Category Archives: Media

2012 ➤ Welcome JLS to the pop millionaires club

Rich List, JLS, Marvin Humes, JB Gill, Oritsé Williams, Aston Merrygold

£5m apiece: JLS’s Marvin Humes, JB Gill, Oritsé Williams, Aston Merrygold

❚ NO REALLY POPTASTIC SURPRISES in the annual Sunday Times Rich List for the UK and Ireland, published today. Adele, inevitably, tops the Richest Young Musicians after the past year’s runaway success that more than tripled her estimated wealth from £6m to £20m ($33m). There are only five newcomers each worth £5m ($8m) in the top 20 millionaires aged 30 and under. One is Jessie J, 24, the former Brit School student who has sold close to 1m copies of her album Who You Are and is currently mentoring on the television show The Voice UK. The others are all four members of JLS (short for Jack the Lad Swing), the UK’s coolest boy band, who came to fame on The X Factor and released their third album, Jukebox, last November.

♫ View video: JLS performing their January release,
Do You Feel What I Feel?

The under-30s millionaire list is nowhere in the same stratosphere as the main Sunday Times Music Millionaires Top 50. These are the grandees from the headier days of British rock who have had a lifetime in which to amass royalties — ex-Beatles, Stones and assorted moguls. Among pop performers, the 70s are still represented by David Bowie (today valued at £100m, $163m); the Swinging 80s only by George Michael (up this year to £100m); the 90s by Robbie Williams (£100m), as a new entry the joint husband-and-wife wealth of Coldplay’s Chris Martin and actress Gwyneth Paltrow (£72m), plus Take That’s Gary Barlow (£50m).

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The same trio as last year head the Young Entertainers Rich List, led by Daniel Radcliffe, aged 22, who starred in eight Harry Potter films and has increased his wealth by £6m in a year to £54m ($88m), helped by the success of his latest movie, the gothic thriller The Woman in Black. At No 2, Twilight star Robert Pattinson has added £8m in a year to his fortune and is now worth £40m. Keira Knightley is the third top-earning movie star, still worth £30m.

➢ 2010, Rich List puts George Michael top of the popstars from the un-lucrative 80s

➢ 2011, Soprano Jenkins tops pop’s young Rich List

Daniel Ek, Spotify ,Rich List, social media

Daniel Ek: Swedish entrepreneur who launched Spotify’s streaming service in 2008

➢ Britain’s top ten richest people in the world of social media are worth a combined £15.8bn — The Daily Telegraph reports that, sprinting fast behind the billionaires, is the 29-year-old co-founder of Spotify, the legal online music streaming service. London-based Arsenal supporter Daniel Ek is the highest new entry on the Music Millionaires Rich List as well as No 8 in the…

top ten Social Media Millionaires

1 Alisher Usmanov, Facebook: £12.3bn
2 Michael Moritz, LinkedIn: £1.08bn
3 Niklas Zennstrom, Skype: £600m
4 U2 (Bono), Facebook, Yelp: £514m
5 Andrey Andreev, Badoo: £500m
6 Michael and Xochi Birch, Bebo, TweetDeck: £270m
7 Vikrant Bhargava, SocialGO: £230m
8 Daniel Ek, Spotify: £190m
9 Tihan Presbie, Miniclip: £155m
10 Joanna Shields, Bebo, Facebook: £50m

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2012 ➤ How guitar wizard Bert taught two million young Brits to “play in a day”

Bert Weedon, “Mr Guitar” ,Play in a Day ,tutor,Eric Clapton,

ERIC CLAPTON, the only three-time inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, once said: “I wouldn’t have felt the urge to press on without the tips and encouragement that Bert’s book gives you. I’ve never met a player of any consequence that doesn’t say the same thing”

➢ On his death, The Guardian pays tribute to Bert “Mr Guitar” Weedon, author of the novice guitar players’ bible which has sold over two million copies since it was published in 1957 …

The manual Play in a Day was the bible for generations of budding guitarists in the 1950s and 1960s. Its author was Bert Weedon, an unassuming dance-band musician whose unpatronising approach made him Britain’s earliest expert on the instrumental niceties of rock’n’roll. Weedon, who has died aged 91, was among the first British musicians to incorporate into his style the innovations of American country and western, boogie and rock’n’roll guitarists.

