Showing posts with label Phone Hacking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phone Hacking. Show all posts

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Hugh Grant: Love child revelations reveal a man who needs to grow up

THE VANCOUVER SUN
BY WILLIAM LANGLEY, LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH

hugh grant

Ten long years have passed since Hugh Grant announced his retirement from the movie business.

“This is the last film I will ever do,” he promised the fans at the London premiere of Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason. “I’ve completely lost interest. I was never a very committed actor. Now I can just stop.”

Like a lot of what 53-year-old Grant says, this turned out to be something less than the gospel truth, and his latest effort, The Reluctant Professor, yet another romantic comedy, is due to reach our screens shortly.

Admittedly, things have changed in the old boy’s life, and with three “love children” to support, he perhaps needs to keep the bumbling, cod-roue screen shtick going for a little longer.Grant’s off-set romances are clearly something else. Two years ago, it emerged that he had sired a daughter, Tabitha, whom he chivalrously characterized as the product of a “fleeting affair” with little-known Chinese actress Tinglan Hong. Soon the pair were fleeting again, and in February last year, Grant announced that they had produced a son, Felix Chang.

But before the second baby came along, the actor had switched his attentions to thirtysomething Swedish TV producer, Anna Eberstein, who, it was revealed last week, bore him a son in September 2012.


Both women and their children now live in expensive West London properties, although Grant, who apparently picks up the bills, doesn’t live with either of them. It is possible that he doesn’t want to show favouritism, but equally likely, given his lengthy record of embroilment-avoidance, that he prefers doing his daddying from a distance.

This seems puzzling. Born into a close, secure family, Grant has frequently spoken of his longing to have children.

“Much as I adore myself”, he once told Vogue magazine, “I’m quite keen to have someone else to care about”.

Ruminative by nature, much of his ruminating has been about his inability to find love or permanence, with the result that his life — now in deep middle age — is “boring to the point of embarrassment”.

Or the point of self-parody. Yet, however gladly he sends himself up, it is hard to escape the suspicion that Britain’s most bankable actor is an authentically troubled soul.

“He is like a complete cynic, self-tortured and dark,” says Drew Barrymore, who starred with him in Music and Lyrics, yet another romcom. “You’d go into his trailer and he’d be sitting there on the couch, chopping salad alone, an angry Englishman.”

In December 2012, Grant was castigated by the US talk show host Jon Stewart, who described him as “a big pain in the ass” and his “least favourite guest of all time”.

He doesn’t take issue with these judgments, yet there’s no doubt of his high intelligence or his ability to charm and entertain in the broader sense. As frontman for Hacked Off, the group lobbying for stricter press controls, he has shown a politician’s flair and an undeniable measure of personal courage.

What should be an irresistible package unravels with the rackety nature of his personal life and the clod-footedness with which he conducts himself. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to this Oxford-educated dreamboat that it might one day be painful for his daughter to know that he saw her as the by-product of a fling, or for Felix to learn that, by the time he was born, his father had impregnated someone else.

It isn’t that Grant is uncaring — he has made generous provision for these children and their mothers — but that his behaviour suggests an inbuilt deficiency of something he has long aspired to: class.


As a young man, Hugh John Mungo Grant was keenly aware that there was a richer, more refined world waiting to be discovered. A New College contemporary recalls him dressing in a tweed jacket to hold traditional tea parties where egg-and-cress and cucumber sandwiches and Earl Grey tea were served on college crockery. “Here were all the OEs [Old Etonians] pretending that they hadn’t been to Eton, because, of course, it wasn’t quite the slightest bit cool. And here was Hugh, acting as though he had been there. It was all pretty confusing.”


READ MORE HERE: http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Hugh+Grant+Love+child+revelations+reveal+needs+grow/9468336/story.html

Monday, January 27, 2014

Jude Law says in court he didn't know family member sold his stories to NOTW

INDEPENDENT
JAMES CUSICK
Monday 27 January 2014



One of Britain’s leading actors has said he was unaware that the News of the World had paid a member of his family for inside information on his private life.

Jude Law told the hacking trial at the Old Bailey that the first time he had learned that a family member had allegedly sold information to the now-closed News International tabloid was “today”.



