delayed gratification issue 5
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The latest issue of the Slow Journalism Magazine, covering October-December 2011.TRANSCRIPT
18thO
ct‘‘I think w
e are superstars” – R
wandan
Para
lym
pic
hopefu
l Dom
iniq
ue B
izim
ana
We were all pirates in those days”- Jimmy Savile and the 1951 Tour of Great Britain29th Oct
‘‘
The men and women who once attempted to build England’s green
and pleasant land in Palestine start to sing ‘Jerusalem’”– Remembering Britain’s forgotten war
29th Oct
‘‘
I fear for you, I want you
to get off the bus. Get off” – Going undercover in Homs
3rdO
ct‘‘G
uilty: Knox
loo
ks stunned
as appeal against murder
convictio
n is rejected” – T
he
dangers
of p
re-e
mptiv
e n
ew
s
Dav
is A
nd
Cai
ro A
re
1 F
ist”
– H
ow
a
pep
per-
sp
rayin
g c
op
bro
ug
ht in
fam
y to a
sle
ep
y C
alifo
rnia
n tow
n
18th
Nov
‘‘
It’s cultureand persuasio
n
over guns and
sanctio
ns – do
lls o
ver drones”
– S
esam
e S
treet
goes to
Pakis
tan
10thD
ec‘‘
15th Dec‘‘He’d murder whole bottles of whiskey and then you’d hear the tip-tap of the typewriter” –
Denis MacShane
MP remembers
Christopher
Hitchens
Ess
ential
ly I’v
e got
a fem
ale
star
ting a
t ce
ntr
e bac
k” –
Can a
trans
gend
er de
fende
r sa
ve the
worl
d’s w
orst fo
otball
team?
22nd
Nov
‘‘
His d
eath is on
e of those sm
all
thin
gs” –
A South Korean’s viewof the demise of Kim Jong-il
17thD
ec‘‘
Oct Nov Dec 2011
The Slow Journalism magazine | Last to breaking news
‘Lung Mixture’ by Eelus5
2011
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
to hear” – A
iman
Magu
z, c
o-fo
un
der o
f Lib
ya’s
Trib
ute
FM
20thO
ct‘‘£10 Issue 05€14 ¦ $22 ¦ A$20 ¦ ¥2 ¦�⏒���
00005
As long as a piece’s history doesn’t require explanation, everyone keeps on making money” – Inside
the world of
stolen art
2nd Nov‘‘
19th Dec‘‘
The
Trinidad
Sco
rpion B
utch T Pepper
is so ho
t it melts Latex
gloves” –
The s
trange w
orld
of c
om
petitiv
e c
hilli e
atin
g
I w
ante
d
Tra
pal
and
a
to b
e le
ft a
lon
e as
a p
lace
of
pea
ce, s
low
nes
s,
emp
tin
ess
and
imag
inin
g”
– C
hris
Moss o
n t
he b
att
le o
f
the P
ata
gon
ia d
am
6th
Oct
‘‘
9thO
ct‘‘
contentsSat 1st Oct – Sat 31st Dec 2011
Send in theCookie Monster!
Sat 10th DecCan ‘Sesame Street’save US/Pakistani
relations?
Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito are acquitted of
murderMon 3rd Oct
By John Follain, journalist and author
Kim Jong-il diesThu 17th Dec
By Korean blogger TK
Syria undercoverSat 19th Dec
An secret trip to Homs
The world’s population reaches
seven billionMon 31st Oct
By Jack A Goldstone, Professor of Public
Policy
Muammar Gaddafi is killed
Thu 20th OctBy Aiman Maguz,
co-founder, Tribute FM.
Steve JobsWed 5th Oct
Andy Hertzfeld remembers his time
working with the Apple boss
A man,a plan, a dam
Thu 6th OctChris Moss reports on the battle for Patagonia
Brushes withthe law
Wed 2nd NovThe murky world of
art crime
Occupational hazards
Fri 18th NovThe fallout fromLt John Pike’s
pepper-sprayingof protesters
Occupy timelineMon 21st Nov
How the protests spread across the world
“I have to fightto play”
Tue 18th OctIntroducing the
Rwandan SittingVolleyball team
Out of EdenSat 15th Oct
Palestine comes toNorth Yorkshire
SERIOUS
LONG
SHOR
T
The butterfly effectSun 11th Dec
How Prince Albert’s tree led to threats of war in
Korea
Breaking badTue 15th Dec
The perils of pre-emptive news reporting
Christopher HitchensTue 15th Dec
Denis MacShane MP remembers his friend
The Iron LadiesSun 23rd Oct
The world’s female heads of state and government
The Frame GameOct opener
The month’s biggestart sales tracked day
by day
One list to rule them all
Mon 28th NovWhat was the best
album of 2011?