Hank Marvin, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Brian May and Eric Clapton were among those whose introduction to the guitar was strumming through the exercises in Weedon’s tutor books. McCartney’s testimony was typical: “George and I went through the Bert Weedon books and learned D and A together … / continued online

❏ Herbert Maurice William Weedon, guitarist, born 10 May 1920; died 20 April 2012

➢ Play in a Day is still in print — details at Bert Weedon’s own website where he offers plenty of tips and hints

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2012 ➤ East London hipsters: leave your mark on Dazed’s instant history map

Jamie Hawkesworth,Dazed & Confused ,Secret History, East London

Photographed by Jamie Hawkesworth, clockwise from top left: Elijah Butterz, Nasir Mazhar, Tracey Moberly, Kathryn Ferguson, Yang Du, Martine Rose, Missy the dog, James Edson, Charlotte Jansen

➢ Kicking off its Secret History of East London project, the May issue of Dazed & Confused “asks a host of creatives, pioneers and dreamers whether rising rents, silicon roundabouts and a surfeit of artisinal [sic] coffee means that it’s all over for the creative inhabitants of east London”.

The young photographer Jamie Hawkesworth was asked to capture parts of the creative community — portraits of the artists, designers, musicians, publishers etc working from the area — and for his own memories of east London: “I’m always inspired by people that have a really strong character, a real sense of being and an expressive personality that comes across in the slightest of touches.” See above for the result.

Dazed Digital invites you to map your memories on its interactive timeline

Secret History ,East London ,dazeddigital,Cantaloupe

At Dazed Digital: a few hundred yards adrift, a black cross marks the fabled Cantaloupe where boys and girls learned the cruel facts of life about Shoreditch in the 90s


➢ Being taught the rules of London in the Canteloupe [sic] — See black cross added today by Duncan to Dazed Digital’s map. He says: “When I first moved to London in 1998 from Manchester, in fact my second day I think it was, I was in the back of the Canteloupe on Charlotte Road in Shoreditch and got talking to a guy from Manchester who told me the ‘rule of London’ being that you have to be brutal and move through social groups until you find YOUR people … taking the ones from a group you like the most and then surfing through people because London runs deep. It was a ‘big city’ chat. I didn’t really follow the advice, but I remember the advice like it was yesterday… Today (17th April) I walked past the Canteloupe and it has just closed, being refitted…”

Secret History ,East London ,dazeddigital,Cantaloupe,restaurants

Since November 1995 scruffy old Cantaloupe has been the benchmark of cool among the artisan streets of the Wild East: “as essential to Shoreditch as misunderstood haircuts, bubbling new musical hybrids and devil-may-care debauchery”

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1912–2012 ➤ My pal Tucker’s Titanic moment and the truth about the “Unsinkable” Molly Brown

A Night To Remember ,Tucker McGuire ,movies,Unsinkable Molly Brown,centenary, Titanic,Mrs James Joseph Brown,

“Come on girls!” — Tucker McGuire as the Unsinkable Molly Brown in A Night To Remember, 1958. (ITV Studios Home Entertainment DVD)

❚ TUCKER McGUIRE WAS SOMEBODY I’D KNOWN for years before we actually met in London in 1982. She was an American-born actress who’d made her home in England in the 1930s and she played 34 screen roles, according to IMDb, and hundreds more on radio. But the one I knew her from — along with thousands of other British cinema-goers — was her feisty performance in what endures today as the most thrilling version of the Titanic disaster, A Night To Remember, directed as an authentic docu-drama by Roy Ward Baker at Pinewood Studios not far from London in 1958.

