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2018 / / The Times of Bill Cunningham is a movie starring Bill Cunningham. A new feature film documentary about legendary NYTimes photographer Bill Cunningham / writed by: Mark Bozek / USA / star: Bill Cunningham. Free watch the times of bill cunningham show.

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I have zero interested in fashion, but I kind of want to see this flick. Critics Consensus No consensus yet. 74% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 23 89% Audience Score User Ratings: 18 The Times of Bill Cunningham Ratings & Reviews Explanation Tickets & Showtimes The movie doesn't seem to be playing near you. Go back Enter your location to see showtimes near you. The Times of Bill Cunningham Videos Photos Movie Info Told in Bill Cunningham's own words from a recently unearthed six-hour 1994 interview, the iconic street photographer and fashion historian chronicles, in his customarily cheerful and plainspoken manner, moonlighting as a milliner in France during the Korean War, his unique relationship with First Lady Jackie Kennedy, his four decades at The New York Times and his democratic view of fashion and society. Narrated by Sarah Jessica Parker, The Times of Bill Cunningham features incredible photographs chosen from over 3 million previously unpublicized images and documents from Cunningham. Rating: NR Genre: Directed By: Written By: In Theaters: Feb 14, 2020 limited Runtime: 74 minutes Studio: Greenwich Entertainment Cast News & Interviews for The Times of Bill Cunningham Critic Reviews for The Times of Bill Cunningham Audience Reviews for The Times of Bill Cunningham The Times of Bill Cunningham Quotes Movie & TV guides.

Free watch the times of bill cunningham actor. →→ ✱✱✱✱✱✱✱ →→ WATCH →→ ❂❂❂❂❂❂❂ Directed by=Mark Bozek / Story=The Times of Bill Cunningham is a movie starring Bill Cunningham. A new feature film documentary about legendary NYTimes photographer Bill Cunningham / 2018 / genre=Documentary / duration=74 minutes / writed by=Mark Bozek. I LOVE PETER🎶🎸. FRAMPTON. 💙💚💛. Ouvindo agora no Brasil. Dodgers absolutely need pitching over another outfielder. Especially one who had a major drop off this last year. Starts with great music and then it's uphill all the way from there. Surely whether you shoot people, animals, places or whatever is this not what photography should be about, sharing experiences. The latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox Marijuana for breakfast: The Beatles and the making of Help! John Lennon recalled glazed eyes and giggling on Dick Lester’s zany Bond spoof – now recognised as the film that invented pop video, as well as the moment The Beatles’ songwriting left Merseybeat far behind. Mark Beaumont on how a classic was created out of chaos. Thank you Jon, very cool. 'English'Full'Movie'Download [The Times of Bill] Pirate Bay "The Times" movie you tube Watch The Times of 2018 Online IMDB. Does Bill Maher or one of the staff make sure to feed all those hungry seals afterwards. Free online the times of bill cunningham tv show. The Sunday Times The Sunday Times cover (13 July 2014) Type Sunday newspaper Format Broadsheet Owner(s) News UK Founder(s) Henry White Editor Emma Tucker [1] Founded 18 February 1821; 198 years ago (as The New Observer) Political alignment Conservative [2] Centre-right [3] Headquarters The News Building (London) Circulation 659, 699 (as of September 2019) [4] Sister newspapers The Times Website thesundaytimes Free online archives No The Sunday Times is the largest-selling British national newspaper in the " quality press " market category. It is published by Times Newspapers Ltd, a subsidiary of News UK, which is in turn owned by News Corp. Times Newspapers also publishes The Times. The two papers were founded independently and have been under common ownership only since 1966. They were bought by News International in 1981. The Sunday Times occupies a dominant position in the quality Sunday market; its circulation of just over 650, 000 exceeds that of its main rivals, the Sunday Telegraph and the Observer, combined. [5] [6] While some other national newspapers moved to a tabloid format in the early 2000s, The Sunday Times has retained the larger broadsheet format and has said that it will continue to do so. As of December 2019, it sells 75% more copies than its sister paper, The Times, which is published Monday to Saturday. [7] The Sunday Times has acquired a reputation for the strength of its investigative reporting – much of it by its Insight team – and also for its wide-ranging foreign coverage. [ citation needed] It has a number of popular writers, columnists and commentators including Jeremy Clarkson and Bryan Appleyard. A. Gill was a prominent columnist for many years. It was Britain's first multi-section newspaper and remains substantially larger than its rivals. A typical edition contains the equivalent of 450 to 500 tabloid pages. Besides the main news section, it has standalone News Review, Business, Sport, Money and Appointments sections – all broadsheet. There are three magazines ( The Sunday Times Magazine, Culture, and Style) and two tabloid supplements (Travel and Home). It has a website and separate digital editions configured for both the iOS operating system for the Apple iPad and the Android operating system for such devices as the Google Nexus, all of which offer video clips, extra features and multimedia and other material not found in the printed version of the newspaper. [ citation needed] The paper publishes The Sunday Times Rich List, an annual survey of the wealthiest people in Britain and Ireland, equivalent to the Forbes 400 list in the United States, and a series of league tables with reviews of private British companies, in particular The Sunday Times Fast Track 100. The paper also produces an annual league table of the best-performing state and independent schools at both junior and senior level across the United Kingdom, entitled Parent Power (with additional information available online), and an annual league table of British universities and a similar one for Irish universities. It publishes The Sunday Times Bestseller List of books in Britain, and a list of the "100 Best Companies to Work For", focusing on UK companies. It also organises The Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival, held