The Australian


Guy Rundle: The Oz can’t leave the Manne essay alone

For a paper that has declared “the subject closed”, The Australian really can’t leave Robert Manne’s “Bad News” essay alone. To say there has been a degree of score settling is something of an understatement.

Media briefs: Rudds’ airport woes … Hun’s loaded poll …

In today’s Media Briefs: airport troubles for Rudds … More updates on the issue they won’t update … Online Poll of the Day … Julian Assange publishers to release autobiography without his consent and more …

Rundle: a collector’s piece for the ages, The Oz on Manne

Get ye to a newsagent and see if they have not returned their copies of The Weekend Australian. Its outrageous defence of Robert Manne’s Quarterly Essay is a collectors’ item.

Guy Rundle: Rundle: a Review review reveals an enduring legacy of not much

One has to say something about the demise of The Australian Literary Review, especially in light of Nick Cater’s somewhat freestyling herogram-to-self in yesterday’s comments section.

Your Say: Daily Mail readers' feedback: Too ugly to contemplate

Crikey readers have their say.

Your Say: Daily Mail readers' feedback: The Australian Literary Review

Crikey readers have their say.

Media briefs: Tele beat-ups … Oz’s digital challenge …

Another day, another complaint about political reporting in The Daily Telegraph. But, was that really an exclusive? and other media tidbits of the day.

The Oz playing the Manne: why it’s a barracker and a bully

The Australian is launching a major response to Robert Manne’s Quarterly Essay, and the blurbs tell us that there will be more to come on Saturday, with the usual suspects lining up to respond.

The quality journalism project: it’s Mega!

George Megalogenis is a popular man, judging by the plethora of nominations we received to have him involved in Crikey’s quality journalism project.

ALR closure shows a literary culture that runs on love, not money

The most striking thing about news of the closure of the Australian Literary Review has been the relative equanimity with which it has been greeted.

Crikey Says: The Oz has a private moment with itself

There is no subject that obsesses The Australian more than the subject of The Australian itself. Today it began an orgy of self-defence to Robert Manne’s Quarterly Essay.

Australian Literary Review shuts up shop

Storied News Limited literary digest The Australian Literary Review will publish its last edition next month, Crikey can reveal.

Manne’s Quarterly Essay: silence so far from The Oz

Robert Manne’s account of the influence of The Australian and the tactics it uses to promote its conservative views and discredit its enemies has so far been met with silence from Holt Street.

Crikey Says: Crikey says: two very different angles

Two newspapers interpret the same economic news, the ABS household expenditure survey …

Hey Janet, on female sex you’ve got the rough end of the stick

Janet Albrechtsen’s opinion piece in yesterday’s Australian was shocking — you would never would have pegged her as a Sex and the City fan. Or suggesting all female sexual exploration is positive.

Beecher: govt funding could stem loss of serious newspapers

What kind of democracy would we live in if it didn’t include the work of a thousand-or-so newspaper reporters and editors?

Crikey Says: We’re sorry, honest, but not really

A hollow apology from The Australian.

Milne debacle: how a 16 year old story was spiked by The Oz

Glenn Milne has egg all over his face after the re-hired columnist filed an error-filled op-ed reviving discredited allegations that Prime Minister Julia Gillard had somehow been an accomplice to her one-time partner Bruce Wilson’s alleged fraud.

Media briefs: APC to increase regs … more NotW hacking … SMH appoints readers’ ed …

Trendy Salt’s cafe missive … Front Page of the Day … Australian Press Council plans to increase regulation … Milly Dowler phone hackers “used more than one voicemail” …

Rupert era effectively over … new Murdoch leader most unlikely

It would not have been possible for editors Andy Coulson and Rebekah Brooks to have both been doing their job, and to have been in ignorance about hacking and blagging.

The quality journalism project: the heart of The Oz, Chris Mitchell

Crikey picks the brains of some of Australia’s most respected journalists, editors and producers to find out what great journalism means to them and where they go to get it. Editor-in-Chief of The Australian Chris Mitchell, divulges his media diet.

Mayne: Murdoch only champions free speech away from home

It has been a full month since the Murdoch phone hacking scandal blew up and, after more than 30 contributions across various media platforms, Stephen Mayne finally got a rise out of the empire today.

Your Say: Daily Mail readers' feedback: The GM food debate is nonsense

Crikey readers have their say.

Stutchbury, Quiggin and the fallout from the ‘recession of 2009′

Economists in glass houses ought to be careful when accusing others of bias …

What about the ethics of climate change reporting?

Confirming News Limited’s journalists’ familiarity with the corporation’s code of ethics is all well and good, it’s the ethics themselves, when it comes to climate change reporting, that worries Matthia Dempsey.