Light entertainersNov opener
Celebrities flicking the Christmas switches
across Britain
When the balloon went up
Mon 21st NovThe story of Britain’s
first hot air balloon trip
The odd squadThu 24th Nov
The salvation ofthe world’s worst
international football team
The end of ‘Up Yours’?Thu 10th Nov
A history of digital swearing
On the cover… Overleaf
Eelus interviewed
Some like it hotSun 9th Oct
The world of extreme chilli-eating
“We are much saddened by
the death of ourcomrade Kim
Jong-il”Fri 23rd Dec
British communistson North Korea
Jimmy Savile and the Hard Luck Tour
Sat 29th OctHow a cycle race
spawned a showbiz legend
Plot linesTue 18th Oct
The making of the Booker Prize longlist
Scrapheap challengeSun 20th Dec
The recycled value of prized monuments
The true meaning of Christmas
Dec openerGoogling trendsover December
The film formulaMon 31st Oct, Wed 30th Nov,
Sat 31st DecEvery film release of the
quarter boiled down
How to run a penny stock pump
and dumpThu 13th Oct
Your guide to making a quick buck
fRIvOLOUS
LONG
SHOR
T
The smart money
Tue 29th NovThe bets you should
have made this quarter
The quarter in feeble thieves
Fri 7th OctOdd thefts from thelast three months
The quarter in financial ruin
Mon 31st OctBusiness disasters of
the period
Cavaliere attitudesSat 12th Nov
Berlusconi’s career at a glance
Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito are acquitted of murderJohn Follain, Sunday Times journalist and author
Mon 3rd Oct 2011 Momentthat mattered
“I wasn’t that shocked by Knox and Sollecito’s acquittal, because of the body language in the court throughout the appeal trial. The judges and jurors hung on every word of the defence lawyers, but they sat back in their seats wearing sceptical expressions when the prosecution was responding. Often when
the prosecutors made requests they would be slapped down by the judges. It was very noticeable in the last pleas – when Amanda and Raffaele stood up in turn to speak and proclaim their innocence – how attentive the court was.
That is not to say that the acquittal was expected. I was sat just behind the Kercher family and after almost four years of them being told that Amanda and Raffaele were guilty, it really made them feel as if they were back at square one. They wondered where the 10,000 pages of evidence had gone.
The key moment in the whole appeal trial was when the two court-appointed experts, who had been brought in to examine DNA evidence on a kitchen knife and Meredith’s bra clasp, showed a video of the forensic police taken at the cottage. The experts said they used dirty gloves, shook the evidence and passed it between themselves. You could see the shock and surprise on the faces of the judges and the jurors as they watched.
I have been reporting on the case since the day that Meredith’s body was discovered and it was always clear that it would be a huge story. The rareness of the situation – one female student being accused of killing another – the youth and looks of the protagonists and the cocktail of sex and drugs alleged by the prosecution helped make it so.
But over the last four years, the Perugians kept their distance from the trial, and it was very rare to see more than half a dozen of them in court. There was a feeling that it wasn’t a Perugian murder in the sense that outsiders were involved – both the victim and the people who had been targeted by the prosecution. That is not to say that the city didn’t care, and there was always affection for the victim, who was known as ‘La povera Meredith’ (Poor Meredith). On the night of the verdict, thousands of people turned up in
the square and when Amanda and Raffaele’s lawyers came out there was a strong reaction, with some people shouting ‘assassins!’ and ‘shame!’. Talking to people in Perugia over the following days it was clear that they weren’t convinced by the verdict and most believed what the prosecution said – that Amanda, Raffaele and Rudy [Guede] were all guilty.
In the Italian system you are not definitively convicted or acquitted until you have exhausted all possibilities of appeal. There are two possibilities of appeal, so there was the first trial at which Amanda and Raffaele were convicted, then the second where they were acquitted of the murder. Now what is expected is that there will be a trial by the supreme court in Rome, the highest court, which will either be in the summer or the autumn. The Supreme Court will confirm the acquittal, declare them guilty or call for a retrial because of the controversy over the appeal trial.