As well as the stars Kenneth More and Honor Blackman, this J Arthur Rank mini-epic featured a galaxy of British character actors playing cameo roles from boiler-room to bridge. Tucker was cast as the American millionairess Mrs Margaret “Molly” Brown. And she delivers the scene-stealing line everybody remembers, moments after the mightiest ocean liner of its day slipped beneath the calm mirror-like North Atlantic 100 years ago today.

Though Lifeboat No 6 had capacity for 65 people, it held only 19 women and four men who now stared in horror and awe as the broken Titanic ultimately stood up on end, paused and then vanished in one vertical plunge. Unexpectedly, say eye-witness survivors, the clear night air was suddenly torn with an appalling crescendo of wailing from the hundreds of fellow-passengers struggling for their lives and drowning in the bitter freezing water.

A Night To Remember, DVD, Blu-Ray, Titanic,Roy Ward Baker,Pinewood Studios

A Night To Remember, 1958: the most accurate telling of the Titanic tragedy in its day thrilled audiences long before CGI effects were invented. This mighty mock-up of the doomed liner was built in a field at Pinewood and water scenes shot at Ruislip Lido. (2012 DVD cover from ITV Studios Home Entertainment)

In Rank’s movie, 44-year-old Mrs Brown grabs her oar and insists they turn their lifeboat round and return to save the desperate swimmers: “Come on girls! Row!” She is straight-away rebuked by quartermaster Robert Hichens, the 29-year-old crewman at the helm (who had been at the wheel of the Titanic itself at the liner’s moment of impact with the iceberg). He yells that turning back risked swamping the boat with too many people, whereupon the millionaire women’s rights activist becomes immortalised for ever as the heroic and “Unsinkable” Molly Brown. She tells him: “You get fresh with me son, and I’ll throw you overboard.”

It took 40 minutes after the Titanic sank for the wails of 1,514 doomed souls to be silenced. Hichens gloomily allowed the women to row around for a while, then his boat joined up with Lifeboat No 16 to await rescue in the silent night. With the dawn, a total of 710 survivors were taken aboard by the RMS Carpathia.

Titanic, Lifeboat No 6, Frederick Fleet , Carpathia, Robert Hichens, Unsinkable Molly Brown

Titanic’s Lifeboat No 6 approaches RMS Carpathia to be rescued in 1912: Quartermaster Hichens can be seen at the rear manning the tiller and Frederick Fleet, the look-out who first saw the iceberg, is seen at the bow preparing to catch a tow-line. Is it too fanciful to imagine the large hat at centre belonging to the “Unsinkable” Molly Brown? (Photograph by Louis Mansfield Ogden © Royal Museums Greenwich)

❏ Tucker McGuire is among 13 actresses, including Debbie Reynolds, to have portrayed the “Unsinkable” Molly Brown, and like so many thespians, proved to be a hugely entertaining character when we met 30 years ago. She had been widowed three years earlier so wanted to widen her social circle by joining an evening class I used to give in creative writing in central London. She didn’t let on about her most famous role for a long while, but when she did I knew exactly who she was, along with the rest of the nation’s vintage movie fans who had seen A Night To Remember on TV seemingly every other Sunday afternoon since 1958.

Though at 69 she was old enough to be granny to most of us, Tucker was vivacious company and after the class often invited the regulars for drinks at her basement flat where she’d show us snapshots from her career and her yearbook for the class of 1930 at Handley High School in Winchester, Virginia. As part of the written coursework she submitted an affecting review of Katherine Mansfield’s Taking the Veil, “an unhappy daydream with a happy ending — a perfect love story. It has drama and comedy and leaves one glad to have read it”. In March 1982 our group went to the Lyric Theatre in Hammersmith to see Patricia Routledge and Paul Eddington starring in the newest comedy by Michael Frayn. It proved achingly hilarious and Tucker’s verdict was, in true billboard tradition, that “this one will run and run”. How prescient: a brilliant revival of Noises Off is playing to packed houses at the Old Vic right now.