annually, and The Sunday Times Festival of Education, which takes place every year at Wellington College. [ citation needed] History [ edit] Plaque to the first edition of The Sunday Times at No. 4 Salisbury Court, London Founding and early history (1821–1915) [ edit] The paper began publication on 18 February 1821 as The New Observer, but from 21 April its title was changed to the Independent Observer. Its founder, Henry White, chose the name in an apparent attempt to take advantage of the success of the Observer, which had been founded in 1791, although there was no connection between the two papers. On 20 October 1822 it was reborn as The Sunday Times, although it had no relationship with The Times. [8] In January 1823, White sold the paper to Daniel Whittle Harvey, a radical politician. Under its new owner, The Sunday Times notched up several firsts: a wood engraving it published of the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1838 was the largest illustration to have appeared in a British newspaper; [9] in 1841, it became one of the first papers to serialise a novel: William Harrison Ainsworth 's Old St Paul's. [10] The paper was bought in 1887 by Alice Anne Cornwell who had made a fortune in mining in Australia and floating the Midas Mine Company of the London Stock Exchange. She bought the paper to promote her new company, The British and Australasian Mining Investment Company, and as a gift to her lover Frederick Stannard (‘Phil’) Robinson. Robinson was installed as editor and she married him in 1894. [11] She then sold it in 1893 to Frederick Beer, who already owned Observer. Beer appointed his wife, Rachel Sassoon Beer, as editor. She was already editor of Observer – the first woman to run a national newspaper – and continued to edit both titles until 1901. [12] The Kemsley years (1915–59) [ edit] There was a further change of ownership in 1903, and then in 1915 the paper was bought by William Berry and his brother, Gomer Berry, later ennobled as Lord Camrose and Viscount Kemsley respectively. Under their ownership, The Sunday Times continued its reputation for innovation: on 23 November 1930, it became the first Sunday newspaper to publish a 40-page issue and on 21 January 1940, news replaced advertising on the front page. [13] In 1943, the Kemsley Newspapers Group was established, with The Sunday Times becoming its flagship paper. At this time, Kemsley was the largest newspaper group in Britain. On 12 November 1945, Ian Fleming, who later created James Bond, joined the paper as foreign manager (foreign editor) and special writer. The following month, circulation reached 500, 000. [14] On 28 September 1958 the paper launched a separate Review section, becoming the first newspaper to publish two sections regularly. [15] The Thomson years (1959–81) [ edit] In 1959 the Kemsley group was bought by Lord Thomson, and in October 1960 circulation reached one million for the first time. [16] In another first, on 4 February 1962 the editor, Denis Hamilton, launched The Sunday Times Magazine. (At the insistence of newsagents, worried at the impact on sales of standalone magazines, it was initially called the "colour section" and did not take the name The Sunday Times Magazine until 9 August 1964. ) The cover picture of the first issue was of Jean Shrimpton wearing a Mary Quant outfit and was taken by David Bailey. The magazine got off to a slow start, but the advertising soon began to pick up, and, over time, other newspapers launched magazines of their own. In 1963, the Insight investigative team was established under Clive Irving. On 27 September 1964, the Business section was launched, making The Sunday Times Britain's first regular three-section newspaper. In September 1966, Thomson bought The Times, to form Times Newspapers Ltd (TNL). It was the first time both The Sunday Times and The Times had been brought under the same ownership. Harold Evans, editor from 1967 until 1981, established The Sunday Times as a leading campaigning and investigative newspaper. On 19 May 1968, the paper published its first major campaigning report on the drug Thalidomide, which had been reported by the Australian doctor William McBride in The Lancet in 1961 as associated with birth defects, and quickly withdrawn. The newspaper published a four-page Insight investigation, entitled The Thalidomide File, in the Weekly Review section. A compensation settlement for the UK victims was eventually reached with Distillers Company (now part of Diageo), which had distributed the drug in the UK. TNL was plagued by a series of industrial disputes at its plant at Gray's Inn Road in London, with the print unions resisting attempts to replace the old-fashioned hot-metal and labour-intensive Linotype method with technology that would allow the papers to be composed electronically. Thomson offered to invest millions of pounds to buy out obstructive practices and overmanning, but the unions rejected every proposal. As a result, publication of The Sunday Times and other titles in the group was suspended in November 1978. It did not resume until November 1979. Although journalists at The Times had been on full pay during the suspension, they went on strike demanding more money after production was resumed. Kenneth Thomson, the head of the company, felt betrayed and decided to sell. Evans tried to organise a management buyout of The Sunday Times, but Thomson decided instead to sell to Rupert Murdoch, who he thought had a better chance of dealing with the trade unions. The Murdoch years (1981–present) [ edit] Murdoch 's News International acquired the group in February 1981. Murdoch, an Australian who in 1985 became a naturalised American citizen, already owned The Sun and the News of the World, but the Conservative government decided not to refer the deal to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission, citing a clause in the Fair Trading Act that exempted uneconomic businesses from referral. The Thomson Corporation had threatened to close the papers down if they were not taken over by someone else within an allotted time, and it was feared that any legal delay to Murdoch's takeover might lead to the two titles' demise. In return, Murdoch provided legally binding guarantees to preserve the titles' editorial independence. Evans was appointed