The multiple academy award-nominated actor, famous for his roles in The Talented Mr Ripley and recently alongside Robert Downey Jnr in the highly successful Sherlock Holmes films, gave evidence to the court on the period of time when he discovered his former girlfriend and fellow actor, Sienna Miller, was having an affair with the James Bond star, Daniel Craig.

Prior to being questioned about the Miller-Craig affair, Mr Law told the court that when police investigating hacking inside the NOTW had first contacted him, he was “shocked” to find how much information the paper’s specialist private investigator, Glen Mulcaire, had gathered about him.

Mr Mulcaire had pleaded guilty to hacking-related charges earlier in the trial’s progress.

READ MORE HERE:  http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/jude-law-tells-phonehacking-trial-he-didnt-know-family-member-sold-his-stories-9088231.html

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Hugh Grant gets an apology from Murdoch Duchess of York and Christopher Eccleston also settle hacking cases in High Court JAMES CUSICK (INDEPENDENT)



The Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson, actors Hugh Grant and Christopher Eccleston, and the Catholic parish priest of singer Charlotte Church, Father Richard Reardon, were among 17 phone-hacking victims offered  public apologies in the High Court  today by News International.

The “sincere” contrition and undisclosed “substantial” damages for a total of 144 cases, means that 26 victims of the News of the World’s illegal phone-hacking activities, have yet to settle with Rupert Murdoch’s UK newspaper division in the latest wave of claims.

Among the claimants who opted for a court-room apology were singer James Blunt, Uri Geller, Geoffrey Robinson, the former Labour minister, and Colin Stagg, the man wrongly accused of the murder of Rachel Nickell. Mr Stagg, one of the few to have his damages disclosed, was awarded £15,500.

Those who settled, but opted to keep the terms of the arrangement private, included Cherie Blair QC, the wife of the former prime minister, Ukip leader Nigel Farage, TV presenters Jamie Theakston and Chris Tarrant, Ted Beckham, the father of the former England football captain, former Tory minister Lord Blencathra, actor James Nesbitt, footballer Wayne Rooney, and BBC reporter Tom Mangold.

READ MORE:  http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/hugh-grant-gets-an-apology-from-murdoch-8486935.html

Friday, November 30, 2012

Hugh Grant U.K. TV Documentary Includes Piers Morgan Phone Hacking Comments (Video) 8:00 AM PST 11/28/2012 by George Szalai (HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)

Previously unseen footage of the CNN host and then-tabloid editor saying "a spate of stories" came out "because of mobile phones" could reignite an old debate.



LONDON - A Hugh Grant TV documentary set to air in the U.K. Wednesday night includes previously unseen 2003 footage of CNN host Piers Morgan telling British singer Charlotte Church about news stories that emerged thanks to phone hacking.

Channel 4, which will air Hugh Grant: Taking on the Tabloids at 8 p.m. London time, posted a video clip of the footage on YouTube Wednesday. It could reignite the debate about former Daily Mirror editor Morgan and his knowledge about hacking.

Channel 4 said Church's chat with Morgan was filmed when singer was 17 and preparing to address a crowd about a potential privacy law to protect under-18-year-olds.

During the Leveson Inquiry into media ethics and standards in the U.K., Morgan denied any involvement in hacking or having any reason to believe that it may have been used during his time at the Daily Mirror. As Channel 4 put it: "Piers Morgan has always said that he knew phone hacking existed, and he still maintains that he never knowingly used it."

Earlier this year, BBC host Jeremy Paxman told the Leveson Inquiry that Morgan once described how hacking works during a lunch event.



READ MORE: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/hugh-grant-uk-tv-documentary-395005


Email: Georg.Szalai@thr.com
Twitter: @georgszalai


Friday, October 19, 2012

Hugh Grant Scores Apology From Rupert Murdoch Over Tweet Claiming He Abandoned "Love Child" by Gina Serpe (E!)



Has the World stopped spinning? Oh wait, yes it has.

Well, that would go some way towards explaining why Rupert Murdoch, of all people, deigned to (brace yourselves) make a public apology to the tabloid-scorned Hugh Grant.

But not, as it happens, for the gross invasion of privacy that was the tabloid phone-hacking scandal.