Tucker died in 1988. Despite her extrovert demeanour, she’d never talked about her family or why she had left America so young. Last month’s DVD rereleases of A Night to Remember gave new life to Tucker’s line “Come on girls!” and prompted a sentimental search session with Google which revealed a daughter Janie Booth, who is also an actress here in Britain. Anne Tucker McGuire was born in Winchester, Virginia, where her father was President of the American Medical Association. Tucker’s first mentions in England include playing in Three Men on a Horse at the Wyndham’s Theatre, London, and making the Albert de Courville film Strangers on Honeymoon, both in 1936.

Tom Macaulay,Dark Stranger, Tucker McGuire,

Tucker’s husband, Tom Macaulay, in Dark Stranger, 1946

Her old Harrovian husband called himself Tom Macaulay as an actor but his fuller name Thomas Macaulay Booth resonates with British history. The Macaulays included Zachary, the 18th-century slavery abolitionist, and Thomas Babington, the celebrated historian and Whig politician.

The Booth family was no less distinguished: Charles Booth was a 19th-century shipowner and social researcher whose study of working-class life in London led to the founding of old-age pensions. His greatest innovation, documented in Life and Labour of the People in London, included the socially coded Maps Descriptive of London Poverty 1898-99, and revealed that 35% were living in abject poverty. He was elected president of the Royal Statistical Society (1892–4).

A Night To Remember ,Tucker McGuire ,movies,Unsinkable Molly Brown,centenary, Titanic,Mrs James Joseph Brown

Two faces of Mrs James Joseph Brown: the real Denver socialite and women’s activist around 1912, and (right) feisty Tucker McGuire in the 1958 Titanic movie A Night To Remember

❏ Back in the real world of Mrs James Joseph Brown, “Molly” had been born Margaret Tobin in 1867 to Irish immigrants in Hannibal, Mo. From becoming a teen bride in Denver, she struck it rich with her husband, joint-owner of a Colorado gold mine, and enjoyed devoting her life to philanthropy and campaigning for labour rights and women’s suffrage. Mrs Brown eventually separated amicably from her husband and in 1912 went to explore Egypt along with Colonel John Jacob Astor and his wife Madeleine, stars of New York society.

On returning, all three boarded the Titanic at Cherbourg, along with their servants, for the voyage to the States. In the ship’s final hour, the chivalrous Colonel Astor kissed his wife goodbye, saw her into a lifeboat and went to his death smoking a cigarette by the bridge. He was the richest passenger aboard the Titanic, and left a $150 million fortune ($11.92 billion, today).

Mrs Brown died in 1932 pursuing another lifelong passion — acting. Incidentally, she didn’t use either of the famous nicknames Molly or “Unsinkable”. These were given her by a gossip columnist in her hometown of Denver, Colorado.

A Night To Remember,centenary, Titanic,John Jacob Astor,lifeboats

“Women and children first”: The Edwardian code of chivalry prevented men from boarding the Titanic’s 20 lifeboats before all the women had done so. The grim truth was that there was lifeboat capacity for only half the passengers and crew. The agony for American millionaire John Jacob Astor (depicted here) was deepened by knowing his wife Madeleine was pregnant with their first child. (Illustration by Fortunino Matania)

➢ Museum located in her Denver home tells story of Titanic survivor Molly Brown – by Colleen Slevin, Associated Press

➢ A Night to Remember (1958,digitally remastered DVD)

➢ Criterion Collection: Night to Remember (1958, Blu-ray US import)

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➤ Lest we forget the 907 Falklands dead and the 1,965 injured

Belgrano, sinking, Falklands, 1982

May 2, 1982: ARA General Belgrano lists heavily to port in the Atlantic Ocean, while its crew abandon ship. Sailor’s picture via Press Association

❚ TODAY WAS THE DAY 30 YEARS AGO that prime Minister Margaret Thatcher took Britain to war in the South Atlantic Ocean, all because a repressive dictatorship in Argentina had occcupied a tiny island with a handful of marines posing as scrap merchants. Since the 1800s, Britain had asserted sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (population 1,800) and its neighbouring dependencies, while Argentina repeatedly claimed its sovereignty over the colony it knew as the Islas Malvinas. They lie 300 miles away from Argentina and 8,000 miles from the UK.