editor of The Times in February 1981 and was replaced at The Sunday Times by Frank Giles. In 1983, the newspaper bought the serialisation rights to publish the faked Hitler Diaries, thinking them to be genuine after they were authenticated by the own newspaper's own independent director, Hugh Trevor-Roper, the historian and author of The Last Days of Hitler. Under Andrew Neil, editor from 1983 until 1994, The Sunday Times took a strongly Thatcherite slant that contrasted with the traditional paternalistic conservatism expounded by Peregrine Worsthorne at the rival Sunday Telegraph. It also built on its reputation for investigations. Its scoops included the revelation in 1986 that Israel had manufactured more than 100 nuclear warheads [17] and the publication in 1992 of extracts from Andrew Morton 's book, Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words. In the early 1990s, the paper courted controversy with a series of articles in which it rejected the role of HIV in causing AIDS. In January 1986, after the announcement of a strike by print workers, production of The Sunday Times, along with other newspapers in the group, was shifted to a new plant in Wapping, and the strikers were dismissed. The plant, which allowed journalists to input copy directly, was activated with the help of the Electrical, Electronic, Telecommunications and Plumbing Union (EETPU). The print unions posted pickets and organised demonstrations outside the new plant to try to dissuade journalists and others from working there, in what became known as the Wapping Dispute. The demonstrations sometimes turned violent. The protest ended in failure in February 1987. During Neil's editorship, a number of new sections were added: the annual The Sunday Times Rich List and the Funday Times, in 1989, (the latter stopped appearing in print and was relaunched as a standalone website in March 2006 but was later closed); Style & Travel, News Review and Arts in 1990, and Culture in 1992. In September 1994, Style and Travel became two separate sections. During Neil's time as editor, The Sunday Times backed a campaign to prove that HIV was not a cause of AIDS. [18] [19] [20] [21] In 1990, The Sunday Times serialized a book by an American conservative who rejected the scientific consensus on the causes of AIDS and argued that AIDS could not spread to heterosexuals. [20] Articles and editorials in The Sunday Times cast doubt on the scientific consensus, described HIV as a "politically correct virus" about which there was a "conspiracy of silence, " disputed that AIDS was spreading in Africa, claimed that tests for HIV were invalid, described the HIV/AIDS treatment drug AZT as harmful, and characterized the WHO as an "Empire-building AIDS [organisation]. " [20] The pseudoscientific coverage of HIV/AIDS in the Sunday Times led the scientific journal Nature to monitor the newspaper's coverage and to publish letters rebutting Sunday Times articles which the Sunday Times refused to publish. [20] In response to this, the Sunday Times published an article headlined "AIDS - why we won’t be silenced", which claimed that Nature engaged in censorship and "sinister intent". [20] In his 1996 book, Full Disclosure, Neil wrote that the HIV/AIDS denialism "deserved publication to encourage debate. " [20] That same year, he wrote that the Sunday Times had been vindicated in its coverage, "The Sunday Times was one of a handful of newspapers, perhaps the most prominent, which argued that heterosexual Aids was a myth. The figures are now in and this newspaper stands totally vindicated... The history of Aids is one of the great scandals of our time. I do not blame doctors and the Aids lobby for warning that everybody might be at risk in the early days, when ignorance was rife and reliable evidence scant. " He criticized the "AIDS establishment" and said "Aids had becme an industry, a job-creation scheme for the caring classes. " [22] John Witherow, who became editor at the end of 1994 (after several months as acting editor), continued the newspaper's expansion. A website was launched in 1996 and new print sections added: Home in 2001, and Driving in 2002, which in 2006 was renamed InGear. (It reverted to the name Driving from 7 October 2012, to coincide with the launch of a new standalone website, Sunday Times Driving. ) Technology coverage was expanded in 2000 with the weekly colour magazine Doors, and in 2003 The Month, an editorial section presented as an interactive CD-Rom. Magazine partworks were regular additions, among them 1000 Makers of Music, published over six weeks in 1997. John Witherow oversaw a rise in circulation to 1. 3 million [23] and reconfirmed The Sunday Times's reputation for publishing hard-hitting news stories – such as Cash for Questions in 1994 and Cash for Honours in 2006 and revelations of corruption at Fifa in 2010. [24] The newspaper's foreign coverage has been especially strong, and its reporters, Marie Colvin, Jon Swain, Hala Jaber, Mark Franchetti and Christina Lamb have dominated the Foreign Reporter of the Year category at the British Press Awards since 2000. [ citation needed] Marie Colvin, who worked for the paper from 1985, was killed in February 2012 by Syrian forces while covering the siege of Homs during that country's civil war. [25] In common with other newspapers, The Sunday Times has been hit by a fall in circulation, which has declined from a peak of 1. 