Search

Your search keyword '"Cox, David"' showing total 70 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Cox, David" Remove constraint Author: "Cox, David" Topic literature/writing Remove constraint Topic: literature/writing
70 results on '"Cox, David"'

Search Results

1. Day of the stealth persuaders: the sexy hard sell is on the way out. You can filter out ads on television and the internet, and many people don't buy newspapers anyway. So advertisers are turning to more sinister methods, reports David Cox

2. Writers at war: the literary world loves a feud, but a fierce row is threatening English PEN's very existence. The casualties may be imprisoned authors around the world

3. Will we survive the winter? Water supplies are drying up, the National Grid can't cope, the sewers are collapsing and the transport system is in chaos. If you believe everything we are told, some of us may not make it through to the spring

4. 'The men and women who control broadcasting believe that television is an idiot's lantern'. (Essay)

5. Whose liberty, whose livelihood? The forthcoming Countryside March is not what it seems. It will be a final, desperate rally for a tribe that has lorded it over us for centuries and is now doomed. (Features)

6. Kill the licence fee: the BBC is financed by a poll tax which turns the poor into criminals and stultifies the intellectual and creative life of the nation. We should get rid of it. (Cover Story)

7. Bring the BBC to heel

8. The great television flop

9. Here comes the Fat Controller

10. Let's set the countryside on fire

11. Keep out! By order of the squirearchy

12. Don't trust farmers with our land

13. Silence of the lambs' champions

14. Dyke is just Birt with a grin

15. Stand up to the media giants

16. Tea-party vicar

17. The irresistible force of a £50bn free lunch

18. Dyke drags us into a cultural desert

19. The box dethroned

20. The fight for TV's toothless comb

21. Krakow Melt

22. Auntie's little secret

23. Conservation: warbler power

24. Technohype bites back: does your quad-band, polyphonic camphone make you feel slightly sick? It should. Our addiction to pointless technology will be the death of us all, argues David Cox

25. How Ofcom has let down viewers: the new communications regulator offers a clear analysis of the malaise of public service broadcasting, but only a pointless fig leaf as a remedy

26. Homeland security; Dirty bombs: the menace persists

27. Watch us wreck your telly: Britain could be the first in the world to go over wholly to digital TV. But only at inconvenience to viewers. Will new Labour brave their anger?

28. Mark Thompson: polished, pious and pragmatic, he has turned around Channel 4. Will he really reject a mission to save the BBC?

29. A cat fight at breakfast: Sarah Montague's position as successor to Sue MacGregor on Radio 4's Today programme seemed assured--until she went on maternity leave

30. Let women save the BBC; behind the scenes, female executives warned that machismo would get the corporation in trouble. With the charter up for renewal, will the boys now listen to them?

31. How to stop the TV cheats

32. Fear and loathing at the BBC: if the nation's biggest broadcaster got most of the blame for the Kelly affair, it was an accident waiting to happen. David Cox exposes the roots of a catastrophe

33. The audience of BBC Radio's morning show may not be as liberal as we thought, but it is deadly serious about running the country

34. Find this man a job! Nearly half of Britain's voters think Tony Blair will no longer be PM by the end of 2004. But what can he do instead? David Cox canvasses potential employers

35. Bring on the Yankee vandals

36. Birds against democracy

37. So, is this information or entertainment?

38. Can pay, but why should we? (The Licence Fee)

39. Don't be fooled. There may be a ban on expense-account lunching but the pink paper remains in the pink. (Profile the Financial Times)

40. He is the creative luvvy-in-chief at the BBC but never got the plum job. Does he have what it takes to turn around the ICA? (Profile: Alan Yentob)

41. Poor ratings and a new regard for human interest dross may kill off a grand British institution. So bye-bye, Jeremy and John. (Profile the Political Interview)

42. The fattest cats get together. (Broadcasting)

43. Millbank mayhem. (Media)

44. Almost a national joke, he has an unBritish bent for solving puzzles methodically, yet also has fierce flashes of creative insight. (Profile: Lord Birt)

45. Profile Martin Bashir: he is television's father confessor, ministering to the cult of celebrity, but himself eschews the bright lights

46. At last, the silent people speak: Ken Livingstone has tried to ban it but, this year, St George's Day will be celebrated as never before. David Cox finds that the English have arisen

47. Blair counts the counties out: The creation of new regional assemblies -- toothless, partially unelected bodies that will usurp existing councils -- is an act of gross cynicism

48. For a proper public service, try Murdoch: the BBC has abandoned any pretensions to quality, putting out trash when commercial channels schedule good programmes

49. Coming soon, the next rural fiasco: After botching the foot-and-mouth outbreak, the government promised to make amends. But now it is botching the follow-up

50. The future has been cancelled: Experts said we would surf the net on TVs and watch films on mobiles. But we still prefer the cinema

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources