has just launched the region’s biggest ever de-regulation campaign; supported by the UK and its ‘better regulation agenda’.

The 'better regulation agenda' they refer to is that of the then called Better Regulation Task Force (now know as the Better Regulation Commission, which was replaced by the Risk and Regulation Advisory Council in 2008[10]). The Better Regulation Task Force (BRTF) was set up in 1997 as an 'independent advisory body' to advise the Government on regulatory action. The BRTF went on to ‘become a very influential body in influencing the Government's policy on regulation’[11].

People

Lois Boyle

| Tom Cassidy
|Andrew Connell
|Christine Dick
|Caroline Gordon
|Allan Hogarth
|Lorna Inglis
|Jack Irvine
|Gordon Robertson
|Lindsay Smith
|Ramsay Smith

Clients

Media house discloses the following clients on its website. It also notes that 'Certain major clients cannot be named for strategic and confidential reasons.'

Main Accounts

USA

Project Work

As of October 2011 MH no longer lists clients on its website, with the exception of eight case studies.

Current clients listed:

Past clients:

[12]

Contact

Website: http://www.mediahouse.co.uk/index.htm

References

  1. Media House What We Do Accessed 29th January 2008
  2. Media House FAQ Accessed 29th January 2008
  3. BBC Online Wednesday, 19 January, 2000, 19:44 GMT PR firm hit by Section 28 'hoax'
  4. Ref needed
  5. Ref needed
  6. Ref needed
  7. Ref needed
  8. Smith, L. & Connell, A. (2005) EU REGULATION: A CHALLENGE FOR US BUSINESSES Media House Commercial Intelligence Team. Accessed 29th January 2008
  9. Smith, L. & Connell, A. (2005) EU REGULATION: A CHALLENGE FOR US BUSINESSES Media House Commercial Intelligence Team. Accessed 29th January 2008
  10. Times Online Risk assessment watchdog set up to halt march of the nanny state Accessed 29th January 2008
  11. Centre for Corporate Accountability Better Regulation Task Froce Accessed 29th January 2008
  12. MH International Case Studies, accessed 11 October 2011.