ChatterBank1 min ago
Should Newspapers That Who Crusade Against Online Pornography And The Danger To Children Do This?
It's not so much the story (even thought it have bugger all newsworthy content), but it's the pixellated image and even more bizarrely...
It prints the name of the porn website, so that any child reading the paper, can go and have a look at the x-rated conted!!!
Is this a typical example of the hypocrisy of the right wing brigade...?
Or a one off mistake made by a newspaper with great integrity?
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/f email/a rticle- 2487827 /Jenn-T isdale- films-s ex-scen es-X-ra ted-por n-star- James-D een-ope n-casti ng-call .html
It prints the name of the porn website, so that any child reading the paper, can go and have a look at the x-rated conted!!!
Is this a typical example of the hypocrisy of the right wing brigade...?
Or a one off mistake made by a newspaper with great integrity?
http://
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by sp1814. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.>>>a newspaper with great integrity
I can't believe that you even considered that as a possibility, Sp1814!
I simply can't see where the 'news' is in the story:
Adult-movie star advertises for women to perform with him. Woman freely chooses to do so, gets well paid for it and proudly tells her story to a well-respected website. Then the Mail nicks the story and claims that it's 'news'. Why?
I can't believe that you even considered that as a possibility, Sp1814!
I simply can't see where the 'news' is in the story:
Adult-movie star advertises for women to perform with him. Woman freely chooses to do so, gets well paid for it and proudly tells her story to a well-respected website. Then the Mail nicks the story and claims that it's 'news'. Why?
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Ha ha..Old_Geezer. My pleasure.
Oh. And just in case anyone subsequently accuses me of being a secret Daily Mail reader, I have toq knowledge the source of the story: The Media Blog. It was they who picked up on the hypocrisy. Not me!
http:// www.the mediabl og.co.u k/the-m edia-bl og/2013 /11/dai ly-mail -promot es-hard core-po rn.html
Oh. And just in case anyone subsequently accuses me of being a secret Daily Mail reader, I have toq knowledge the source of the story: The Media Blog. It was they who picked up on the hypocrisy. Not me!
http://
oh, I see, thanks, naomi. It is undoubtedly a right-wing newspaper, though. And this is I think a genuine conflict in recent right-wing philosopy - between conservatives and libertarians.
One the one hand, a wish not to promote things like porn that are perceived to threaten family life and degrade women. On the other, your right to make money where you can and have the greatest possible personal freedom.
Usually, conservatives espouse either one view or the other; but the Mail is trying to have it both ways here,a dn it looks bad.
One the one hand, a wish not to promote things like porn that are perceived to threaten family life and degrade women. On the other, your right to make money where you can and have the greatest possible personal freedom.
Usually, conservatives espouse either one view or the other; but the Mail is trying to have it both ways here,a dn it looks bad.
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I suspect the growth in titillation has more to do with the growth of its website internationally. It needs to balance its stories about minor UK celebs with more foreign material, especially from the USA, where lots of odd things happen. This one doesn't seem odd enough to me to be worth the space, but presumably some editor decided otherwise.
Nonetheless, including the name of the website seems like a mistake to me. (Surely its readers are bright enough to find it themselves if they want to?)
Nonetheless, including the name of the website seems like a mistake to me. (Surely its readers are bright enough to find it themselves if they want to?)
joke
Absolutely...but a family newspaper - especially one who is campaigning against the ease at which children an access porn online, shouldn't actually be advertising web addresses to simplify the process?
It's like the police fighting drugs, and then printing the names of local cannabis dealers on the information boards in their waiting rooms.
Absolutely...but a family newspaper - especially one who is campaigning against the ease at which children an access porn online, shouldn't actually be advertising web addresses to simplify the process?
It's like the police fighting drugs, and then printing the names of local cannabis dealers on the information boards in their waiting rooms.
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