We use the NME website, every day. We get interview biographies and band biographies from it. The good thing about it is that it won't let you forget about it as it stays on the screen, and it has loads and loads of links. You can flick through reviews from the night before as well as records the NME has reviewed - and then you can access the music. But the main reason people use NME is for the news pages. The quality is good, very fast, and it's updated daily.
Hint Magazine is basically a fashion magazine on the web. It's an irreverent look at the fashion industry and the media. As well as reviews, it looks at industry gossip - at what the editor of Harper's Bazaar or Gwyneth Paltrow is doing. There was an article about which model has the sexiest, prettiest and cutest eyes, which we extracted for our magazine; it listed the top 10 and then it let the people who accessed the website have a debate in the chatrooms. It ran for four or five days. I guess what I like about it is there's no pomposity, but it's also very informative and tells you when the fashion shows are on. The whole package is slickly done.
I suspect a journalist is behind www.tvgohome.com. It's a mock-up of the Radio Times, with all the same fonts and photos with bylines with the latest TV series and film premieres, but all the entries are made up. It's a satirical look at news programmes and a satire on news presenting on television - I think it's fair to say it wouldn't exist if it hadn't been for Chris Morris and Brass Eye. It's literally a page of television listings with a paragraph block for each programme (over Christmas, say, it had a billing that said: "4.00. Film Premiere: A Muppet Schindler's List. Harrowing drama starring Liam Neeson and Kermit the Frog.") It's not interactive, but it's incredibly humorously and rudely written. Kind of fun.
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