Difference between revisions of "Weekend World"

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(New page: John Lloyd on ''Weekend World'': <blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">''Weekend World'' always made it explicit that pol...)
 
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[[John Lloyd]] on ''Weekend World'':
 
[[John Lloyd]] on ''Weekend World'':
  
<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">''Weekend World'' always made it explicit that politicians, especially cabinet ministers, faced on most issues a range of difficult and constructed choices. It sought to make sense of the choices; its interviews were aimed at clarifying the view that the politician or public figure took of these choices. The presenters - [Peter] [[Peter Jay|Jay]], then the former MPs [[Brian Walden]] (Labour) and [[Matthew Parris]] (Conservative) - stressed that politicians had larger responsibilities than they did because politicians were elected, and had taken on a greater or lesser range of duties as part of the democratic and governing process. Power was held to account, but explicitly underpinned because it was elective power. Television was a secondary function of democracy. <ref>John Lloyd, '[http://www.newstatesman.com/200211110037 The interview as humiliation. Jeremy Paxman is the champion of an insidious form of journalism. John Lloyd on why his dispute with John Birt is symptomatic of a wider crisis in our political culture]', New Statesman, 11 November 2002</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">''Weekend World'' always made it explicit that politicians, especially cabinet ministers, faced on most issues a range of difficult and constructed choices. It sought to make sense of the choices; its interviews were aimed at clarifying the view that the politician or public figure took of these choices. The presenters - [Peter] [[Peter Jay|Jay]], then the former MPs [[Brian Walden]] (Labour) and [[Matthew Parris]] (Conservative) - stressed that politicians had larger responsibilities than they did because politicians were elected, and had taken on a greater or lesser range of duties as part of the democratic and governing process. <ref>John Lloyd, '[http://www.newstatesman.com/200211110037 The interview as humiliation. Jeremy Paxman is the champion of an insidious form of journalism. John Lloyd on why his dispute with John Birt is symptomatic of a wider crisis in our political culture]', ''New Statesman'', 11 November 2002</ref></blockquote>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
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Revision as of 15:03, 14 December 2009

John Lloyd on Weekend World:

Weekend World always made it explicit that politicians, especially cabinet ministers, faced on most issues a range of difficult and constructed choices. It sought to make sense of the choices; its interviews were aimed at clarifying the view that the politician or public figure took of these choices. The presenters - [Peter] Jay, then the former MPs Brian Walden (Labour) and Matthew Parris (Conservative) - stressed that politicians had larger responsibilities than they did because politicians were elected, and had taken on a greater or lesser range of duties as part of the democratic and governing process. [1]

Notes