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Breivik in court, Winehouse funeral and Olympics countdown
for the week ending Sunday 31 July
- Norway remains prominent in the aftermath of the terror attacks
- Amy Winehouse (in the week of her funeral) and the Olympics (with a year to go) also covered lots
- Cyprus’ credit rating, ITV’s profits and South Korean landslides covered little
Covered lots
- Anders Behring Breivik, making his first court appearance after twin terror attacks in Norway, 513 articles
- Olympic countdown, with one year until London 2012, 309 articles
- Amy Winehouse, whose funeral took place this week, 250 articles
- President Obama and House Speaker Boehner address the nation as the US debt crisis deepens, 175 articles
Covered little
- Cyprus’ credit rating is cut by Moody’s rating agency, 15 articles
- Broadcaster ITV announced a rise in pre-tax profits, 10 articles
- Torrential rain in South Korea causes landslides, killing at least 32 people, 8 articles
Political ups and downs (top ten by number of articles)
- David Cameron: 468 articles (-42% on previous week)
- George Osborne: 270 articles (+34% on previous week)
- Vince Cable: 177 articles (+111% on previous week)
- William Hague: 143 articles (+96% on previous week)
- Ed Miliband: 109 articles (-54% on previous week)
- Tony Blair: 88 articles (-41% on previous week)
- Ed Balls: 88 articles (+132% on previous week)
- Gordon Brown: 73 articles (-47% on previous week)
- Nick Clegg: 72 articles (-56% on previous week)
- Michael Gove: 56 articles (+17% on previous week)
Celebrity vs serious
- Zara Phillips’ wedding on Saturday, to rugby player Mike Tindall, 137 articles vs. the death of BBC journalist Ahmed Omed Khpulwak, killed in an insurgent attack in Afghanistan on Thursday, 9 articles
- L’Oreal’s airbrushed make-up ads, featuring stars like Julia Roberts, are banned, 7 articles, vs. resignation of Polish defence minister, Bogdan Klich, following a report on the 2010 plane crash that killed President Kaczynski, 3 articles
- David Beckham launches an underwear range, 14 articles vs. Iranian nuclear scientist shot dead in Tehran, 5 articles
Arab spring (countries & current leaders)
- Libya and Colonel Gaddafi: 199 articles (+188% on previous week)
- Syria and President Al Assad: 54 articles (+42% on previous week)
- Egypt and ex-President Mubarak: 36 articles (+3% on previous week)
- Tunisia and ex-President Ben Ali: 19 articles (+19% on previous week)
- Yemen and President Saleh: 10 articles (-17% on previous week)
- Turkey and Prime Minster Erdogan: 9 articles (+200% on previous week)
- Saudi Arabia and King Abdullah: 8 articles (-27% on previous week)
- Egypt’s Military council: 8 articles (-43% on previous week)
- Iran and President Ahmadinejad: 7 articles (-22% on previous week)
- Gaza and Hamas: 6 articles (-40% on previous week)
- Israel and Prime Minister Netanyahu: 6 articles (-54% on previous week)
- Iraq and Prime Minister Al Maliki: 6 articles (from 0 articles previous week)
- Jordan and King Abdullah: 4 articles (+300% on previous week)
- Bahrain and King Al Khalifa: 2 articles (-67% on previous week)
Who wrote a lot about…’Famine in Somalia’’
Mike Pflanz – 5 articles (Daily Telegraph), Mark Tran – 3 articles (The Guardian), Emily Dugan – 3 articles (The Independent), Daniel Howden– 3 articles (The Independent)
Long form journalism
- 4,285 words: ‘Jude Law: “I was a great champion of the human spirit. I lost that for a time”‘ – Carole Cadwalladr, The Observer, 31 July 2011
- 3,784 words: ‘9/11 Ground Zero: why has its rebirth turned sour?’ – Rowan Moore, The Observer, 31 July 2011
- 3,642 words: ‘Charity cash should go to starving children, not to fire me: Former Unicef boss blasts poverty charity’ – Warren Swords, Mail on Sunday, 31 July 2011
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