Nope. Instead, the conservative News Corp. media mogul took to Twitter this week and offered up an apology on a far more personal matter: namely, Hugh's parenting skills.

"Hugh Grant states that he is deeply involved in his daughter's life—I accept that, regret tweet on the matter. Apologies to both parents," the 81-year-old wrote yesterday.

The uncharacteristic about-face came just a day after he first called out the British rom-com vet in an offense-causing tweet that came courtesy of an exchange with another Twitter user earlier this week.

READ MORE:http://www.eonline.com/news/355559/hugh-grant-scores-apology-from-rupert-murdoch-over-tweet-claiming-he-abandoned-love-child 

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Hugh Grant Sues News Corp. Over Phone Hacking by Tabloid By Erik Larson - Sep 14, 2012 10:26 AM ET (BLOOMBERG)



Hugh Grant, the British actor who told a media-ethics inquiry the press had become “toxic” in its pursuit of celebrity gossip, sued News Corp. (NWSA)’s U.K. unit over claims its News of the World tabloid hacked his phone.

The lawsuit was filed yesterday in London, his lawyer Mark Thomson said in an e-mail. Grant, 52, joins Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, and 34 other victims who lodged claims yesterday, racing to beat the deadline for the civil suit which won’t begin before May 1.


Grant, who starred in the comedy “Notting Hill,” told the inquiry in November that phone hacking was probably used by other publishers. He said he’d suffered numerous media intrusions, such as a break-in at his apartment in 1995 and tabloids running stories about private medical treatments.

The now-defunct tabloid targeted some of the best-known celebrities, including U.S. actors Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie and England soccer player Wayne Rooney, prosecutors said in July. Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive officer of News Corp.’s U.K. publisher, and seven others were charged with conspiring between 2000 and 2006 to hack the phone messages of more than 600 people.


READ MORE: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-14/hugh-grant-sues-news-corp-over-phone-hacking-by-u-k-tabloid.html




Sunday, August 26, 2012

Hugh Grant to sue News Corporation over hacking SARAH MORRISON (THE INDEPENDENT)



The actor and campaigner Hugh Grant is to join the lengthening list of celebrities in suing News Corporation for phone hacking, and has pledged to give any damages he is awarded to helping fellow victims. The 51-year-old is believed to feature in police evidence suggesting the unlawful interception of communications, and has instructed solicitors to submit a claim within days.

Grant confirmed yesterday that he is to sue, and has earmarked any award for helping the cause of lower-profile victims of press intrusion. Grant told The Independent on Sunday: "If I am successful in my legal action, then I hope that the court makes the billionaire owner of a multibillion-pound corporation write the cheque directly to Hacked Off, and helps empower them to ensure we have a free and responsible press in the future. Then Mr Murdoch can return to his favourite pastime of staring at photos of naked princes.

READ MORE: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/press/hugh-grant-to-sue-news-corporation-over-hacking-8081426.html

Monday, July 16, 2012

Hugh Grant: Hugh and cry over press freedom in Hungary Posted JUL 16 2012 by THE BUDAPEST TIMES in CEE, NEWS (SOFIA GLOBE)



The Hungarian government has sent an information pack to British actor Hugh Grant, who recently cited Hungary as an example of the dangers of state control of the media.

“We have already posted the necessary information, and unless Hugh Grant has any further questions we consider the matter closed,” the government’s international communications chief, Ferenc Kumin, said on Monday.

This came the day after newspaper Vasárnap Reggel reported that the government had put together a package for the actor but was unsure of where to send it. A spokesman for the Socialist party issued a sarcastic statement with the address of a New York PR firm representing Grant.

For the full story, please visit The Budapest Times

(Photo: Tine Hemeryck)

http://sofiaglobe.com/2012/07/16/hugh-and-cry-over-press-freedom-in-hungary/#!prettyPhoto/0/

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Hugh Grant takes the fight to Brussels (IRISH TIMES)



AFTER HIS magnetic if surreal performances on Question Time, Newsnight and at the Leveson inquiry, Hugh Grant will reprise his role as a media ethics crusader in Brussels next week at a forum on media pluralism, called Wider? World? Web?