Of course it is unlikely that Amanda would return from America for the second appeal. The prosecution found out about the rules of extradition in case Amanda were to be convicted in Rome. They were told that there was zero
possibility that the US would ever send Amanda back, especially considering the very strong public
opinion there that Amanda is innocent.I think the second appeal will go on even
without Amanda. The precedent for big Italian crime cases is that you can have somebody convicted for years, maybe decades and then suddenly somebody comes forward and the whole thing gets started again. Nothing is ever really set in stone in the Italian judicial system and we do have this contradiction now that the
supreme court in Rome said that Rudy killed Meredith with others and this acquittal
says that it wasn’t Amanda and Raffaele. So the question is left hanging – if it wasn’t them,
then who was it? To be honest, though, I am sceptical of the chances of the final truth of how and why Meredith died coming from an Italian courtroom.” Interview by Rob Orchard.
John Follain is a journalist for the Sunday Times and the author of ‘Death in Perugia: The Definitive Account of the Meredith Kercher Case from Her Murder to the Acquittal of Raffaele Sollecito and Amanda Knox’.
“This acquittal says that it wasn’t Amanda and
Raffaele. The question is left hanging – if it wasn’t them, then
who was it?”
OctSat 1st “By punishing one Mumtaz Qadri, you will produce a thousand Mumtaz Qadris!”Reuters reports the words of a demonstrator outside a prison in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, where Malik Mumtaz Hussain Qadri is sentenced to death by hanging for the assassination of Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer in Islamabad in January. Qadri shot Taseer while working as his police bodyguard because he disagreed with the politican’s attempts to revise Pakistan’s blasphemy law.
Temperatures in Gravesend in Kent reach 29.9ºC, the hottest October temperature ever recorded in the UK.
Sun 2nd
In Denmark, a new ‘fat tax’ on foods containing over 2.3 per cent saturated fat is launched. Money raised from the new tax will be used to fund anti-obesity policies.
German-trained filly Danedream wins the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe in a record time of two hours, 24 minutes and 49 seconds. The horse had starting odds of 27-1 to win, and was bought by its current owners for just €9,000 a year ago.
Mon 3rd
Amanda Knox is released from prison after an Italian appeals court overturns the 26-year-old’s sentence for the murder and sexual assault of her British roommate Meredith Kercher. f Moment that mattered
At the High Court in London, a judge rules that Basildon Council can remove caravans from 49 of the 54 plots that make up the Dale Farm Travellers site in Essex, the largest in the country. The site is the home of around 400 Travellers, who have been fighting the council’s plan to clear it and return it to green belt land for ten years. m12th Oct
NovLEEDSRonan ParkeMatt CardleTinchy StryderPRESTON
BeverleyKnight
BLACKPOOLTinchy Stryder
CUMBERNAULDLloyd Daniels
FALKIRKPaije Richardson
BRISTOLOlly Murs
SLOUGHEthan Boroian
CROYDONLarry Lamb
LONDONWESTFIELD SHOPPING CENTRESJustin Bieber
LONDONHAMPSTEAD
Michael McIntyre
LUTONJames ‘Arg’ Argent
PAISLEYStacey Solomon
BELFASTJustin Fletcher
(aka Mr Tumble)
OMAGHJanet Devlin
NEWCASTLEJoe McElderry
17th
7th19th
BRIGHTONThe cast of ‘Spamalot’16th
23rd
27th
10thCHELMSFORDOlly Murs
CAMBRIDGESheila Ferguson(from The Three Degrees)
WOLVERHAMPTONLinda Lusardi and Fireman Sam
28th
19th
20th
LIVERPOOLRebecca Ferguson 9th
9th
3rd
DURHAMZoe Henry, Mark Charnockand Jeff Hiordley(from Emmerdale)
5th
19th
19th
19th
19th
17th
21st
20th
SingerActorComedianKids’ TVBritain’s Got TalentX FactorThe Only Way Is Essex
FAMOUS OBSCURE
Light entertainers In Wolverhampton, nothing says Christmas quite like Fireman Sam
and Linda Lusardi flicking a switch. But which celebrities turned on the festive lights in Britain’s other cities?
Illustration: Christian Tate
NovLEEDSRonan ParkeMatt CardleTinchy StryderPRESTON
BeverleyKnight
BLACKPOOLTinchy Stryder
CUMBERNAULDLloyd Daniels
FALKIRKPaije Richardson
BRISTOLOlly Murs
SLOUGHEthan Boroian
CROYDONLarry Lamb
LONDONWESTFIELD SHOPPING CENTRESJustin Bieber
LONDONHAMPSTEAD
Michael McIntyre
LUTONJames ‘Arg’ Argent
PAISLEYStacey Solomon
BELFASTJustin Fletcher
(aka Mr Tumble)
OMAGHJanet Devlin
NEWCASTLEJoe McElderry
17th
7th19th
BRIGHTONThe cast of ‘Spamalot’16th
23rd
27th
10thCHELMSFORDOlly Murs
CAMBRIDGESheila Ferguson(from The Three Degrees)
WOLVERHAMPTONLinda Lusardi and Fireman Sam
28th
19th
20th
LIVERPOOLRebecca Ferguson 9th
9th
3rd
DURHAMZoe Henry, Mark Charnockand Jeff Hiordley(from Emmerdale)
5th
19th
19th
19th
19th
17th
21st
20th
SingerActorComedianKids’ TVBritain’s Got TalentX FactorThe Only Way Is Essex
FAMOUS OBSCURE
NovSat 12th
The Arab League votes to impose sanctions on Syria and suspend it from its meetings.
