Journalisted is an independent, not-for-profit website built to make it easier for you, the public, to find out more about journalists and what they write about.
It is run by the Media Standards Trust, a registered charity set up to foster high standards in news on behalf of the public, and funded by donations from charitable foundations.
Each week Journalisted produces a summary of the most covered news stories, most active journalists and those topics falling off the news agenda, using its database of UK journalists and news sources.
for the week ending Sunday 6 February
- Ongoing popular protests in Egypt covered across press
- Football (Association and American) hogs the back pages
- Massive Afghan bank fraud and China-Zimbabwe investment hardly covered
Covered lots
- Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, refusing to step down immediately but entering negotiations with opposition groups, 743 articles
- Footballer Fernando Torres, making his Chelsea FC debut against former club Liverpool, 152 articles
- The Super Bowl, in which the Green Bay Packers beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-25, 115 articles
- Cyclone Yasi hitting the already flood stricken coast of Queensland, 114 articles
Covered little
- Controversy over suspected $900m loss at Kabul Bank, 9 articles
- A 14-year-old is flogged to death in Bangladesh, accused by Islamic clerics of having an affair with a married man, 8 articles
- China reportedly poised to invest $10bn in Zimbabwe’s ailing economy, 1 article
Political ups and downs (top ten by number of articles)
- David Cameron: 517 articles (-16% on previous week)
- George Osborne: 161 articles (+72% on previous week)
- Nick Clegg: 139 articles (-18% on previous week)
- Tony Blair: 121 articles (-45% on previous week)
- Gordon Brown: 103 articles (-13% on previous week)
- William Hague: 99 articles (+212% on previous week)
- Ed Miliband: 93 articles (-48% on previous week)
- Theresa May: 73 articles (+43% on previous week)
- Vince Cable: 71 articles (+122% on previous week)
- Jack Straw: 60 articles (-62% on previous week)
Celebrity vs serious
- Jeremy Clarkson, making offensive comments about Mexicans on Top Gear, 45 articles vs. WikiLeaks cables revealing a secret US-funded anti-radicalisation campaign in Britain, 7 articles
- Christina Aguilera, fluffing her lines at the Super Bowl, 22 articles vs. Formula 1 driver Robert Kubica, severely damaging his hand in a rally crash, 20 articles
- Sally Bercow, wife of the Speaker John Bercow, poses for magazine photos, 31 articles vs. a care worker in Bern, Switzerland admits to abusing 114 disabled adults and children over three decades, 4 articles
- Keira Knightley, with new boyfriend rumours, 31 articles vs a climber who fell a thousand feet and survived with minor injuries, 10 articles
Who wrote a lot about…’Omar Suleiman’
Richard Spencer – 10 articles (Telegraph), James Hider – 7 articles (The Times), Ian Black – 7 articles (The Guardian), Tom Chivers – 6 articles (Telegraph), Colin Freeman – 6 articles (Telegraph)
Long form journalism
- 4,583 words: ‘Storm over the Nile’ – Matthew Campbell, Sunday Times, 6th February 2011
- 3,902 words: ‘Benefit fraud: spies in the welfare war’ – Amelia Gentleman, The Guardian, 1st February 2011
- 3,548 words: ‘Road to redemption’ – David James, Sunday Times, 6th February 2011
More from the Media Standards Trust
News about the joint Media Standards Trust/Cardiff University local news project, including an ITV Wales programme, available on our website
The Media Standards Trust’s unofficial database of PCC complaints is available for browsing at www.complaints.pccwatch.co.uk
For the latest instalment of Tobias Grubbe, journalisted’s 18th century jobbing journalist, go to journalisted.com/tobias-grubbe
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