In 1968,
Australian Rupert
Murdoch bought The News of the World
newspaper in the U.K., and followed that up in 1969 with the purchase of The Sun. In 1981, he acquired The Times and the Sunday Times. His media holdings in the United States now include
Fox News, The Wall Street Journal,
the New York Post, and many others.
British
journalism (and eventually American journalism) would never be the same.
Murdoch embraced new technology, moved operations from Fleet Street, raised the
ire of the unions, threw himself (and his newspapers) fully behind Margaret
Thatcher and later Tony Blair. The content of the newspapers he acquired
changed as well. While the Murdoch newspapers didn’t turn tabloid journalism
into an art form, they soon were treading where many newspapers had feared to
tread. The journalism establishment was initially outraged; within a few short
years, it would be forced to follow Murdoch’s lead.
In the
play Ink,
British playwright James Graham
focuses on the pivotal acquisition of The
Sun in 1969, not so much on how it happened but more on the assembling of a
staff, the first Murdoch edition of Nov. 17, 1969, and how with a year The Sun was catching up to its bigger
competitors. And the play is less about Murdoch and more about Larry Lamb
(1929-2000), the editor Murdoch lured to The
Sun and who in many ways “out-Murdoched” Murdoch.
This isn’t
a play with a build toward a fever-pitch climax. Instead, Ink is a narrative, almost like a snapshot of what happened at The Sun in the early Murdoch years, and
the determination that Murdoch and the editors had to overtake The Mirror, then the most widely read
newspaper in Britain.
James Graham |
Graham,
born in 1982, has written more than 20 plays, and recently had both Ink and Labour of Love
being staged at the same time in London. He has gained a reputation for being
one of the best of Britain’s playwrights writing about politics. He’s also
written for television and worked as an actor.
Today, we’re
watching enormous upheavals going on in the media world, brought by technology,
the internet, social media, dramatically changing economics, and politics. Some
of the seeds of these upheavals can be found in what Rupert Murdoch did in 1969.
Ink provides a way to help understand
what happened.
Related:
Writing
Rupert, Playing Murdoch, Making Ink – The
New York Times.
Top photograph: The first edition
of the Sun under Rupert Murdoch, Nov. 17, 1969.
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