An Islamist militant kills seven and blows himself up in the southern Kazakh city of Taraz. There had previously been terror attacks in Kazakhstan in May and October.
Seventeen Revolutionary Guards, including a major figure in Iran’s missile programme, are killed in a blast at a missile base at Bid Ganeh, Iran. Sources say that Israel is suspected of plotting the explosion, although the official explanation is that it was an accident.
Silvio Berlusconi resigns as prime minister of Italy. j‘Cavaliere attitudes’ m 16th Nov
Juan Manuel Santos, the president of Colombia, calls for governments around the world to debate the possibility of legalising some drugs in order to help combat drug trafficking and its violent consequences.
Sun 13th
“This is really, really difficult” Talking on the BBC’s ‘Andrew Marr Show’, Tony Blair evaluates the precarious situation in the Eurozone, saying that current European leaders are “behind the curve” in tackling the problems and that: “The myth that the Italian and German economies were the same – that ten-year myth has now evaporated.”
Mon14th
The Bangkok Post reports that the death toll from recent flooding in Thailand has reached 562 people.
Tue 15th
New York police raid the Occupy Wall Street site in Zuccotti Park, remove tents and property, and arrest around 200 people.
A lone protester on the UC Davis quad is clutching a placard: “Ask me about banning plastic bags!” As students cycle past him with barely a glance – cars are rare sights on campus – you
sense he’s preaching to the converted. At the edge of the quad, a female student’s sign reads “Give Blood – Free Ice Cream!”: a few steps away, the young man at the Davis College Republicans desk seems thoroughly bored of his own company.
It’s the morning of Tuesday 17th January and UC Davis almost looks like a perfectly wholesome Californian campus. Almost. The centre of the quad is home to a small campsite, and at noon today, 200 Occupy UC Davis protesters will gather around the nine tents and march through campus, ending up at an unused building which they plan to take over. The campsite marks the spot where two months ago Lt John Pike pepper-sprayed a row of non-violent student protesters sitting cross-legged on the ground.
The photos of the incident spread quickly and widely. Davis – population around 65,000 – had never seen anything like it. Everybody in this semi-rural spot, where town and gown are almost inseparable, felt the impact.
Davis was little more than farmland when the University of California arrived with its chequebook in 1908. Today it’s one of the most educated cities in America (almost 70 per cent of residents have graduate degrees) and is famed for its liberal politics. Before November 2011, the town was best known for its extensive network of cycle paths and its annual Whole Earth Festival, a huge celebration of sustainable living. Now, however, if the residents of this proud, pretty place type “Davis California” into Google, predictive search will suggest they’re looking for “Davis California pepper spray”.
Images of a police officer pepper-spraying students at an Occupy protest made the University of California
in Davis infamous overnight. Two months after the incident,Matthew Lee finds a campus still in a state of shock.
Occupational hazards
Fri 18th
Way
ne T
ilcoc
k/A
P/P
ress
Ass
ocia
tion
Imag
es
DecThu 1st It is reported that a 19-year-old Afghan woman jailed for 12 years for adultery after she was raped by a relative is set to be freed – but only after she agrees to marry the man who attacked her.
UK trade union Unison says Jeremy Clarkson should be sacked for comments made on ‘The One Show’.
Speaking about striking workers, Clarkson said “I would take them outside and execute them in front of their families.” He insisted it was taken out of context and that it was clearly a joke.
Fri 2nd
The findings of the inquiry into Stafford Hospital reveal a number of NHS failings at the facility where as many as 1,200 patients died in four years after suffering neglect. There are cases of unqualified receptionists assess-ing emergency treatment, sick people being denied food and drink, and patients falling over and dying because there were no staff on hand to attend to them.
“I’m a proud Effin woman. And I always will be an Effin woman”Anne Marie Kennedy begins a campaign to get Facebook to recognise the village of Effin in County Limerick after it was was branded “offensive” and blocked from the site.
Sat 3rd
Herman Cain announces that he will withdraw from the race for Republican nomination in the United States presidential election following a series of sexual harassment allegations.
