Book description
How do you decide what is a 'story' and what isn't? What does a
newspaper editor actually do all day? How do hacks get their scoops? How
do the TV stations choose their news bulletins? How do you persuade
people to say those awful, embarassing things? Who earns what? How do
journalists manage to look in the mirror after the way they sometimes
behave? The purpose of this insider's account is to provide an answer to
all these questions and more. Andrew Marr's brilliant, and brilliantly
funny, book is a guide to those of us who read newspapers, or who listen
to and watch news bulletins but want to know more. Andrew Marr tells the
story of modern journalism through his own experience. This is an
extremely readable and utterly unique modern social history of British
journalism, with all its odd glamour, smashed hopes and future
possibility.
Andrew Marr was born in Glasgow. He graduated from Cambridge
University and has enjoyed a long career in political journalism,
working for the Scotsman, the Independent , the Economist, the Express
, and the Observer before being appointed as the BBC's political
editor in May 2000. He is also the presenter of Start the Week. Andrew
Marr's broadcasting includes series on contemporary thinkers for BBC 2
and Radio 4, and political documentaries for Channel 4 and BBC
Panorama. He has had major prizes from the British Press Awards, the
Royal Television Society and Bafta, among others. He lives in London.