Richard Hartley

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Media Monkey: Jeremy Paxman, Robert Peston and Brexit

ITV’s political editor feels a bit of a tweet, TV referendum banana skins round-up, and Mail Online has a huge float for Cannes Lions

Charging money to go ad-free? The New York Times meets the BBC

Former corporation man Mark Thompson has hit on a new, yet strikingly familiar, formula for revenues in the digital age

Untold: Britain’s dirtiest murder cover-up has become a must-listen podcast

In 1987, Daniel Morgan was found dead in a pub car park with axe wounds to the head and £1,000 in his pocket. Now a gripping new podcast is lifting the lid on the most investigated murder in British history

Should governments bail out newsprint newspapers?

And should the BBC have to fund 150 reporters to help local press publishers?

BBC tops poll as most important news source for EU referendum

Corporation listed by 34% compared to 20% for papers and 16% for social media

Mail Online boss: ‘We don’t stoke fears about immigration’

Martin Clarke defends Daily Mail website’s coverage of EU referendum, also attacking critics of its so-called ‘sidebar of shame’

Rupert Murdoch to invest millions in video for Sun and Times

News UK plans to make thousands of videos a year for papers’ websites, including advertising and live content

No holding back from networks on Rogerson but Alan Jones lies low

Guilty verdict prompts TV’s take on bad cops; Coffs Coast Advocate misses its Shott; and cartoonist Bill Leak offends the ‘offenderati’

Facebook’s rise as news source hits publishers’ revenues

Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism report also finds importance of TV news is waning among young people

Almost 60% of US newspaper jobs vanish in 26 years

Employment statistics show the effects of the digital age on newsprint

Mike Bartlett: ‘The world didn’t know if Snowden was a hero or traitor’

The playwright on his new play, Wild, inspired by Edward Snowden’s leaks and his forthcoming series Press, about the aftermath of phone hacking

Independent looks to the US to drive digital-only future

Publisher to boost American presence and ‘devolve’ power from London base

Canadian newspaper reports increased readership for its tablet edition

Publisher of La Presse, which is digital-only on weekdays, says readers are spending up to an hour a day reading its content - and ad sales are ‘strong’

Mass media is over, but where does journalism go from here?

The crucial question no one, including Jeff Jarvis, can answer: how will we fund journalists in a world dominated by Google and Facebook?

Suddenly, national newspapers are heading for that print cliff fall

As advertisers turn their backs on newsprint, publishers who have been in denial about the digital revolution are confronted by an uncomfortable reality

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About

  • About Richard Hartley
  • Richard Hartley’s Work
  • Location

Film & Tech News

  • Stop! That! Train! review – RuPaul-led zany drag comedy is a riot
  • The best robot vacuums in the UK to keep your home clean and dust free, tested
  • Strictly Ballroom review – Baz Luhrmann’s dizzying, dance-tastic swirl of fun is a classic ugly-duckling tale
  • Met police chief calls for law to make stolen phones ‘unusable bricks’
  • ‘They kissed, and the audience roared’: the new musical about gay activists and striking miners
  • French star Patrick Bruel charged with rape and sexual assault
  • Labor to set terms for datacentre and AI growth as it vows not to repeat mistakes of resources boom
  • Dead Poets Society director Peter Weir receives lifetime achievement award at Sydney film festival
  • Stephen Ogilvie’s family appeal for calm on second night of disorder – as it happened
  • Elon Musk’s X not facing action from UK government over posts inciting violence in Belfast
  • Glenn Close and Ridley Scott among names set to receive honorary Oscars
  • The Guardian view on far-right violence: digital radicalisation is threatening democracy
  • Sales of Meta whistleblower’s memoir soar after Hay festival ‘silencing’
  • How to Talk Australians: The Movie review – viral web series lampooning Aussie culture gets big-screen adaptation
  • First trailer for Aaron Sorkin’s Facebook sequel The Social Reckoning
  • Actor Tyler Mane reveals he is having treatment for rare male breast cancer
  • Under the Shadow review – Leila Farzad is fantastic in this nerve-shredding tale of 80s Tehran
  • From An Evening With Gary Lineker to Dear England: what to watch to warm up for the World Cup
  • Peter Asher on being music’s incredible ‘Everywhere Man’: ‘The secret is simple’
  • ‘It’s not about heroes and villains’: the triumphant return of long-lost indie I Shot Andy Warhol
  • Should you send that midnight text? 11 essential rules for phone etiquette
  • The best films of 2026 so far
  • Chinese activist in UK told by X that abusive deepfakes do not breach rules
  • Boogie Nights review – Paul Thomas Anderson’s porn epic is still gaudy, seedy fun
  • Global brands ‘likely’ using mineral that funds rebels accused of atrocities in DRC, investigation finds
  • Can a $159 Bluetooth sleep mask help you snooze better? I tested to find out
  • How Belfast knife attack became the latest far-right ‘trigger event’
  • Crackdown on tech platforms will go ahead despite US intervention, says No 10
  • Peabo Bryson obituary
  • Practice dates: should you swipe right on people you’re not attracted to?

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