Around 45,000 people are evacuated from the German city of Koblenz after an unexploded WWII bomb is found on the bed of the River Rhine. m 4th Dec
Elmo may look like the lovechild of a bath mat and a genetically modified chrysanthemum. But the three-and-a-half year-old
baby monster exerts the kind of magnetism that has made him into a marketing sensation. In 1996, a doll version of the red, shaggy ‘Sesame Street’ star, “Tickle Me Elmo” – was featured on US comedian Rosie O’Donnell’s talk show: the result was a buying frenzy which made hundreds of millions of dollars for the Sesame Workshop, and led to some dolls being advertised at as much as $2,000. But while you can see the appeal to toddlers, Elmo has a more unlikely fanbase – the world’s leading politicians. For Elmo has been deployed by USAID (the US Agency for International Development) to Pakistan, where his not insignificant mission is to help boost literacy in a country with one of the lowest rates in the world, and promote tolerance at the same time as his home country is dropping bombs in drone attacks on the north west tribal areas.
In the West, the reaction to the sending of ‘Sesame Street’ to Pakistan – where it has been redeveloped and renamed ‘Sim Sim Hamara’ – has been divided. While liberal newspapers and broadcasters have given it an amused thumbs up, in December the never less than outspoken Republican Senator Tom Coburn attacked it in his annual report ‘Wastebook’ as an unnecessary waste of federal money
As Sesame Street launches in Pakistan, Rachel Halliburton looks at the politics behind the fluffy, all-singing shock troops of American soft power. Illustration: Christian Tate
Send in the Cookie Monster!
at $10 million for the first leg of the project (overall the proposed spending is $20 million over four years). Describing the new characters for the show Coburn singled out “a conceited well-dwelling crocodile named Haseen O Jameel, a spirited adult woman, Baaji, who enjoys family time and tradition, and Baily, a hard-working donkey who longs to be a pop star.” Jared Thomas, a taxpayer advocate and prominent member of the right wing Christian Coalition, said: “When you’re explaining to somebody that our taxes have gone up this year so that we can have a Pakistani version of Oscar the Grouch, that just doesn’t pass the smell test.”
But Oscar didn’t get the call-up. While Senator Coburn has correctly identified some characters, ‘Sim Sim Hamara’s most significant cast member is actually Rani, a six-year-old, cricket-mad female puppet who is endlessly curious – providing an important role model in a country where at 40 per cent (according to most recent UN figures), female literacy is significantly lower than the 69 per cent rate among men.
There is also Munna, a five-year-old boy who lives for maths and playing the tabla-drum. What makes SSH distinctively ‘Sesame Street’ is its transformation of the slightly wholemeal principles of tolerance and egalitarianism (along with literacy and numeracy) into a brightly-coloured, endorphin-raising, fast-food kind of fun.M
att C
ross
ick/
PA W
ire/P
ress
Ass
ocia
tion
Imag
es
‘Sim Sim Hamara’ is a classic example of soft power, defined by Professor Joseph Nye, who coined the phrase in his seminal ‘Bound to Lead’ in 1990, and described it as “the ability to get what you want through attraction rather than through coercion”. It’s culture and persuasion over guns and sanctions, or – in this case – dolls over drones. Nye is cautiously optimistic about the introduction of Elmo and co to Pakistan. “I think programmes like ‘Sesame Street’ can help, particularly with younger kids who still have open minds,” he says. But given that the soft power equation relies on the perceived legitimacy of foreign policies, how can anything American be well received in the context of the drone strikes? “Drone strikes may increase power but at the cost of reducing soft power,” Nye concedes. “On the other hand the differences between the countries are greater than just drone strikes.”
The sheer extent of the empathy chasm between the US and Pakistan is illustrated in the most recent research by America’s Pew Research Center. “Negative attitudes to the US are pervasive in Pakistan,” says Richard Wike, associate director of the Pew Global Attitudes Project. “Our last survey there, conducted in May 2011, found that only 12 per cent of Pakistanis had a favourable
opinion of the US. Only eight per cent of Pakistanis expressed confidence in President Obama to do the right thing in world affairs, which is about the same rating that President Bush received in 2008.”
“There are a number of factors that drive anti-American sentiments in Pakistan. The war next door in Afghanistan is unpopular, as are American drone strikes in Pakistan. American anti-terrorism efforts are widely opposed, and most think the US does not consider Pakistan’s interest when it is making foreign policy. And most believe the US favours India over Pakistan.”
“Elmo’s mission is to
help boost literacy and promote
tolerance while his home country is dropping bombs
in drone attacks”
DecWed 7th
The former Israeli president Moshe Katsav arrives at a prison outside Tel Aviv to start a seven-year term for the rape of a female employee.