Grant, who has argued in favour of tougher sanctions for media organisations that break industry codes of conduct, will take part in a panel discussing media ownership at the forum on June 27th.

Perhaps deterred by Grant’s movie-star charm, News International has declined an organisers’ offer to put forward a representative to debate from the same platform, although it has indicated that it will be present at it.

The event will “definitely not be ‘yet another conference on the media’,” according to organisers from Belgium’s University of Leuven, Gray’s Inn in London and Italy’s Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom.


READ MORE: http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2012/0621/1224318352817.html


Wednesday, April 18, 2012

High Grant: Criminal charges considered over newspaper phone hacking in UK By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com (WORLD NEWS)





Actor Hugh Grant took a starring role in a London courtroom when he testified at a public hearing about alleged phone hacking by British tabloids. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.


Criminal charges against journalists and a police officer are being considered by British prosecutors after an investigation into alleged phone hacking by reporters at tabloid newspapers, it was reported Wednesday.

The Crown Prosecution Service said police had handed it files on four cases, which include allegations that a reporter paid a police officer for information and that another attempted to pervert the course of justice, BBC News reported.

The cases also include allegations of misconduct in a public office, witness intimidation and harassment.


READ MORE:  http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/18/11261969-criminal-charges-considered-over-newspaper-phone-hacking-in-uk?lite


Tuesday, March 27, 2012

HUGH GRANT WANTS TO REGULATE TWITTER



Is Hugh Grant going to run for office?  He's jumping into a lot of regulation talk here - regulate Twitter?  Pace yourself, guy.  You haven't seen anything yet.  Wait until your daughter becomes a teenager - you'll be tearing your hair out.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=h_6ZZVaiWT0#!



Friday, March 16, 2012

Hugh Grant: 'I love getting into a taxi and saying House of Lords instead of Soho – again' (GUARDIAN)

Decca Aitkenhead guardian.co.uk


Hugh Grant with a model of the character he voices in his latest film, The Pirates! In An Adventure With Scientists. Photograph: William Selden for the Guardia



In his latest role, he's taken on the tabloids – 'a vicious and vindictive industry'. But soon Hugh Grant will be back on familiar ground, giving voice to a big, barrel-chested pirate. In a rare interview, he tells Decca Aitkenhead about standing up for what is right, fatherhood and the genius of Aardman.

The Hugh Grant I meet in a west London restaurant could barely look less relaxed if I'd found him in the dock at the Old Bailey. The mischievously witty actor we know from our screens is nowhere to be seen; in his place is a sober and strained-looking man who actually shudders as we greet.

"Well, I'm very unrelaxed doing a newspaper interview. I think it's only the third British newspaper interview I've done to promote a film in 16 years. But I want to be nice to the Guardian, because I think they've been brilliant." He looks excruciatingly uncomfortable. "Yes, that would be correct," he concurs. How horrible is this for him? "Well, I really hate giving newspaper interviews. I don't want people to be able to say, 'Oh look, he's using this hacking issue to get attention for himself.' It just sticks in my craw if it's about me." Is this as bad as he'd feared? "Yes. It is."

I confess I'm nervous, too, unsure how to interview the star of a campaign against press intrusion without trespassing on the very privacy he's been so persuasively defending. Ever since Grant became the poster boy of the Hacked Off campaign against press criminality and corruption, the tabloids have been poisonous, hounding the mother of his newborn child and accusing him of lying to the Leveson inquiry.




READ MORE:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/mar/16/hugh-grant-hacking-pirates-film?newsfeed=true



Thursday, March 8, 2012

Hugh Grant prefers politics to acting (UK SCREEN)



Posted by: Husam Asi on 2012-03-08

As I wait for Huge Grant in a room in Las Vegas’s Treasure Island Hotel, I hear a commotion in the outside hall. Stepping out of the room to investigate, I see a bemused Huge Grant surrounded by a crowd of excited middle-age women, who have apparently stormed out of their breast cancer conference when they glimpsed him passing by.

Remarkably, the star of Bridget Jones Diaries, who’s known of his disdain of the culture of celebrity, poses cheerfully for photographs with his swooning fans as his face is showered by their flashing cameras. Grant has been making bold headlines recently, not for starring in movies, but for his relentless campaign against the British tabloids and becoming the unofficial spokesman for the universal outrage directed at them.