Neither nation formally declared war on the other, yet the 74-day conflict led to the deaths of 649 Argentine and 255 British servicemen and 3 Falklands Island civilians. There were 1,188 Argentine non-fatal casualties and 777 British. The whole tragic saga was made more complex when the US declined to intervene because its Central Intelligence Agency had supported the military junta of Leopoldo Galtieri, the President of Argentina, against the Sandinistas in Nicaragua.

One month to the day after the Argentinian invasion, Sunday May 2, the British war cabinet headed by Margaret Thatcher, met at Chequers, the prime minister’s weekend retreat, and unanimously agreed to a naval order to sink the Argentine warship, General Belgrano, in the South Atlantic.

The Sun, Gotcha, 1982, Belgrano, Falklands War,Subsequently, to its eternal shame, Britain’s biggest selling daily paper The Sun boasted in its most notorious headline: “GOTCHA”. This rabid jingoism by middle-aged politicians and armchair media generals alike, as they relived memories of World War Two, drove a wedge into the generation gap that has never been equalled. Those of us under 40 — too young to remember WW2 — were appalled that a simmering 150-year-old squabble with Argentina over sovereignty of the Falkland Islands should now warrant military action by Britain. We were even more appalled at the near-total, gung-ho media hype that blessed it.

Britain initiated the first naval loss at 4pm that Sunday when the nuclear-powered submarine HMS Conqueror fired a pattern of torpedoes at the Belgrano which was patrolling south of the Falklands. Two struck the vintage light cruiser and within 20 minutes its captain ordered his men to abandon ship. It was more than a day before 770 were rescued from the open ocean. Meanwhile 323 crew had died.

In their superbly detailed chronicle The Battle for the Falklands (1983, republished 2012), journalists Max Hastings and Simon Jenkins report the reasoning of a senior British commander: “You have got to start something like this by showing that you’re bloody good and you’re determined to win.” After the sinking, a British destroyer captain said when he broke the news to his ship’s company: “There was a mixture of horror and disbelief. There certainly wasn’t any pride.” The legitimacy of this British action remains the subject of controversy today.

Retribution followed two days later, on May 4. An Argentine Exocet missile struck the British destroyer HMS Sheffield amidships, with devastating effect, ultimately killing 20 crew members and severely injuring 24 others. The ship sank six days later. In the Royal Navy, Hastings reported, officers and men were shocked at the ease with which a single enemy aircraft had destroyed a warship specifically designed for air defence.

On June 8, at Bluff Cove on East Falkland, Argentine aircraft bombed Britain’s civilian-manned landing ships Sir Galahad and Sir Tristram, causing the biggest loss of British forces in the conflict. A total of 32 Welsh Guards died, and 150 men suffered burns and injuries.

Bluff Cove, Falklands war,Sir Galahad,

Britain’s civilian-manned vessel Sir Galahad ablaze after the Argentine air raid on East Falkland, June 8, 1982. This videograb comes from newly unearthed footage shot by guardsman Tracy Evans, which is viewable on the BBC news website

➢ Welsh Guard’s film shows Falklands War scenes for first time (above)

➢ Falklands War 30 years on — by Simon Jenkins who co-authored the most detailed account of the conflict: “How British PM’s lucky gamble turned Thatcher into a world celebrity, not only repelled the Argentinian invasion but also paved way for her ideological reforms.”

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