Michele Zagaria, 53, is arrested in a secret bunker in the Italian town of Casapesenna. Zagaria is the head of a powerful group in the Camorra crime syndicate, which investigators estimated to be worth €20 billion (£16.7 billion) in 2008.
A copy of Action Comics No 1, which features the debut appearance of Superman, sells for a record $2.16
million during an online auction.
Thu 8th
A police officer is shot dead on the campus of Virginia Tech, the university where 32 people were killed in a mass shooting in 2007. After killing the police offiicer, the gunman, Ross Truett Ashley, turned the weapon on himself.
Fri 9th “It was a tough decision but the right one”David Cameron refuses to sign up to an EU-wide treaty change to tackle the eurozone crisis, saying it is not in the UK’s interests.
Sat 10th
Around 50,000 people march in Moscow to protest against alleged election fraud by Vladimir Putin and his United Russia party.
Sim Sim Hamara debuts on Pakistani television. j‘Send in the Cookie Monster!’
Britain’s most successful Olympic sailor, Ben Ainslie, is disqualified from the world championships in Perth after he boards a TV boat to protest that it had impeded him during one of the races.
BIBLE
USS GENERAL SHERMAN
BIBLE BIBLE
GODEY’SLADY’S BOOK
USS GENERAL SHERMAN
BIBLE
KOREA
KOREA
ONOFFThe butterfly effect
How Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha helped lead to threats of war on the thirty-eighth
parallel... Words: Rob Orchard Illustration: Christian Tate
Christmas 1841 iPrince Albert, the consort of Queen Victoria, introduces a
tradition from his native Germany and installs a Christmas tree at Windsor Castle.
1848 mA woodcut picture of the Royal Family posing in front of their Christmas tree appears in the Illustrated London News, the world’s first illustrated newspaper. As of Christmas 1849, upper class British families start to emulate the Royal Family by putting up their own trees.
f1850American newspaper Godey’s Lady’s Book reprints the illustration, modified slightly by removing Albert’s moustache and Victoria’s tiara, in order to make the scene appear more American. The image circulates across the country, helping to popularise Christmas trees in the 31 states.
g 1866Robert Jermain Thomas, a Welsh
Protestant missionary, arrives in Korea on the USS General Sherman. He travels around the country,
distributing Bibles, a crime punishable by decapitation.
Sun 11th
BIBLE
USS GENERAL SHERMAN
BIBLE BIBLE
GODEY’SLADY’S BOOK
USS GENERAL SHERMAN
BIBLE
KOREA
KOREA
ONOFF
1882 hKorea and the US conclude a Treaty of Amity and Trade, which includes provisions for the protection of missionaries.
2nd Sep 1866 iThe General Sherman is attacked and destroyed by the Korean army near Pyongyang. Thomas grabs his Bibles, jumps over the side of the boat and wades to the shore where he hands them to the screaming crowd while shouting “Jesus, Jesus”. He is killed. As Christianity starts to grow in Korea, many of the early members of the church use Bibles received from Thomas, who is seen as a martyr.
Christmas 2010The South Korean government
allows a Christian group to turn on thousands of lights on
a 30-metre-high Christmas tree-shaped iron structure
topped by a giant cross on a hill near the Demilitarised Zone,
where it is visible from the major North Korean city
of Kaesong.
f
i 11th Dec 2011North Korean state-run website Uriminzokkiri
threatens retaliation if the Christmas tree structure (now joined by two others) is lit on 23rd
December as planned. Christmas celebrations are forbidden north of the ‘bamboo curtain’ and the
government accuses the South of “psychological warfare through the gambit of lighting the towers.” The North threatens “unintended consequences” and a “sea of fire” if its neighbours go ahead with
their illuminations.
19th Dec 2011 hIt is announced that Kim Jong-Il, the Dear Leader of North Korea, has died. As a gesture of conciliation during the mourning period, South Korean Unification Minister Yu Woo-Ik bans the lighting of theChristmas tree towers.
1882 fEdward H Johnson, president
of the Edison Electric Illuminating Company
of New York, creates the first Christmas tree lights and places them on a rotating tree, moved by an Edison dynamo. The illuminated tree is reported across the globe.
1889 hUS President Benjamin Harrison unveils
the first Christmas tree in the White House. The tradition becomes
adopted across the States.
f1905-1945Under the Japanese
occupation of Korea, many Christians are executed for
refusing to take part in emperor-worship, leading to a strong
identification between Christianity and Korean nationalism. After the
Korean War and the division of the country, South Korea develops the
largest Christian population by percentage in Asia.
