[Home]History of Rupert Murdoch

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Revision 10 . . (edit) October 26, 2001 8:26 am by Asa
Revision 9 . . October 24, 2001 6:43 pm by Aristotle [NOPV current and past British Prime Ministers dependency on Murdock]
Revision 8 . . October 23, 2001 7:00 pm by Asa [restored some of the Pattern incident material, making it more NPOV]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1c1
Australian-born (though now a US citizen) media entrepreneur, major shareholder and managing director of [News Corporation]?, a conglomorate which owns many newspapers in Britain (incluing the tabloid The Sun, [The Mirror]? and the broadsheet [The Times]?), Australia, [20th Century Fox]?, [Sky Television]? the monopoly pay-television operator in the United Kingdom and operating in much of Europe, the [Fox Network]? a US-wide television network, and [Star TV]?, an Asian satellite TV service.
Australian-born (though now a US citizen) media entrepreneur, major shareholder and managing director of [News Corporation]?, a conglomorate which owns many newspapers in Britain (incluing the tabloid The Sun, [The Mirror]? and the broadsheet? [The Times]?), Australia, [20th Century Fox]?, [Sky Television]? the monopoly pay-television operator in the United Kingdom and operating in much of Europe, the [Fox Network]? a US-wide television network, and [Star TV]?, an Asian satellite TV service.

Changed: 3c3
Murdoch is generally regarded as the single most politically influential media proprietor in the world, and is regularly courted by politicians (especially British PM Tony Blair, who relies on good coverage in Murdoch's tabloids) who attempt to convince him to run favourable coverage. He regularly runs partisan media coverage for political parties that promote policies and decisions which favour his commercial interests. For example, it is believed that Murdoch tried to suppress the publication of the memoirs of [Chris Patten]?, the last British governor of Hong Kong, in an attempt to curry favour with the mainland Chinese political leadership - Pattern's book was very critical of the Chinese government. Whatever the motives, the book was dropped from publication by Murdoch's HarperCollins? book publishing company. It was only because of Pattern's political influence that the story came to light and the book was later published by a non-News Corperation house. It is speculated that Murdoch wanted to please the Chinese government because this all happened around the time he was attempting to get a foot-hold in the Chinese market with the launch of [Star TV]?.
Murdoch is generally regarded as the single most politically influential media proprietor in the world, and is regularly courted by politicians (especially current and past British Prime Minsters, who rely on good coverage in Murdoch's tabloids) who attempt to convince him to run favourable coverage. He regularly runs partisan media coverage for political parties that promote policies and decisions which favour his commercial interests. For example, it is believed that Murdoch tried to suppress the publication of the memoirs of [Chris Patten]?, the last British governor of Hong Kong, in an attempt to curry favour with the mainland Chinese political leadership - Pattern's book was very critical of the Chinese government. Whatever the motives, the book was dropped from publication by Murdoch's HarperCollins? book publishing company. It was only because of Pattern's political influence that the story came to light and the book was later published by a non-News Corperation house. It is speculated that Murdoch wanted to please the Chinese government because this all happened around the time he was attempting to get a foot-hold in the Chinese market with the launch of [Star TV]?.

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