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Is Private Eye Magazine Leaning To The Right Or Left

Is the UK media right wing?

The UK media is pretty much in the centre. Some of the papers are slightly to the right of centre some slightly to the left.The BBC seems to be having an identity crisis at the minute. It used to be very biased towards Labour in the days of Tony Blair. It certainly is biased against the Tories which would suggest a left wing bias, but it appears to hate Corbyn.It still keeps wheeling out Tony Blair and his cronies. Pseudo Liberals perhaps?At the fringes are the Communist Morning Star and the Socialist Worker, a looney left weekly paper.If there are any extreme right wing papers I’ve never come across them.

What is the best thing about someone born under the cancer sign?

Positive Traits: kind, loving, emotional, intuitive, imaginative, shrewd, cautious, protective and sympathetic.

Negative Traits: changeable, moody, over-emotional, touchy, untidy, clinging, unable to "let go," and a tendency to wallow in self-pity.

Likes: hobbies, romance, children, parties, home and country.

Dislikes: failure, opposition, aggravating situations, being told what to do and being given advice...whether good or bad.

Natives of Cancer are probably most in tune with those governed by Pisces, since Pisces is prone to moods just like Cancer, but of a less volatile nature. This is a couple who will find peace and harmony throughout the majority of their relationship.

Scorpio, another Sign ruled by the element of Water, would also be favorable since Scorpio is equal to the moods of Cancer and capable of great understanding. Cancer finds the Scorpio depth of character intriguing and will certainly appreciate the rich view of life inherent in the Scorpio nature, to say nothing of the awareness and perception associated with that Sign. This is a couple who will likely provide everything either has ever wanted in a relationship. The physical chemistry here is quite amazing...it is long-lasting and only gets better with the passage of time.

What are the various biases exhibited among the major UK newspapers?

Let me quote from that amazing series from the 80's, Yes Minister:Hacker[The Minister]: Don't tell me about the press. I know exactly who reads the papers: the Daily Mirror is read by people who think they run the country; The Guardian is read by people who think they ought to run the country; The Times is read by people who actually do run the country; the Daily Mail is read by the wives of the people who run the country; the Financial Times is read by people who own the country; The Morning Star is read by people who think the country ought to be run by another country; and The Daily Telegraph is read by people who think it is.Sir Humphrey[A Civil Servant]: Prime Minister, what about the people who read The Sun?Bernard[Minister's Secretary]: Sun readers don't care who runs the country, as long as she's got big tits.

What is the most unbiased newspaper available in the United Kingdom?

I’m always surprised when this question is put, as - to be frank - it implies the questioner knows very little about the nature of newspapers.Newspapers are commercial ventures which make their money from carrying advertising, even the Financial Times, cited below in another response. Some newspapers, of course, exist by subscription, but then it more or less follows that if you choose to subscribe to a certain publication, you do so because you share its bias. So there’s your first dead end.No newspaper will build up much of a circulation if all it carries is advertising (and it charges money to carry that advertising). So the news and features it carries are intended to attract readers. The more readers it can attract, the higher its circulation. And the higher its circulation, the more it can charge for carrying advertising: look, it can tell potential advertisers, we sell more than our rival and are read more than our rival so if you advertise with us, your ads will be seen by more people. So much for the theory.In practice, of course, it is really not that straightforward. And the respondent below is right that a paper such as the Financial Times can be regarded as less biased than say (here in Britain) the Guardian or the Telegraph, each of which, like other newspapers, is inclined to pander to the views of its readers in the hope its readers will continue to buy it rather than a rival paper.The FT (and the Economist) I would suggest are special cases in that their perceived lack of bias is as much a selling point as the bias of other papers. Both are read by the movers and shakers and, pertinently, advertisers know that they are read by such, so placing an ad for a high-powered big cheese of some kind is likely to attract a more suitable applicant than placing the ad in, say, the Daily Mail or the Sun.But I have to say there is no simple answer to this question, and what I have written is intended to get the questioner and other readers to think a little more about the nature of journalism, its commercial aspects and to draw their own conclusions. One thing I might add, in all seriousness, is this: when it comes to the newspaper industry you can never be too cynical.

Can anyone tell me dirty jokes ?

i have one , but not that good , whats the difference between a woman and a car , you have to open the car to ride it , but you have to ride the woman to open her . do you have any ... plz tell :)

Is ABC liberal or conservative?

With the exception of Fox News, all non-I-net news sources are liberal (some much more then others).

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