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While opposed to restoration of the [[death penalty]], he supports suspected terrorists being deported to states where they could be tortured or executed. Littlejohn demanded on 16 August 2002, after [[Holly Wells]] and [[Jessica Chapman]] had gone missing in [[Soham]], a referendum on the death penalty for crimes against children, which he expected to find in favour of hanging.<ref>[[The Sun newspaper]] - 16 August 2002]</ref> {{Fact|date=May 2008}}
While opposed to restoration of the [[death penalty]], he supports suspected terrorists being deported to states where they could be tortured or executed. Littlejohn demanded on 16 August 2002, after [[Holly Wells]] and [[Jessica Chapman]] had gone missing in [[Soham]], a referendum on the death penalty for crimes against children, which he expected to find in favour of hanging.<ref>[[The Sun newspaper]] - 16 August 2002]</ref> {{Fact|date=May 2008}}


===The Michael Winner incident===
On one of [[London Weekend Television]] show ''Richard Littlejohn Live And Uncut'' in July 1994, two [[lesbian]] guests (including the former [[London Borough of Lambeth|Lambeth]] council leader [[Linda Bellos]]) argued in favour of lesbians becoming parents. Littlejohn was critical of the two women, which led to [[Michael Winner]] denouncing Littlejohn as a homophobe, saying "I think the lesbians have come across with considerable dignity and you have come across as an arsehole". [[Nigella Lawson]], also present, described Littlejohn's views as "extreme".


Littlejohn recalled this incident in his 1995 book ''You Couldn't Make It Up'', expressing surprise that his "revolutionary opinion" that children should have a male and a female parent, and that the [[National Health Service|NHS]] should not subsidise [[artificial insemination]] for women "who can't even abide the thought of becoming [[pregnant]] in the natural manner", was condemned so vociferously.


===The Will Self incident===
===The Will Self incident===

Revision as of 17:22, 30 January 2009

Richard Littlejohn
Born
Richard William Littlejohn

(1954-01-18) January 18, 1954 (age 70)
Occupation(s)Journalist, broadcaster and author
Notable credit(s)Daily Mail
The Sun
SpouseWendy Bosworth (1974-present)
Children2 children

Richard William Littlejohn (born 18 January 1954 in Ilford) is a right-wing English author, broadcaster and journalist. His twice-weekly columns in the Daily Mail and The Sun earned him a place in the inaugural 'Newspaper Hall of Fame' as one of the most influential journalists of the past 40 years. He has been named Fleet Street's Columnist of the Year, Irritant of the Year by the BBC's What The Papers Say awards and "The stupid person's Jeremy Clarkson" by The Guardian.[1] He has also written for London's Evening Standard, Punch and The Spectator.

His radio and television programmes have won a Sony award and a Silver Rose of Montreux.

Career

Although primarily a newspaper journalist, Littlejohn has presented numerous radio and TV shows, and has authored or co-authored several books.

Journalism

Littlejohn was born in Ilford in January 1954 and his family moved to Peterborough when he was five. His father was an engineer for British Rail. Littlejohn passed the Eleven-plus but turned down a scholarship at a minor public school on the grounds that they didn't play football. Instead, he attended Deacons Grammar School between 1965 and 1970. He left at 16 to work as a trainee journalist in Peterborough. He worked for local newspapers during the early 1970s. In the mid-1970s, he joined the Birmingham Evening Mail, becoming industrial editor in 1977.

He worked at the London newspaper the Evening Standard from 1979 to 1989, initially as industrial editor, later a feature writer and (in 1988) a columnist. While industrial editor in the early 1980s he was asked to stand as a Labour Party candidate, which he declined.[2] In 1989 he joined The Sun, becoming its most popular columnist. His columns attracted controversy, and he was voted "Irritant of the Year" at the 1993 What The Papers Say Awards.

In 1994, he left The Sun to write for the Daily Mail, contributing columns on news and current affairs (in a similar format to his Sun column), and one on sport. His Mail columns earned him the title "Columnist of the Year" at the 1997 British Press Awards.

In early 1998, Littlejohn became the UK's best-paid columnist when he returned to The Sun to write a twice-weekly column as part of a £800,000-a-year deal which also saw him present a regular TV programme, Littlejohn: Live And Unleashed, on Sky One.

In May 2005, he re-joined the Mail. Mail editor Paul Dacre praised Littlejohn, adding he was "thrilled" that Littlejohn was "returning to his spiritual home". Littlejohn reportedly earns an annual salary of between £700,000 and £800,000, making him the Mail's highest-paid journalist.

In addition to regular columns, Littlejohn has contributed articles to The Spectator and Punch.