After a decades-long combative, and sometimes litigious, relationship with the tabloid press, Grant turned the table against them by discreetly recording incriminating admissions by former journalist, Paul McMullen, which he penned in an article for The New Statesman last April. Titled “The Bugger, Bugged”, the article exposed long-standing ethical violations, including phone hacking, committed by the News of the World and other media outlets, allegedly with the knowledge of politicians and even the police.

“All the phone hacking stuff has been swept under the carpet because everyone’s been too frightened either politically or in terms of their personal reputation to confront the power of those tabloid beasts,” he says.


Read further:  http://www.ukscreen.com/article.htm?article_id=40924



Sunday, January 1, 2012

Media Blog Awards of 2011 - Here are The Media Blog's very unofficial end of year awards...

Dec 31, 2011

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Hugh Grant's Privacy Crusade Reaches Parliament



Read more: http://www.eonline.com/news/hugh_grants_privacy_crusade_reaches/278666#ixzz1fn7kvZE5
BBC
Hugh Grant may be right: Just because he's paranoid, that doesn't mean he isn't being watched.

A day after a government investigator testified that Grant and then-girlfriend Elizabeth Hurley were specifically targeted by News of the World back in 2003, the actor spoke before Parliament about the latest round of information-gathering tactics employed by scoop-seeking paparazzi.

"Do you really think this is a way for grown men to be behaving?" is what Grant said he told a photographer who was following Tinglan Hong, the mother of his infant daughter.

Hong has since obtained an injunction forbidding photographers from snapping her or her child on the street outside their London home.

Grant on the panel in the House of Commons today were Steve Coogan, former motocross honcho Max Mosley and parliament member Zac Goldsmith.

In acknowledging that he has no problem giving interviews to promote his films, Grant noted that it didn't mean the press should be automatically privy to his private life, as well.

"If I sell someone milk for 50p, you wouldn't expect anybody to come and say, 'You slut, now you've got to give me milk for free, for ever,'" the Notting Hill star said.

Grant, who since the News of the World hacking scandal broke has become a de facto spokesman for victims of Britain's tabloid culture, said that the media's "hubris is incredible" if they think that they are responsible for turning people like him into celebrities.

Successful films have nothing to do with an actor's private life, and vice versa, Grant says.  "Tom Hanks is a good man, a lovely family man who does lots of charity work, an all-round good egg," he noted. "But some of his films flop."

And as far as his biggest public debacle—his 1995 arrest for lewd conduct in L.A. after soliciting the services of prostitute Divine Brown—goes, Grant does not fault the media for covering the scandal.

"That was on the public record, I've no argument with that," the actor said. "It's not my beef."

E ONLINERead more: http://www.eonline.com/news/hugh_grants_privacy_crusade_reaches/278666#ixzz1fn7Et8T6

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

It's Not Just the Tabloid Press That's on Trial


It was, in its moving and sometimes funny way, as English as roast beef. First, the suburban couple whose dead daughter's hacked phone messages triggered this inquiry, as modest and dignified as grieving human beings can be. And later, the performance of his life from an actor world famous for his English understatement, but who had decided that understatement was no longer enough.

There was nothing funny, of course, about the Dowlers' testimony to the Leveson Inquiry on Monday, the first time they had spoken publicly about the events that made them think their dead daughter was alive. Sally Dowler didn't, she told the court, sleep for three nights after hearing that her daughter's phone had been hacked. "You replay everything in your mind," she said. She was thinking back, she said, to those moments when she'd thought "something untoward is going on".

"Something untoward" was certainly going on, something that meant she could suddenly hear her daughter's voice on her voicemail, and that someone could print a photograph of a walk that no one except she, her husband, and the police knew about, a walk retracing their daughter's last steps. The photograph, she said, made her "really cross", and so did the fact that whenever she went out of her front door, she "had to be on guard".

But when she met the chairman of the media company whose employees had made her life even more of a hell than it had been before, she wanted to be fair. Rupert Murdoch was, she told the court, "very sincere". She and her husband were, she said, "ordinary people", with "no experience in such a public life situation".

"We tried," she said, and it's hard to hear the words without wanting to cry, "to be as balanced as we could."