3 million to just over 710, 000. It has a number of digital-only subscribers, which numbered 99, 017 by January 2019. [26] Edition number 9, 813 of The Sunday Times, published on 7 October 2012 During January 2013, Martin Ivens became acting editor of The Sunday Times in succession to John Witherow, who became the 'acting' editor of The Times at the same time. The independent directors rejected a permanent position for Ivens as editors to avoid any possible merger of The Sunday Times and daily Times titles. [27] Online presence [ edit] The Sunday Times has its own website. It previously shared an online presence with The Times, but in May 2010 they both launched their own sites to reflect their distinct brand identities. Since July 2010, the sites have charged for access. An iPad edition was launched in December 2010, and an Android version in August 2011. Since July 2012, the digital version of the paper has been available on Apple's Newsstand platform, allowing automated downloading of the news section. With over 500MB of content every week, it is the biggest newspaper app in the world. [ citation needed] The Sunday Times iPad app was named newspaper app of the year at the 2011 Newspaper Awards and has twice been ranked best newspaper or magazine app in the world by iMonitor. Various subscription packages exist, giving access to both the print and digital versions of the paper. On 2 October 2012, The Sunday Times launched Sunday Times Driving, a separate classified advertising site for premium vehicles that also includes editorial content from the newspaper as well as specially commissioned articles. It can be accessed without cost. [ edit] The Sunday Times Travel Magazine [ edit] This 164-page monthly magazine is sold separately from the newspaper and is Britain's best-selling travel magazine. [28] The first issue of The Sunday Times Travel Magazine was in 2003, [29] [30] and it includes news, features and insider guides. Notable stories [ edit] Some of the more notable or controversial stories published in The Sunday Times include: [31] Thalidomide, a drug prescribed to pregnant women to treat morning sickness, was withdrawn in 1961 following reports that it was linked to a number of birth defects. The Sunday Times spent many years campaigning for compensation for the victims, providing case studies and evidence of the side-effects. In 1968, the Distillers Company agreed to a multimillion-pound compensation scheme for the victims. [ citation needed] The paper sponsored Francis Chichester 's single-handed circumnavigation of the world under sail in 1966–67, and the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race in 1968–69. [ citation needed] The Insight team ran an investigation into Kim Philby, the Soviet double agent, that ran on 1 October 1967 under the headline "Philby: I spied for Russia from 1933. " [ citation needed] Insight carried out a major investigation in 1972 into Bloody Sunday in Northern Ireland. [ citation needed] The newspaper published the faked Hitler Diaries (1983), believing them to be genuine after they were authenticated by historian Hugh Trevor-Roper. [ citation needed] Israeli nuclear weapons: using information from Mordechai Vanunu, The Sunday Times in 1986 revealed that Israel had manufactured more than 100 nuclear warheads. On 12 July 1987 The Sunday Times began serialisation of the book Spycatcher, the memoirs of an MI5 agent, which had been banned in Britain. The paper successfully challenged subsequent legal action by the British government, winning its case at the European Court of Human Rights in 1991. [32] The paper ran a story [ when? ] claiming Queen Elizabeth II, who generally maintains a strictly impartial role politically, was upset with the style of Margaret Thatcher 's leadership. [ citation needed] In 1990, in what became known as the Arms-to-Iraq affair, the paper revealed how Matrix Churchill and other British firms were supplying arms to Saddam Hussein's Iraq. [ citation needed] Over two years in the early 1990s, The Sunday Times published a series of articles rejecting the role of HIV in causing AIDS, calling the African AIDS epidemic a myth. In response, the scientific journal Nature described the paper's coverage of HIV/AIDS as "seriously mistaken, and probably disastrous. " [33] Nature argued that the newspaper had "so consistently misrepresented the role of HIV in the causation of AIDS that Nature plans to monitor its future treatment of the issue. " [34] In 1992, the paper published extracts from Andrew Morton 's book, Diana: Her True Story in Her Own Words, which revealed for the first time the disastrous state of her marriage to Prince Charles. [ citation needed] Also in 1992, the paper agreed to pay David Irving, an author widely criticised for Holocaust denial, the sum of £75, 000 to authenticate the Goebbels diaries and edit them for serialisation. [35] The deal was quickly cancelled after drawing strong international criticism. In its “ cash for questions ” investigation in 1994, Graham Riddick, MP for Colne Valley and David Tredinnick, MP for Bosworth, accepted cheques for £1, 000 each from an Insight journalist posing as a businessman in return for tabling a parliamentary question. The investigation followed information that some MPs were taking one-off payments to table questions. [36] Under the headline, "KGB: Michael Foot was our agent", The Sunday Times ran an article on 19 February 1995 that claimed the Soviet intelligence services regarded Foot, a former leader of the Labour Party, as an "agent of influence", codenamed "Agent Boot"", and that he had been in the pay of the KGB for many years. The article was based on the serialisation of the memoirs of Oleg Gordievsky, a former high-ranking KGB officer who defected from the Soviet Union to Britain in 1985. Crucially, the newspaper used material from the original manuscript of the book which had not been included in the published version. Foot successfully sued, winning "substantial" damages. [37] In 1997–98, the paper ran a series of exclusive stories based on revelations from Richard Tomlinson, a former MI6 spy, about life inside MI6 and secret MI6 operations around the world. [ citation needed] During the siege of the United Nations compound in East Timor in 1999, the paper's foreign reporter, Marie Colvin was one of only three journalists (all women) who remained to the end with the 1, 500 people trapped there. She reported their plight both in The Sunday Times and in interviews on radio and television and was widely credited with saving their lives. [38] In 2003, The Sunday Times published confidential Whitehall documents revealing the names of more than 300 people who had declined New Years, Queens Birthday and Dissolution honours (i. e. knighthoods, damehoods, etc. ) [ citation needed] In 2006, in an investigation that became known as Cash for Honours, The Sunday Times revealed how several prominent figures nominated for life peerages by the then prime minister, Tony Blair, had loaned large amounts of money to the Labour Party at the suggestion of Lord Levy, a Labour Party fundraiser. In mid-2009, the newspaper ran a series of articles revealing how politicians were abusing the expenses system. [39] Between 2004 and 2010, the newspaper ran an