One of Littlejohn's Sun columns - a 2004 skit, entitled "Rum, Sodomy and the Lifejacket", in which Lord Nelson is confronted with political correctness, compensation culture and the nanny state - has been published in newspapers, magazines, and websites with Littlejohn's writing credit removed.[3]

Radio

By the end of the 1980s, Littlejohn was known in London for his Evening Standard columns, and was invited to radio programmes as a pundit. From 1991, he worked for the London radio station LBC, standing in for Michael Parkinson on the morning show and Mike Dickin on the afternoon phone-in .

LBC gave Littlejohn his own early afternoon show, Littlejohn's Long Lunch, in August 1992; the programme was a talk show featuring topical discussion, phone-ins, and guests. He later became permanent presenter of the morning show, replacing Parkinson.

Television

After leaving LBC in 1994, Littlejohn was approached by BSkyB managing director (and former Sun editor) Kelvin MacKenzie, and was offered the chance to present a nightly current affairs show on the TV channel Sky News. Called Richard Littlejohn, the show ran for one year and was not a success. Littlejohn expressed his disappointment, claiming that broadcasting regulations would not permit him to present the show in the style of Rush Limbaugh's programmes: "If Sky News could emulate its U.S. sister Fox News... ratings would soon shoot past the Astra satellite. But the regulators won't allow it."

Later in 1994, Trevor Phillips of London Weekend Television hired Littlejohn to host a studio-based talk show entitled Richard Littlejohn Live And Uncut. Phillips produced three series of the programme, which was transmitted in the London area. In 2006 it was named by the BBC's TV listings magazine Radio Times as one of the worst programmes on British television, its presenter called "as amateurish as he is odious". A fault during one LWT broadcast of one episode switched to RTL Television, which was showing softcore porn.[4]

Littlejohn hosted the first series of Channel 4's game show Wanted, a stand-in for Bob Mills).[citation needed] Wanted aired in October 1996 and won a Silver Rose at the Festival Rose d'Or.

During the 1990s and early 2000s, Littlejohn presented shows for Carlton Television, including Sport In Question, Thursday Night Live, Do I Not Like That, Shut Up Shop and Forking Out For The Scots. Additionally, he has appeared on the BBC's Question Time and Have I Got News For You.

As part of a 1997 deal which saw him return to the Sun, Littlejohn hosted a night talk show on Sky One called Littlejohn: Live And Unleashed. It was first broadcast on 21 April 1998.

In early 2003 he returned to Sky News to present Littlejohn, a live talk show initially broadcast twice weekly but later extended to four nights per week. The programme was axed in 8 July 2004. \

On 9 July 2007, Channel 4 showed a documentary entitled The War on Britain's Jews?, presented by Richard Littlejohn.

Books

Littlejohn has authored or co-authored:

  • The Essex Girl Joke Book (as Ray Leigh, with Brent Wood, 1991, Corgi Publishing) - a collection of Essex girl jokes, co-written (with "Brent Wood") under the pseudonym "Ray Leigh".
  • The Book Of Useless Information (with Keith Waterhouse, 2002, John Blake Publishing, ISBN 1-903402-79-4) - co-written with Keith Waterhouse, this "stocking filler" book is a collection of "useless" facts, described on the cover as "all you never needed to know and didn't need to ask."
  • The Ultimate Book Of Useless Information (with Keith Waterhouse, 2004, John Blake Publishing, ISBN 1-84454-060-X) - another volume of "useless" facts.
  • Littlejohn's Britain - Publisher: Hutchinson (3 May 2007) ISBN-10: 0091795680 - Described by the Observer as "Lampooning New Labour with polemic, pastiche, parody, satire and savage social commentary."

Controversy and criticism

LBC radio programme

During his time at LBC, Littlejohn was censored by the Radio Authority for breaching broadcasting rules. This culminated in an reprimand by the Radio Authority for homophobia, due to an edition of his phone-in show in which he suggested the police should have used flamethrowers against gay rights protestors.[5] The subject of the protest was the lowering of the gay age of consent, which Littlejohn described as "allow[ing] schoolboys to be buggered at sixteen".[citation needed] Littlejohn was judged by the Radio Authority to have breached guidelines on homophobia and incitement to violence. Littlejohn claims gay people on the programme found his comments about massacring gay people with flamethrowers "hilarious".

