BLOGS

The mad, mad world of the very famous

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Two great knights of the realm, Sir Jimmy Savile and Sir Salman Rushdie, have just made our strange world seem a little stranger. Salman has appeared, nuzzling Scarlett Johansson's neck in a video to promote the actress's new single, "Falling...

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The mad, mad world of the very famous

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Two great knights of the realm, Sir Jimmy Savile and Sir Salman Rushdie, have just made our strange world seem a little stranger. Salman has appeared, nuzzling Scarlett Johansson's neck in a video to promote the actress's new single, "Falling...

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Exposed: the world of grubby grown-ups

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A mistress of the ambivalent, the American photographer Annie Leibovitz has a talent for catching a cultural mood in her portraits, while exploiting it at the same time. Her photograph of Demi Moore, nude and heavily pregnant, pointed up celebrity...

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There’s more to animal welfare than sentimentality

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It was, by any standards, something of a shock to discover that the British apparently care more about the plight of maltreated donkeys than maltreated women. The three main charities for victims of rape, domestic violence and abuse have a...

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Season of renewal – and renewed anxiety

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It has been a difficult few days: silence in the hedgerows where there should be song, followed by the publication of a profoundly depressing survey into the decline of migrating birds. But today has brought relief. The cuckoo is back,...

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Don’t be glum! Here are ten reasons to be cheerful

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The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, founded by the chocolate millionaire in 1904 to combat "the great scourges of humanity", has been looking into equivalent scourges today. Having consulted 3,500 people, it has nominated our top ten social evils. They are the...

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Weren’t computers meant to liberate us?

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Of the publication of silly surveys there is no end. To help us make sense of an increasingly frantic and fragmented world, publicity-minded academics and marketing experts eagerly supply a daily diet of research documents and studies, usually with some...

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Winners don’t always play by the rules

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Of all the names one would least expect to find in reports of a controversy about sport, life and death, and America, that of Captain Mark Phillips would be a leading contender. The captain – "Foggy Phillips", as he was...

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The whiff of defeatism in the face of an old enemy

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Imagine for a moment that a government body has delivered a report which presents, as one of four policy options, the prospect of your house being destroyed as well as your local shops, pub, village and landscape. It could happen...

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When truth and its showbiz cousin collide

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The shaggy media millionaire and poet Felix Dennis has just confessed to murder. In a newspaper interview with Ginny Dougary, he told of an event, some 25 years ago, when a man he knew behaved so badly and violently towards...

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