You couldn't really describe Hugh John Mungo Grant, as we learnt he's called, as an "ordinary" person. You couldn't really say that he has "no experience" in "a public life situation." If he ever thought that playing a bumbling bachelor in films that turned out to be unexpectedly popular would mean a few staged interviews and photoshoots, and a private life that was free as a bird, he soon learnt he was wrong. You don't, in fact, get all that much more public than having the police mugshot taken of you when you were found performing "a lewd act" in a car with a prostitute splashed on the front pages of papers around the world.

Grant, to be fair, which lots of people don't seem to want to be, including Piers Morgan, who tweeted on Monday that he hoped Nelson Mandela was watching the inquiry, "so he could understand what real persecution is all about," seemed to take the whole thing in his stride. He kept his appointment on an American chat show, which was booked a few days later, and told Jay Leno, with the honesty that seems to have become his trademark, "I think you know in life what's a good thing to do and what's a bad thing, and I did a bad thing. And there," he said, "you have it." And when he was invited, on the Larry King show, to come up with some kind of explanation for his behaviour, he wouldn't. "I don't," he said, "have excuses."

On Monday, 16 years after the arrest that made him even more famous, he said it again. "I was arrested," he said, "it was on public record. I totally expected there to be tons of press, a press storm. That happened," he said, "and I have no quarrel with it." What he did have a quarrel with, he went on to say, was the fact that his flat was burgled, and nothing in it stolen, just before a full description of its décor appeared in a tabloid newspaper, and the fact that medical symptoms, reported during a trip to Accident & Emergency, appeared in a tabloid newspaper, and the fact that when a girlfriend was mugged, and they called the police, it was the photographers who came round first.

And the fact that when an ex-girlfriend went into hospital to have his baby, which no one knew about except her parents, who didn't speak English, and his cousin, who he says wouldn't have told anyone, he didn't dare visit his own first child "because of the danger of a leak" bringing a "press storm down." Which, when he couldn't resist "a quick visit," which you can kind of understand, is exactly what happened. Since then, the mother of his child, who never sought the life of a "celebrity," and isn't his partner, and probably didn't plan to have his child, has been unable to leave her home without being chased. Her life, she says, has become "unbearable."

Newspapers, he said, claimed that "celebrities" deserved to have their sex lives exposed because they were trading on false images. "I wasn't aware," he said, "that I was trading on my good name. I've never had a good name. I'm the man who was arrested with a prostitute." He didn't want, he said, to see "the end of popular print journalism," but there was "a section of our press" that had been allowed to become "toxic."

Yes, there is a section of our press that has become "toxic," but this isn't just about the press. When people rush out to buy newspapers that plaster the secrets of people's sex lives, and medical records, and interior décor, and unannounced pregnancies, and private walks in their dead daughter's last steps, where do they think they come from? Do they think the "celebrities" involved are just so thrilled to be "celebrities" that they can't resist phoning tabloid hacks to spill more beans? Do they think it's done on a nice cup of tea and a handshake? Blame the hacks if you like, but what about the "sources," in hospitals, and police stations, and clinics, and hotels, and restaurants, who see any whiff of a "celebrity" life as a fast track to a fast buck?

There is a system for ensuring that people's phones aren't hacked. It's called the law. If the police who were meant to be upholding it had acted on the evidence they had, then quite a lot of this horrible, ugly, shameful exploitation of what ought to have been private grief, and, in Grant's case, private joy, wouldn't have happened. But it wouldn't change a culture that makes "celebrity" a god, and one to be envied, and destroyed.

If Hugh Grant is a King Canute, trying to fend off the lapping tides of an ocean that threatens to drown us, an ocean where every single aspect of the life of anyone you've heard of is public property, then good for him. He's big enough to look after himself, but he isn't, I believe, just thinking of himself. He's thinking of the people who are suddenly thrust into the limelight, and tossed to the lions, or wolves. He's thinking, in fact, in what you might say was quite a plucky English way, of the underdog.

The Leveson Inquiry is about much, much more than the press. It's about what Grant appealed to, and the Dowlers embodied: "Our British sense of decency." It's also about what we used to call fair play.
Follow Christina Patterson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/queenchristina_