1884The first US missionaries start to land in Korea: hundreds of them will arrive in the following 20 years.
m
DecSun 11th
North Korea warns South Korea will face repercussions should it illuminate a Christmas tree near its border. j ‘The Butterfly Effect’
“Rick, I’ll tell you what, 10,000 bucks?”Mitt Romney attempts to make a bet about health care with rival Republican candidate, Texas governor Rick Perry. The size of the wager leads to multimillion-aire Romney being accused of being out of touch with working-class American people.
Mon12th
Canada announces it is to become the first country to formally withdraw from the Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change, claiming the country would face large penalties due to treaty violations if it remained a signatory.
“We’ve asked for it back. We’ll see how the Iranians respond” President Barack Obama reveals he has asked Tehran to return a US drone aircraft that Iran claims it recently brought down in their territory. m 13th Dec
Tue 13th
“No one returns the symbol of aggression to the party that sought secret and vital intelligence”General Hossein Salami, deputy head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, refuses to return a US drone which was brought down in Iranian territory.
Welder Nordine Amrani, 33, opens fire in the Belgian city of Liege, killing at least four people and wounding more than 120.
Video game ‘Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3’ becomes the fastest-selling entertainment product of all time, with $1 billion in sales in 16 days.
Breaking badAs two press agencies are caught out on a Mandela deathwatch, Alan Rutter looks into the murky world
of pre-emptive news reporting. Illustrations: Vanessa Arnaud
When the South African Times reported that Reuters and Associated Press (AP) had set up
CCTV trained on the house of Nelson Mandela, anticipating the revered man’s death, there was outrage across the nation. Chieftainess Nokwanele Balizulu, who lives opposite Mandela’s house in Qunu, Eastern Cape province, had given permission for the cameras to be installed – but nevertheless the actions (which prompted a police investigation) were an afront to South African attitudes to death, and raised many questions about the ethics of such a vulture-like media deathwatch.
The news agencies were unapolo-getic. “They are not surveillance cameras,” said AP spokesperson Paul Colford. “Along with other media, the AP has preparedness around Mr Mandela’s eventual passing. The AP cameras were not switched on and would only be used in the event of a major news story involving the former president. We had similar prepar-edness outside the Vatican ahead of Pope John Paul II’s passing.” One could argue that since Mandela’s eventual death is inevitable, the agencies have a responsibility to be ready to cover what will be a major news event.
And the pressure to be first in the reporting of news is greater than ever. News agencies – referred to as ‘the wires’ by other news organisations that subscribe to their feeds and often barely rework their stories for publication or broadcast – rely on their ability to break stories to survive, and with vast networks of local journalists and stringers across the globe, they have dominated in their field for more than a century (AP was formed as a news
cooperative in 1846). But the digital age has brought with it new competition, from start-up news businesses to the personal reporting tools like Twitter that can turn anybody into a reporter.
The death of Michael Jackson in June 2009 wasn’t broken by one of the big news agencies or organisations, but by celebrity gossip site TMZ.com (launched in December 2005 by Time Warner). Jackson died at 2.26pm Los Angeles time – TMZ posted the news at 2.44pm. Little over an hour after Amy Winehouse had died, she trended on Twitter to the extent that she was the subject of nearly 10 per cent of all tweets worldwide – 20 million people talking about her, before a single news organisation had managed to publish or broadcast a ‘breaking news’ snippet.
In the face of this competition, it’s inevitable that the old-school agencies would want to prepare as much as possible for predictable events – leveraging their ability to provide depth of information, rather than just competing on speed. And since taxes are rarely juicy news, death (particularly of the elderly or unwell) is the other inevitability that can be pre-emptively researched. It’s accepted that obituaries are prepared in advance, as it’s unusual for anybody to do something in their last few days that renders the facts of their life up to that point redundant. Nevertheless, it can be embarrassing if this preparation is published early – as in 2003, when CNN inadvertedly posted to its website draft obituaries for seven major world figures (including Mandela, Fidel Castro, Ronald Reagan, Bob Hope and – rather unfairly, since he was only 62 and the serving vice president – Dick Cheney).