award-winning investigation by Brian Deer which revealed that research by Andrew Wakefield into the MMR vaccine was fraudulent. The investigation led to Wakefield being banned from medicine, and the retraction of his research from The Lancet. In January 2010, The Sunday Times published an article by Jonathan Leake, alleging that a figure in the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report was based on an "unsubstantiated claim". The story attracted worldwide attention. However, a scientist quoted in the same article later stated that the newspaper story was wrong and that quotes of him had been used in a misleading way. [40] Following an official complaint to the Press Complaints Commission, [40] The Sunday Times retracted the story and apologised. [41] [42] In March 2010, undercover reporters from The Sunday Times Insight team filmed members of parliament agreeing to work for a fictitious lobbying firm for fees of £3, 000-£5, 000 a day. One of those implicated, Stephen Byers, described himself as "sort of like a cab for hire". [43] In October 2010, an investigation by the newspaper exposed corruption within FIFA after a member of the association's committee which grants the World Cup guaranteed his vote to an undercover reporter after requesting £500, 000 for a "personal project". [24] In 2011, the paper broke what became known as the Cash for Influence scandal; it revealed that Adrian Severin, Ernst Strasser, Pablo Zalba Bidegain and Zoran Thaler tried to influence EU legislation in exchange for promised money. Both Strasser and Thaler resigned in March 2011. [44] In March 2012, the paper filmed Peter Cruddas, the co-treasurer of the Conservative Party, offering access to David Cameron, the prime minister, in return for donations of £250, 000 ($400, 000). Cruddas resigned several hours later. Cameron said: "What happened was completely unacceptable. This is not the way we raise money in the Conservative Party. " [45] In September 2012, Jonathan Leake published an article in The Sunday Times under the headline "Only 100 adult cod in North Sea". [46] This figure was later shown by a BBC article to be wildly incorrect. [47] The newspaper published a correction, apologising for an over simplification in the headline, which had referred to a fall in the number of fully mature cod over the age of 13, thereby indicating this is the breeding age of cod. In fact, as the newspaper subsequently pointed out, cod can start breeding between the ages of four and six, in which case there are many more mature cod in the North Sea. In January 2013, the seven-times Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong confessed to having used performance-enhancing drugs during each of his Tour victories. The confession ended years of denials about allegations of cheating during most of the cyclist's professional career. The Sunday Times chief sports writer David Walsh had spent over a decade investigating Armstrong, his team, and the systematic doping rife in the sport. The newspaper was forced to pay Armstrong £300, 000 in damages in 2006 after he sued it for libel. Following Armstrong's lifelong ban (and subsequent televised confession) The Sunday Times said it would sue him to recover the damages, plus interest and costs, for the original proceedings which it called "baseless and fraudulent". [48] In January 2013, The Sunday Times published a Gerald Scarfe caricature depicting Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu cementing a wall with blood and Palestinians trapped between the bricks. The cartoon sparked an outcry, compounded by the fact that its publication coincided with International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and was condemned by the Anti-Defamation League. [49] After Rupert Murdoch tweeted that he considered it a "grotesque, offensive cartoon" and that Scarfe had "never reflected the opinions of The Sunday Times " [50] the newspaper issued an apology. [51] Journalist Ian Burrell, writing in The Independent, described the apology as an "indication of the power of the Israel lobby in challenging critical media coverage of its politicians" and one that questions Rupert Murdoch's assertion that he does not "interfere in the editorial content of his papers". [52] In June 2014, the Insight team at The Sunday Times published a front-page story "Plot to buy the World Cup" that detailed how Qatar used secret slush funds to make dozens of payments totalling more than $5m to senior officials at FIFA to ensure the country won enough votes to secure hosting rights to the 2022 FIFA World Cup. [53] The revelation prompted calls for Qatar to be stripped of the World Cup. [54] The reporting by Jonathan Calvert and Heidi Blake won numerous awards, including the Paul Foot Award. [55] It also formed the basis for the book by Calvert and Blake, published by Simon and Schuster, The Ugly Game. [56] In June 2015, The Sunday Times ran a lead front article titled "British spies betrayed to Russians and Chinese". The article was controversial because it contained numerous unlikely and unsubstantiated claims. Shortly after publication parts of the online version of the article were changed quietly by the newspaper. The article appeared to be an attempt to smear the American Whistleblower Edward Snowden, thus fuelling further doubt as to its independent editorship. [57] [58] [59] In August 2019, The Sunday Times received the leaked Operation Yellowhammer file about preparations for a No Deal Brexit. [60] Phone hacking scandal [ edit] In July 2011, The Sunday Times was implicated in the wider News International phone hacking scandal which primarily involved the News of the World, a Murdoch tabloid newspaper published in the UK from 1843 to 2011. Former British prime minister Gordon Brown accused The Sunday Times of employing "known criminals" to impersonate him and obtain his private financial records. [61] [62] Brown's bank reported that an investigator employed by The Sunday Times repeatedly impersonated Brown to gain access to his bank account records. [63] The Sunday Times vigorously denied these accusations and said that the story was in the public interest and that it had followed the Press Complaints Commission code on using subterfuge. Other editions [ edit] Irish edition [ edit] The Irish edition of The Sunday Times was launched on a small