It seems that working for media in Dubai can generate instant class status. An anonymous tip claims that the editor of an ITP magazine has requested that all photographers call her Ma'am. Guess which one?
20 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Got to be that blonde one in charge of Harpers Bazaar...
Jeez. Just for once how about picking a topic that doesn't involve ITP. I used to work there and even I'm bored of hearing this crap. A new paper's launching in Abu Dhabi, with serious staff and serious funding and there's hardly been a word about it. You'd think that would be worth a topic. But no, it's back to an anonymous, and no doubt untrue, piece of gossip about a nobody on an unread consumer mag.
I too am more interested in the new paper. Any jaded journos out there?
Newland seeks 'jaded' journos for Arab paper launch 24 August 2007
By Patrick Smith
Former Daily Telegraph editor Martin Newland is set to launch a new national newspaper in the United Arab Emirates, creating jobs for 200 journalists from around the world.
Newland, who left the Telegraph in 2005 after two years as editor, is currently working on the design and title of the paper and planning the newsroom, based in the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi. He has experience of working on new launches, having played a major role in setting up Canada's National Post in 1998.
Newland said: "You might expect to do this once in a lifetime on a fully national newspaper, but the chance to do it twice was too good to turn down.
There's nothing more exciting than a launch.
"This area is absolutely exploding with potential – in many ways running too fast with infrastructure having to catch up. The paper is aimed at anyone at the high end, so you're looking at broadsheet quality, people earning over £100,000 who speak English. In this place, that's the Indian middle classes, the Anglosphere ex-pats and Emiratis, who speak it fluently."
The paper currently has no title or a launch date more concrete than "months, not years away", but Newland stressed its future is "assured" by significant investment from the investment wing of the Abu Dhabi government.
Although the paper will be a national for the Emirates, Newland said there would be plans to expand further into the Middle East and abroad. He said the paper's aim was to "put Abu Dhabi at the head of a nation within a region" and that, from the start, copies would be sent to London and Washington.
Although it has only recruited one editorial member of staff so far – a designer – the paper's business plan has allowed for at least 200 more and Newland plans to advertise in the US, Canada, Africa and Britain to get staff.
"You've got to understand that, economically, newspapers here are about where we [British newspapers] were at the height of the dotcom era, where you were beating off advertisers with sticks. We have a lot of newspapers that run at 100 per cent profitability – as soon as you can grow a section, it fills [with advertising].
"For those of us who have become slightly jaded with the Fleet Street scene, where circulation is sinking and everyone's being made redundant, this is like turning the clock back. It's booming."
Former Observer business editor Frank Kane left London last year to launch the Arabian Business Standard, based in Dubai but its launch, scheduled for August last year, was postponed after a request from the UAE cabinet to postpone it until new media laws had come into effect. Kane said the paper, the first English-language business newspaper in the region, was to be "a cross between the Financial Times and the Evening Standard".
The paper is backed by publisher ITP, chaired by Spectator publisher Andrew Neil, which publishes more than 40 English-language titles in the Middle East. No one at ITP was available to comment.
Hey moderators - any of you actually even looking at this site? Can you turn this topic into a thread of its own so we can have a proper debate? Hello? Anyone? Wakey, wakey...
For fuck's sake... 'bint editor'? Nice. For what it's worth, the editors of the ITP womens titles are probably the brighest in the company. A cut above the rest of the cut-n-paste drivel that the company produces.
That's right @ 13.01. The editor of Harpers is so fucking bright that it took her multiple attempts to get her first ed's letter approved by London and it was still a pile of shite.
is it really that bad at itp!? wow. there are a few threads on here ripping it up and i've been interviewing for positions there - though not as a contributor...
Yeah, you know, it's actually fine; no worse than working for any other media firm.
I'd certainly pick it over working for one of the many tinpot publishing houses based here that either don't pay staff on time/direct journos what to write/let the boss's dog piss on their legs as it runs around the office/all of the above.
Wasnt there 2 blondes on Harpers Bazaar? Go on, give us a clue. Names names names. Would love to know who below is about :)
That's right @ 13.01. The editor of Harpers is so fucking bright that it took her multiple attempts to get her first ed's letter approved by London and it was still a pile of shite.
This blog is not associated with the original Dubai Media Observer blog, nor with the author of that blog. It uses the same name due to kind permission of the original DMO author.
20 comments:
Got to be that blonde one in charge of Harpers Bazaar...
my money's on a Viva beaver
Jeez.
Just for once how about picking a topic that doesn't involve ITP.
I used to work there and even I'm bored of hearing this crap.