15thThu
Giant Buddha ofWat TraimitBangkokArtist unknown
£179,410,000(5.5 TONNES OF GOLD)CONSTRUCTION COST: UNKNOWN
£1,416,150(9441 TONNES OF WROUGHT IRON)CONSTRUCTION COST: £260,000*
Eiffel TowerParisGustave Eiffel
£734,760(204.1 TONNES OF COPPER)CONSTRUCTION COST: £110,000*
Statue of LibertyNew YorkFrédéric Bartholdi
£317,500(317.5 TONNES OF STAINLESS STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £703,400*
UnisphereNew YorkGilmore D. Claarkrke
£210,000(1,400 TONNES OF STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £19,100,000
The OrbitLondonAnish Kapoor
£110,000(110 TONNES OF STAINLESS STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £14,500,000
£30,000(200 TONNES OF CORTEN STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £800,000
Cloud GateChicagoAnish Kapoor
Angel of theNorthGatesheadAntony Gormley
Marx-EngelsForumMonumentBerlinLudwig Engelhardt
CatBarcelonaFernando Botero
£2,880(0.9 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £6,000,000
£6,400(2 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £1,000,000
£16,000(5 TONNES OF BRONZE)VALUE: UNKNOWN
£1,050(7 TONNES OF CAST IRON)ESTIMATED VALUE: £675,000
£99.20(31KG OF BRONZE)LAST SOLD FOR: £13,300,000
£28.16(8.8KG OF BRONZE)SIMILAR SOLD FOR: £4,800,000
Bust of DiegoLondonAlberto Giacometti
The ThinkerParisAuguste Rodin
Topos VBarcelonaEduardo Chillida
Little DancerAged FourteenLondon, Paris,Washington DCEdgar Degas
£750(0.25 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £500,000
Two Forms(Divided Circle)LondonBarbara Hepworth
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Tue 20th
DecSun 25th The Islamist group Boko Haram kills at least 39 people and injures many more in a series of attacks on churches in Nigeria during Christmas prayers.
The South Pole records its warmest ever day with a top temperature of -12.3°C.
The group that hacked into Stratfor claims to have made payments of over half a million dolllars to charities including Save the Children using the credit card details of Stratfor’s clients. It says it will stop its actions if Bradley Manning, the serviceman detained over his alleged role in leaking government files to Wikileaks, is given a holiday feast “at a fancy restaurant of his choosing”.
Mon26th
The Boxing Day sales start. Despite a tube strike in London, Selfridges claims its busiest ever single hour of trade, taking more than £1.3 million.
On London’s Oxford Street, 18-year-old Seydou Diarrassouba dies after an allegedly gang-related knife attack.
Brazil overtakes the UK to become the world’s sixth largest economy.
Lancaster University student Anuj Bidve, 23, dies in Salford after being shot in the head in the early hours of the morning. He was walking in the direction of Manchester city centre with nine fellow students when he was attacked.
William Burton, a Briton jailed in the Philippines in 1992 for attempting to smuggle six kilos of cannabis out of Manila, is pardoned from a prison sentence which was due to run until 2032. Burton, who was born with thalidomide-related physical problems, was pardoned on grounds of his diminishing health after a ‘Free Billy Burton’ campaign in the UK.
Giant Buddha ofWat TraimitBangkokArtist unknown
£179,410,000(5.5 TONNES OF GOLD)CONSTRUCTION COST: UNKNOWN
£1,416,150(9441 TONNES OF WROUGHT IRON)CONSTRUCTION COST: £260,000*
Eiffel TowerParisGustave Eiffel
£734,760(204.1 TONNES OF COPPER)CONSTRUCTION COST: £110,000*
Statue of LibertyNew YorkFrédéric Bartholdi
£317,500(317.5 TONNES OF STAINLESS STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £703,400*
UnisphereNew YorkGilmore D. Claarkrke
£210,000(1,400 TONNES OF STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £19,100,000
The OrbitLondonAnish Kapoor
£110,000(110 TONNES OF STAINLESS STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £14,500,000
£30,000(200 TONNES OF CORTEN STEEL)CONSTRUCTION COST: £800,000
Cloud GateChicagoAnish Kapoor
Angel of theNorthGatesheadAntony Gormley
Marx-EngelsForumMonumentBerlinLudwig Engelhardt
CatBarcelonaFernando Botero
£2,880(0.9 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £6,000,000
£6,400(2 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £1,000,000
£16,000(5 TONNES OF BRONZE)VALUE: UNKNOWN
£1,050(7 TONNES OF CAST IRON)ESTIMATED VALUE: £675,000
£99.20(31KG OF BRONZE)LAST SOLD FOR: £13,300,000
£28.16(8.8KG OF BRONZE)SIMILAR SOLD FOR: £4,800,000
Bust of DiegoLondonAlberto Giacometti
The ThinkerParisAuguste Rodin
Topos VBarcelonaEduardo Chillida
Little DancerAged FourteenLondon, Paris,Washington DCEdgar Degas
£750(0.25 TONNES OF BRONZE)ESTIMATED VALUE: £500,000
Two Forms(Divided Circle)LondonBarbara Hepworth
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