scale on 1993 with just two staff, Alan Ruddock and John Burns (who is at present associate editor). It used the slogan "The English just don't get it". [64] It is now the third biggest-selling newspaper in Ireland measured in terms of full-price cover sales (Source: ABC Jan–June 2012). Circulation had grown steadily to over 127, 000 in the two decades before 2012 but has declined since and currently stands at 60, 352 (Jan to Jun 2018). [65] [66] The paper is heavily editionalised, with extensive Irish coverage of politics, general news, business, personal finance, sport, culture and lifestyle. The office employs 25 people. The paper also has a number of well-known freelance columnists including Brenda Power, Liam Fay, Matt Cooper, Damien Kiberd, Jill Kerby and Stephen Price. The paper ended collaboration with Kevin Myers after it published a controversial column. The Irish edition has had four editors since it was set up: Alan Ruddock, Rory Godson, [67] Fiona McHugh [68] and, since 2005, Frank Fitzgibbon. [ citation needed] Scottish edition [ edit] For more than 20 years the paper has published a separate Scottish edition, which has been edited since January 2012 by Jason Allardyce. While most of the articles that run in the English edition appear in the Scottish edition, its staff also produces about a dozen Scottish news stories, including a front-page article, most weeks. The edition also contains a weekly "Scottish Focus" feature and Scottish commentary, and covers Scottish sport in addition to providing Scottish television schedules. The Scottish issue is the biggest-selling quality newspaper in the market, outselling both Scotland on Sunday and the Sunday Herald. [ citation needed] Editors [ edit] 1821: Henry White 1822: Daniel Whittle Harvey 1828: Thomas Gaspey 1854: William Carpenter 1856: E. T. Smith 1858: Henry M. Barnett 1864: Joseph Knight and Ashby Sterry (acting editors) 1874: Joseph Hatton 1881: H. W. Oliphant 1887: P. Robinson 1890: Arthur William à Beckett 1893: Rachel Beer 1901: Leonard Rees 1932: William W. Hadley 1950: Harry Hodson 1961: Denis Hamilton 1967: Harold Evans 1981: Frank Giles 1983: Andrew Neil 1995: John Witherow 2013: Martin Ivens 2020: Emma Tucker See also [ edit] References [ edit] ^ Martin Ivens to step down as editor and join The Times Board, Emma Tucker appointed editor of The Sunday Times News UK ^ General Election 2015 explained: Newspapers Independent. Published 28 April 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2016. ^ Mark Wallace. "The centre right press delivers a withering verdict on Cameron's EU renegotiation demands | Conservative Home". Conservative Home. Retrieved 3 January 2016. ^ "The Sunday Times - Data - ABC | Audit Bureau of Circulations".. ^ "The Observer - Data - ABC | Audit Bureau of Circulations".. ^ "The Sunday Telegraph - Data - ABC | Audit Bureau of Circulations".. ^ |website= ^ Pritchard, Stephen (1 January 2006). "Unravelling the DNA inside Britain's oldest Sunday paper". The Observer. UK. Retrieved 17 August 2009. ^ Hobson, Harold, Knightley, Phillip and Russell, Leonard (1972). The Pearl of Days. Hamish Hamilton. p. 22. ISBN 0 241 02266 5. CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link) ^ Hobson, Harold, Knightley, Phillip and Russell, Leonard (1972). p. 39. CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link) ^ Griffiths, D. (2004-09-23). Cornwell [other married names Whiteman, Robinson], Alice Ann (1852–1932), goldmining industrialist and newspaper proprietor. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 10 Dec. 2017, see link ^ Hobson, Harold, Knightley, Phillip and Russell, Leonard (1972). p. 52. p. 226. p. 227. p. 298. p. 339. CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link) ^ "Middle East | Vanunu: Israel's nuclear telltale". BBC News. 20 April 2004. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ Ben Summerskill "Paper tiger" Archived 21 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Observer, 28 July 2002 ^ Ball, Philip (2 October 2006). "When it's time to speak out". News@nature. doi: 10. 1038/news061002-12. ISSN 1744-7933. ^ a b c d e f McKnight, David (2009). "THE SUNDAY TIMES AND ANDREW NEIL". Journalism Studies. 10 (6): 754–768. 1080/14616700903119891. ^ Franklin, Bob (ed. ). Social Policy, the Media and Misrepresentation. Routledge. p. 72. ^ Neil, Andrew (1996). "The great Aids myth is finally laid to rest". The Sunday Times. ^ "42. John Witherow | Media". The Guardian. London. 9 July 2007. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ a b The Sunday Times Insight team (17 October 2010). "World Cup votes for sale". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ "A tribute to Marie Colvin". 22 February 2012. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ "The Sunday Times tablet edition - Data - ABC | Audit Bureau of Circulations".. ^ Katherine Rushton "John Witherow named acting editor of The Times as News International eyes merger", The Daily Telegraph, 18 January 2013 ^ "Travel Magazine (Monthly) - The Sunday Times". News UK. Retrieved 19 June 2018. ^ "Review: First issue of Sunday Times Travel magazine". Campaign. 17 April 2003. Retrieved 29 December 2019. ^ "Knight to replace Schofield as editor of Sunday Times Travel". Press Gazette. 26 February 2004. Retrieved 29 December 2019. ^ "Famous stories".. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ THE SUNDAY TIMES v. THE UNITED KINGDOM (No. 2) – 13166/87 [1991] ECHR 50 (26 November 1991) ^ Will stupid people and their pseudoscience cost more lives this year? The Guardian 2009/jan/03 ^ "New-style abuse of press freedom". Nature. 366 (6455): 493–494. December 1993. 1038/366493a0. PMID 8255275. ^ "Hitler apologist does deal for Goebbels war diaries: 'Sunday Times ' ". The Independent. 3 July 1992. ^ Patricia Wynn Davies, Political Correspondent (11 July 1994). "MPs face 'cash for questions' inquiry". London, UK. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ Rhys Williams Media Correspondent (8 July 1995). " ' Sunday Times' pays Foot damages over KGB claim". Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ Roy Greenslade (22 February 2012). "Marie Colvin obituary". Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ The Sunday Times Insight Team. "Labour peer Baroness Uddin claims £100, 000 expenses on empty flat". Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ a b David Adam (24 March 2010). "Forests expert officially complains about 'distorted' Sunday Times article". London, UK. ^ Roy Greenslade (21 June 2010). "Sunday Times apologises for false climate story in a 'correction ' ". London, UK. ^ George Monbiot (24 June 2010). "Sunday Times admits 'Amazongate' story was rubbish. But who's to blame? ". London, UK. ^ Times Insight (21 March 2010). "Stephen Byers: 'I'm like a cab for hire – at up to £5, 000 a day ' ". Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ "Two Euro MPs quit amid lobbying allegations". BBC. 21 March 2011. Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ Insight: Heidi Blake and Jonathan Calvert (25 March 2012). "Tory treasurer charges £250, 000 to meet PM". Retrieved 16 October 2012. ^ Jonathan Leake (16 September 2012). "Only 100 adult cod in North Sea". The Sunday Times. ^ Hannah Barnes & Richard Knight (29 September 2012). "North Sea cod: Is it true there are only 100 left? ". BBC News. ^ "Lance Armstrong: Sunday Times sues cyclist for up to £1m". BBC Sport. 23 December 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2013. ^ "Anti-Semitic Cartoon in The Sunday Times". ADL. 28 January 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013. ^ "Rupert Murdoch on Twitter". Twitter. ^ Greenslade, Roy (4 February 2013). "Sunday Times apology for Netanyahu cartoon". Retrieved 26 June 2013. ^ Burrell, Ian (29 January 2013). "Rupert Murdoch's Twitter slap-down has big implications - and not just for News Corp editors". London, UK. ^ Blake, Jonathan Calvert and Heidi (1 June 2014). "Plot to buy the World Cup". ISSN 0956-1382. Retrieved 7 February 2019. ^ Times, The Sunday (1 June 2014). "Plot to buy the World Cup: reaction from around the world to the Fifa files". Retrieved 7 February 2019. ^ Jackson, Jasper (26 February 2015). "Fifa Files exposé by Sunday Times joint winner of Paul Foot Award 2014". ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 February 2019. ^ The Ugly Game. 27 June 2017. ISBN 9781501132964. ^ "The Sunday Times' Snowden Story is Journalism at its Worst — and Filled with Falsehoods". The Intercept. ^ Martinson, Jane (15 June 2015). "Sunday Times drops claim that Miranda met Snowden before UK detention". The Guardian. ^ "Sunday Times Reporter Tries To Defend Snowden Story". Huffington Post. 15 June 2015. ^ Rosamund Urwin and Caroline Wheeler (18 August 2019). "Operation Chaos: Whitehall's secret no‑deal Brexit preparations leaked The Sunday Times obtains the government's classified 'Yellowhammer' report in full". Retrieved 18 August 2019. ^ Burns, John; Jo Becker; Alan Cowell (12 July 2011). "Gordon Brown Says Newspaper Hired 'Known Criminals ' ". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 July 2011. ^ Holt, Gerry (12 July 2011). "Gordon Brown allegations: What is blagging? ". Retrieved 12 July 2011. ^ Davies, Nick; David Leigh (11 July 2011). "News International papers targeted Gordon Brown". Retrieved 12 July 2011. ^ John Waters (1 October 1996). "Jesuit's press edict continued a grain of truth". The Irish Times. Retrieved 21 September 2016. ^ "The Irish Times - Data - ABC | Audit Bureau of Circulations".. ^ Slattery, Laura. " ' The Irish Times' had combined daily circulation of 77, 988 in second half of 2017". The Irish Times. ^ "PROFILE: Rory Godson, Powerscourt - A PR 'novice' with an international outlook". PR Week. 21 November 2003. ^ "Irish daily to use IoS team". 26 June 2013. 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Lawmakers from both parties blame companies like Facebook and Google for the struggles of local newspapers. Credit... Lynsey Weatherspoon for The New York Times Published Jan. 12, 2020 Updated Jan. 13, 2020 CORNELIA, Ga. — When a sport utility vehicle swerved out of its lane several weeks ago, slamming into a pickup truck and killing a teenager, a reporter from The Northeast Georgian raced to the scene. Within hours, the paper had posted the news on Facebook and updated it twice. It was shared by hundreds of people on the social network. The fatal wreck consumed the town of Cornelia, Ga., nestled near the Chattahoochee National Forest about 90 miles northeast of Atlanta. The Northeast Georgian was the first to report the news, but unless the people who shared its story on Facebook follow a link to its website, either to see an ad or to subscribe to its twice-weekly print edition, the paper won’t get paid. As with many small papers across the country, that business strategy is not working for The Northeast Georgian. The paper’s five employees do not just report and write. They also edit the articles, take photographs and lay out the newspaper. “My grandmother used to say, ‘Honey, if you let them get milk through the fence, they’ll never buy the cow, ’” said Dink NeSmith, chief executive of Community Newspapers Inc., which owns The Northeast Georgian and 23 other local papers. But the tough economics facing small newspapers like Mr. NeSmith’s has generated rare bipartisan agreement in Washington. Anger toward big technology companies has led to multiple antitrust investigations, calls for a new federal data privacy law and criticism of the companies’ political ad policies. Perhaps no issue about the tech companies, though, has united lawmakers in the Capitol like the decimation of local news. Lawmakers from both parties blame companies like Facebook and Google, which dominate the online ad industry. Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and the majority leader, gave a big boost last week to a bill that may provide some papers a lifeboat. The proposal would give news organizations an exemption from antitrust laws, allowing them to band together to negotiate with Google and Facebook over how their articles and photos are used online, and what payments the newspapers get from the tech companies. (The bill is backed by the News Media Alliance, a trade group that represents news organizations including The New York Times Company. ) The proposal was sponsored by Representative Doug Collins, a conservative Georgia Republican whose district includes Cornelia. It was written by Representative David Cicilline, a liberal Democrat from Rhode Island. Senator John Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, sponsored an identical version in the Senate. Prominent co-sponsors joined, including Democrats like Cory Booker of New Jersey and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, and Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky. For the politicians, the issue is personal. They see news deserts in places where one or two local newspapers used to track their campaigns and official actions, keep local police departments and school boards accountable, and stitch together communities with big layouts on Main Street holiday parades and high school sports stars. “I am a free-markets guy and have fought against the idea that just because something is big it is necessarily bad, ” Mr. Collins said. “But look, I’m a politician and live with the media and see its importance. These big, disruptive platforms are making money off creators of content disproportionately. ” Facebook and Google declined to comment about the legislation. Representatives of the companies say their businesses have spent hundreds of millions of dollars on programs to bolster local journalism. The companies also work with news organizations to promote their articles and videos, driving traffic to their websites. Facebook recently announced partnerships with major news organizations, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and CNN, that would see some of the publishers paid for the content they share. “We know this is a challenging time for journalism, ” Campbell Brown, Facebook’s vice president of global news partnerships, said in a statement. “And we are working closely with publishers to find new ways to address those challenges. ” A Google spokeswoman said, “Every month, Google News and Google Search drive over 24 billion visits to publishers’ websites, which drive subscriptions and significant ad revenue. ” Newspapers have faced devastating financial losses for years. One in five newspapers has closed since 2004 in the United States, and about half of the nation’s more than 3, 000 counties have only one newspaper, many of them printing weekly, according to a report by the University of North Carolina published in late 2018. In the last year alone, Facebook and Google added tens of thousands of employees and reported billions of dollars in profits. Take Mr. Collins’s district in northern Georgia. The Atlanta Journal Constitution, the state’s biggest newspaper, has cut its staff by half in the past eight years. In Mr. Collins’s hometown, The Gainesville Times, one of the biggest papers in its region, cut its weekly print publication schedule to five days from seven a year ago. The demand for local news remains. One day shortly after the fatal car crash, all of the discussion at Fender’s Diner, a 1950s-inspired eatery in Cornelia, was about the victim and allegations that the woman behind the wheel of the S. U. V. had been drinking. “I care more about the people who walk through my front door of my place and the issues that matter to them than anything going on in Washington, ” said Bradley Cook, the owner of the restaurant. Many local leaders say the power of local newspapers was on display recently in Jesup, in southeastern Georgia. One of Mr. NeSmith’s papers in the area, The Press Sentinel in Wayne County, discovered that an Arizona-based company backed by wealthy investors, including Bill Gates, had quietly applied to dump 10, 000 tons of coal ash per day in Jesup. The paper published more than 70 articles about the application, and Mr. NeSmith wrote several editorials. The attention led to public hearings, and the company, Republic Services, to delay its plans. Many officials also say that without robust local coverage, they are constantly fighting against misinformation that spreads on social media. After the Board of Commissioners in Habersham County, Ga., proposed a bond issue to expand the county jail, speculation spread online about the motivations for the project and the burden for taxpayers, said Stacy Hall, the board’s chairman. Voters defeated the proposal in November. “Disinformation on social media is our No. 1 problem, ” Mr. Hall said. “There is a crisis in getting the facts — the basic facts that only community newspapers can provide. ” The proposed antitrust exemption for news organizations still faces hurdles. Congress passed few bills of note in 2019 — and it may pass even fewer this year, in the face of impeachment and the November election. Conservative think tanks and some consumer groups are pushing back on the bill, wary of giving any antitrust exemptions to businesses. “Instead of trying to innovate and find solutions that way, ” said Neil Chilson, a senior research fellow for technology and innovation at the Charles Koch Institute, “they are trying to make better deals with people with more money, and that doesn’t solve their basic business-model problems. ” Supporters of the legislation said it was not a magic pill for profitability. It could, they say, benefit newspapers with a national reach — like The Times and The Washington Post — more than small papers. Facebook, for instance, has never featured articles from Mr. NeSmith’s newspaper chain in its “Today In” feature, an aggregation of local news from the nation’s smallest papers that can drive a lot of traffic to a news site. “It will start with larger national publications, and then the question is how does this trickle down, ” said Otis A. Brumby III, the publisher of The Marietta Daily Journal in Georgia. But the supporters say it could stop or at least slow the financial losses at some papers, giving them time to create a new business model for the internet. “The tech industry platforms benefit from our news, ” said Robin Rhodes, the executive director of the Georgia Press Association, which supports the proposal. “And we need to be on a level playing ground. ” Free online the times of bill cunningham books. 2019 ANYONE. 🤘 months. The apple doesnt fall far from the tree that is for sure with Bill and his daughter. Free online the times of bill cunningham 2017. Free online the times of bill cunningham full. Free online the times of bill cunningham jr And kim. AurGroup's free online bill pay service offers our members a variety of benefits. The bill pay product is simple to understand, easy to navigate, and it saves time. You can pay all your bills in minutes and control when the payments are scheduled. 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