A new paper's launching in Abu Dhabi, with serious staff and serious funding and there's hardly been a word about it. You'd think that would be worth a topic. But no, it's back to an anonymous, and no doubt untrue, piece of gossip about a nobody on an unread consumer mag.
I too am more interested in the new paper. Any jaded journos out there?
Newland seeks 'jaded' journos for Arab paper launch
24 August 2007
By Patrick Smith
Former Daily Telegraph editor Martin Newland is set to launch a new national newspaper in the United Arab Emirates, creating jobs for 200 journalists from around the world.
Newland, who left the Telegraph in 2005 after two years as editor, is currently working on the design and title of the paper and planning the newsroom, based in the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi. He has experience of working on new launches, having played a major role in setting up Canada's National Post in 1998.
Newland said: "You might expect to do this once in a lifetime on a fully national newspaper, but the chance to do it twice was too good to turn down.
There's nothing more exciting than a launch.
"This area is absolutely exploding with potential – in many ways running too fast with infrastructure having to catch up. The paper is aimed at anyone at the high end, so you're looking at broadsheet quality, people earning over £100,000 who speak English. In this place, that's the Indian middle classes, the Anglosphere ex-pats and Emiratis, who speak it fluently."
The paper currently has no title or a launch date more concrete than "months, not years away", but Newland stressed its future is "assured" by significant investment from the investment wing of the Abu Dhabi government.
Although the paper will be a national for the Emirates, Newland said there would be plans to expand further into the Middle East and abroad. He said the paper's aim was to "put Abu Dhabi at the head of a nation within a region" and that, from the start, copies would be sent to London and Washington.
Although it has only recruited one editorial member of staff so far – a designer – the paper's business plan has allowed for at least 200 more and Newland plans to advertise in the US, Canada, Africa and Britain to get staff.
"You've got to understand that, economically, newspapers here are about where we [British newspapers] were at the height of the dotcom era, where you were beating off advertisers with sticks. We have a lot of newspapers that run at 100 per cent profitability – as soon as you can grow a section, it fills [with advertising].
"For those of us who have become slightly jaded with the Fleet Street scene, where circulation is sinking and everyone's being made redundant, this is like turning the clock back. It's booming."
Former Observer business editor Frank Kane left London last year to launch the Arabian Business Standard, based in Dubai but its launch, scheduled for August last year, was postponed after a request from the UAE cabinet to postpone it until new media laws had come into effect. Kane said the paper, the first English-language business newspaper in the region, was to be "a cross between the Financial Times and the Evening Standard".
The paper is backed by publisher ITP, chaired by Spectator publisher Andrew Neil, which publishes more than 40 English-language titles in the Middle East. No one at ITP was available to comment.
Hey moderators - any of you actually even looking at this site?
Can you turn this topic into a thread of its own so we can have a proper debate?
Hello? Anyone? Wakey, wakey...
Clearly not.
Fuck me, some of us do have weekends you know. We're not all here 24/7.
Here you go
I enjoy the gossip. Bring it on!!!
more ma'am please. gotta know now...
Is it the same bint-editor who banned her staff from wearing heels to work?
Oops, that should read: "Is it the same bint-editor who banned her staff from wearing flat shoes to work?" (More sleep required...)
For fuck's sake... 'bint editor'? Nice. For what it's worth, the editors of the ITP womens titles are probably the brighest in the company. A cut above the rest of the cut-n-paste drivel that the company produces.
That's right @ 13.01. The editor of Harpers is so fucking bright that it took her multiple attempts to get her first ed's letter approved by London and it was still a pile of shite.
Jumped, as far as my sources tell me, for 'personal' reasons. One down, one to go...
is it really that bad at itp!? wow. there are a few threads on here ripping it up and i've been interviewing for positions there - though not as a contributor...
Can anyone tell me what it's like working at ITP?
Is it really that bad?
I was thinking about applying for a position with Arabian Business.
I would be coming over with my family as well - does ITP provide their employees with a decent package? What are the salaries like?
Yeah, you know, it's actually fine; no worse than working for any other media firm.
I'd certainly pick it over working for one of the many tinpot publishing houses based here that either don't pay staff on time/direct journos what to write/let the boss's dog piss on their legs as it runs around the office/all of the above.
Wasnt there 2 blondes on Harpers Bazaar? Go on, give us a clue. Names names names. Would love to know who below is about :)
That's right @ 13.01. The editor of Harpers is so fucking bright that it took her multiple attempts to get her first ed's letter approved by London and it was still a pile of shite.
Commented edited:
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Anonymous said...
Talking of women's mags, has anyone got any goss on [removed]'s sudden departure from Harpers Bazaar? Jumped? Pushed?
09 September, 2007 08:50
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