All good things come to an end (and some not so good things, too). I’ve been predicting the demise of careers in print journalism for some time, and yesterday the latest scalp was claimed: my own.
After some eleven and a half years as theatre critic for the Sunday Express – which began with a review of the opening of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang at the London Palladium in May 2002 and ended with a column that included an instant gay theatre classic in Jumpers for Goalposts at the Bush last Sunday – I have been laid off.
The paper had been tipped off by a malicious third party that there were some private, personal (but entirely legal) images of me available on a gay website. I’d never seen or heard of the site myself so it was news to me, but yes, the thumbnail picture I was shown by the Head of Human Resources was indeed of me. I had not posted it, but remembered it being taken, by my reckoning, by a friend in San Francisco I have long lost touch with some 22 years ago – long before I either worked for the paper or the internet had come of age, so I never expected them to turn up on a website that didn’t exist then.
The Sunday Express’s Head of HR, however, believes that the existence of any such images could bring the company into disrepute. My sexuality is public knowledge and by revealing this information freely as I’m doing now, it is clear that I do not agree. The editor of the paper also stated, in front of the HR head, that the images were “embarrassing”. Sorry to disagree with his world view, but I’m not embarrassed at all. (In the week that Tom Daley came out, it is good to be able to be honest about who you are and even what you look like without your clothes on – though I will agree that Mr Daley looks rather better in a state of undress than I do.)
It is, of course, the prerogative of a newspaper editor to choose his own writers but there is a certain irony that a newspaper, now owned by proprietor Richard Desmond whose business interests once included the publication of Penthouse in the UK and Asian Babes – and which he continued to publish long after he acquired the Express group in 2000, until he sold the adult magazine business in 2004 – should be so affronted. (The company continues to own and operate Television X, a series of subscription adult television channels) It could be said that the only difference is that these are straight magazines and channels, whereas mine was defined as a gay one...
Basically when a publisher wants to get rid of a journalist, they'll find any technicality.
UK's leading porn publisher sacks gay man for some old not-really pornographic pics fifty people might have seen for "bringing company into disrepute."
Richard Desmond's Northern & Shell were also the original publishers of Attitude incidentally...
Update: Private Eye report that "Desmond still owns through Northern & Shell subsidiary RHF Hardon TV, the pay-per-view gay website..."
Is that the sound of grinding axes...?
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DeleteI have little sympathy for Mr Shenton. I am certainly no fan of Richard "Fuck Off" Desmond either but Shenton must have known the long-standing attitude of the Express titles against gay for many years. It's a bit like joining the Hitler Youth if you were jewish.
ReplyDeleteI've been reliably informed that when Attitude was at Northern & Shell, whenever Richard Desmond was doing the rounds of hi publishing empire, they were told to take down any naughty pics of semi-naked men. Hilarious...
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