On another LBC phone-in he was censured by the Radio Authority for describing the British Royal Family as a "bunch of tax-evading adulterers".[6] Unlike many other conservative commentators, Littlejohn favours abolition of the Monarchy.[7]

While opposed to restoration of the death penalty, he supports suspected terrorists being deported to states where they could be tortured or executed. Littlejohn demanded on 16 August 2002, after Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman had gone missing in Soham, a referendum on the death penalty for crimes against children, which he expected to find in favour of hanging.[8] [citation needed]


The Will Self incident

On a June 2001 edition of Nicky Campbell's show on BBC Radio Five Live, a discussion took place between Littlejohn and Will Self. Both were on the show to promote their novels (Littlejohn's To Hell in a Handcart and Self's How The Dead Live). Campbell cited David Aaronovitch's description of Littlejohn's novel as a "400-page recruiting pamphlet for the BNP". Littlejohn responded (referring to Aaronovitch): "What else do you expect from an overgrown student union leader who used to be a member of the Communist Party?". He later boasted that he would include the quote on the cover of the book when it was reprinted. However, due to poor sales of the original publication, this reprinting has not taken place.

Self agreed with Aaronovitch's comments, said that he had read half of Littlejohn's book, which he described as "a kind of Tom Sharpe for the far right". Littlejohn said that he should "read the book in its totality", to which Self retorted "Why?... Does it turn into Tolstoy at page 205?". Littlejohn's response was: "No it doesn't turn into Tolstoy. I don't set out to be Tolstoy. It is a much more complex book than that".[9]

Attitude to homosexuality

The Diary column of The Guardian newspaper annually documents the results of a "Littlejohn audit" [10] — a count of the number of references Littlejohn makes to homosexuality in his columns.

In the past year's Sun columns, Richard has referred 42 times to gays, 16 times to lesbians, 15 to homosexuals, eight to bisexuals, twice to 'homophobia' and six to being 'homophobic' (note his scornful inverted commas), five times to cottaging, four to 'gay sex in public toilets', three to poofs, twice to lesbianism, and once each to buggery, dykery, and poovery. This amounts to 104 references in 90-odd columns — an impressive increase on his 2003 total of 82 mentions. There is, alas, no space for us to revisit the scientific study which found obsessive homophobes more responsive to gay porn. But Richard, we're begging you: talk to someone.

— Marina Hyde, The Guardian [10]

Littlejohn has claimed he is opposed to discrimination against homosexuals. In his Daily Mail column on 10 October 2007, he said, in reference to British society in the 1970s: "Though homosexuality wasn't exactly my idea of a night out, I thought it outrageous that gays were subjected to discrimination in areas such as employment, housing and pensions."[11] Ben Summerskill in the Guardian has suggested Littlejohn talks so much about the subject because he is a repressed homosexual.[12]

Criticisms of murdered prostitutes

On 19 December 2006, after the Ipswich murders of five women, Littlejohn described the victims as "disgusting, drug-addled street whores" and their deaths as "no great loss". He added that for prostitutes, being murdered is "an occupational hazard" stemming from their "free choice". He described the feminist debate about how to rescue women from the murderer as "hilarious."[13]

Personal life

Littlejohn is a fan of football, and is a supporter of Tottenham Hotspur football club. He starred in his own football video, We Woz Robbed.[14] In 1974 he married Wendy Bosworth in Peterborough. They have two children, Georgina and William.

References

  1. ^ John Crace "Littlejohn's Britain by Richard Littlejohn" The Guardian 15 May 2007, retrieved 23 October 2007
  2. ^ David Rowan: The Times: Interview - Richard Littlejohn Sky/The Sun
  3. ^ Is Littlejohn's Column Turning Into A Saga?, Press Gazette, 03 June 2005
  4. ^ LNN 10 Year Awards YouTube
  5. ^ Why I'll never give up the day job British Journalism Review, Vol. 13, No. 3, 2002, pages 65-70, "During one of the interminable age-of-consent debates, a gang of militant homosexuals kicked lumps out of a young police officer outside the Commons. I happened to remark on air that the police should have turned the flame throwers on them"
  6. ^ Why I'll never give up the day job British Journalism Review, Vol. 13, No. 3, 2002, pages 65-70, "Another censure arrived when I described the royals as 'a bunch of tax-evading adulterers'. Who, with hindsight, would argue with that?"
  7. ^ Richard Littlejohn's exclusive webchat Mail Online
  8. ^ The Sun newspaper - 16 August 2002]
  9. ^ Self v Littlejohn BBC. 15 June, 2001
  10. ^ a b Hyde, Marina (2004-11-10). "Diary". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-23. A nagging feeling that, to some, anything to do with homosexuality remains fascinatingly transgressive forces us to conduct the annual Littlejohn audit.
  11. ^ "Richard Littlejohn". Daily Mail. 2007-10-04. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
  12. ^ http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/politicsphilosophyandsociety/0,,2099373,00.html
  13. ^ Littlejohn: Spare us the 'People's Prostitute' routine... Daily Mail
  14. ^ http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00004TXC8

External links

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