2015년 1월 19일 월요일

MediaGuardian briefing

Media briefing                                                                                      
Monday 19 Jan 2015
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Top stories on MediaGuardianMore »
In the wake of the shocking attack on Charlie Hebdo, Ed Vulliamy spent time with the magazine’s surviving cartoonists as they put together their survivors’ issue 
ITV and BBC1 need new big Saturday night hits and look to Great British Bake Off and Gogglebox for inspiration 
Broadcasters are much more aware of black, Asian and minority ethnic talent – but there is still a long way to go 
Ex-mayor of Doncaster Martin Winter claims ‘bumbling oddball’ Miliband knew about 2008 economic crash before it happened 
Peter Preston: The reporting differences between the Paris attacks and the Northern Ireland Troubles are stark, but seeing Blair in the chair at Westminster reminds us how politicians still feel they must control the debate 
Steven Emerson was labelled ‘a complete idiot’ by Cameron and mocked on Twitter after saying city was no-go area for non-Muslims 
Lib Dem is first party leader to request new configuration of participants after row over David Cameron refusing to take part 
John Edwards and John Troup have both been cleared of conspiring to commit misconduct in public office 
Former England manager joins David Platt and David O’Leary in criticising Express Newspapers’ cuts 
Swedish gamer ruled the YouTube roost with 4.1bn views, as games, children’s channels and music proved most popular for online video viewers 
Today's newspaper headlinesMore »
Our roundup of the day's media stories, including how the Charlie Hebdo 'survival issue' was made and TV bosses search for next Strictly Come Dancing 
Media Monkey's pick of the dayMore »
To Librairie La Page, in London’s “Little France” in south Kensington, where copies of Charlie Hebdo (a lot of them reserved) first went on sale on Friday morning. One customer began queuing at 7.30am for his pre-ordered copy, tried more than once to jump the queue and so was sent further back, and finally reached the counter at around 8.45am. At last handed his Charlie Hebdo, according to a La Page assistant, he opened it and said “but it’s in French!”. There’s no pleasing some people.


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