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Mar 24, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN3
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phil shared and referred to murdoch, as a great friend. and this was a friendship that was not all that old by october 1864, it was not even a year old. friendship between james murdoch and phil sheridan began in november of 1863, when the actor journey to tennessee to find the body of his son who had been killed in the fighting around chat knew that the. the so is that connection the pressure that murdoch was placing on read, reed just finally decided i'm going to write the poem about sheridan. and he did. the went murdoch recited this poem for the first time, the last day of october at pikes opera house, the crowd just went wild. what is amazing to me is that there are indeed accounts of individuals who had attended that gathering that evening. they were so struck, or taken by this performance, that they wrote letters and they wrote in their journals, you don't think about what is the last time you went to a performance and were so moved and struck by it that you went home and you wrote in your diary. are you sent someone and email. but
phil shared and referred to murdoch, as a great friend. and this was a friendship that was not all that old by october 1864, it was not even a year old. friendship between james murdoch and phil sheridan began in november of 1863, when the actor journey to tennessee to find the body of his son who had been killed in the fighting around chat knew that the. the so is that connection the pressure that murdoch was placing on read, reed just finally decided i'm going to write the poem about...
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Mar 20, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
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neil isn't the only rupert murdoch protege at g.b. news its c.e.o. is a former boss of sky news australia and one of the channel's presenters is down once executive editor at murdoch some news paper. on a drive time presenter on his talk radio station the g.b. news doesn't actually have anything to do with rupert murdoch himself and rather than being outdone by those protege murdoch plans to compete with them he's launching something similar from his news u.k. stable a streaming service evenings only it is being set up overseas by rupert murdoch who created for night it states its chief executive is david rhodes who is a former fox vice president but i think it's going to be less political than. now of g.b. news we know that it's much newsier i think much racier going to thrive on opinion which is a new departure for british television i mean not to sound like a crutch to the old marxist but you can tell a lot about an organization by who's funding them so so far cheeping news has managed to attract about 60000000 pounds in investment and a significa
neil isn't the only rupert murdoch protege at g.b. news its c.e.o. is a former boss of sky news australia and one of the channel's presenters is down once executive editor at murdoch some news paper. on a drive time presenter on his talk radio station the g.b. news doesn't actually have anything to do with rupert murdoch himself and rather than being outdone by those protege murdoch plans to compete with them he's launching something similar from his news u.k. stable a streaming service...
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Mar 20, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN3
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murdoch could recite it. each line picturing the fiery gallop of the fiery sheridan when the audience more and more until it could no longer contain itself. and burst into rapturous applause murdoch recalled of this reception the reaction he knew that people loved him. the people liked him that people adored him and they were there to to praise him and congratulate him. but i don't think he could have ever imagined that this poem would be received in such dramatic fashion. and murdock recalled of this moment where you know, he's just uttering the final words of the poem sheridan's ride. and the crowds just going wild. cheering for him cheering for sheridan cheering for union victory. and he wrote simply murdoch did the sound of my voice. uttering the last word had not died away. when cheer after cheer went up from the great concourse that shook the building to its very foundation in a days after murdoch's performance the poem was published in newspapers. across the north and it became not only a celebrated wo
murdoch could recite it. each line picturing the fiery gallop of the fiery sheridan when the audience more and more until it could no longer contain itself. and burst into rapturous applause murdoch recalled of this reception the reaction he knew that people loved him. the people liked him that people adored him and they were there to to praise him and congratulate him. but i don't think he could have ever imagined that this poem would be received in such dramatic fashion. and murdock recalled...
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Mar 5, 2021
03/21
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CNNW
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there is another murdoch, james murdoch. he is disgusted by the rupert murdochs of the world.take over. but so far there is no sign of that. this channel is moving further and further to the right, so much so that i had one fox employee tell me, we're going so far to the right we're going to fall over. >> brian stelter, thank you so much. great to see you. >>> i do want to get back now to the fallout from the capitol riots. minute ago we told you how some of these suspects are melting down in an effort to stay behind bars. these riot dfrts, areva, i wonder what you think in the complaints and how they view their actions on january 6. >> what we saw them do was exercise their privilege. they believe they were entitled to storm the capitol, to break windows, to break doors, to take weapons into the capitol, to go into nancy pelosi's office, put their feet up on the desk, to destroy property, to even deaf ca indicate -- deficate in our nation's capitol. the nerve that one person said they were detained for one month and that was unfair to him. we know the differences in terms of
there is another murdoch, james murdoch. he is disgusted by the rupert murdochs of the world.take over. but so far there is no sign of that. this channel is moving further and further to the right, so much so that i had one fox employee tell me, we're going so far to the right we're going to fall over. >> brian stelter, thank you so much. great to see you. >>> i do want to get back now to the fallout from the capitol riots. minute ago we told you how some of these suspects are...
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Mar 3, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
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one cannot ignore the murdoch and news corp rupert murdoch's media empire has long been headquartered in new york but his news outlets remain even more influential in the land of his birth than they are in the u.s. or the u.k. murdoch's sky news astray and the country's only national daily the australian helped get prime minister scott morrison into office morrison would like to stay there which may explain why the law has been passed and why some of the fine print reads the way it does we have one of the most concentrated media markets in the world and governments know that if they fall foul of nice call they could face very serious political consequences so i think government is interested in making sure nice corporate remain happy and this is a proposal that they support and that has proven people in the government seeking to action this in one but made up is very important. you know he was one of the 1st advocates for this kind of reform you know. skating thinking about news content but it's worth noting that the actual idea from his card from the big competition and on society ha
one cannot ignore the murdoch and news corp rupert murdoch's media empire has long been headquartered in new york but his news outlets remain even more influential in the land of his birth than they are in the u.s. or the u.k. murdoch's sky news astray and the country's only national daily the australian helped get prime minister scott morrison into office morrison would like to stay there which may explain why the law has been passed and why some of the fine print reads the way it does we have...
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Mar 7, 2021
03/21
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CNNW
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but like i said, the murdochs usually lay low. however, they do occasionally speak to wall street analysts trying to impress investors, that's how eyebrows were raised. he said msnbc was the biggest beneficiary of the trump years. and then he said that's what fox is going to be in the biden years. >> loyal opposition, right? they're calling out the president when a -- when he needed to be called out. that's what, well, our job is now with the biden administration. and you'll see hour ratings, you know, really improve from here and will do so for at least the next four years. >> he's trying to tell investors, don't worry about our weak ratings. we're coming back. the audience is coming back. on one level he's stating the obvious, admitting fox is anti-democrat, saying they are awakening and calling out president biden. what about the news anchors that fox always tauts. remember the slow gal fair and balanced going back decades? of course, fox is cutting back on actual news coverage, reducing its reporter ranks and tripling down on
but like i said, the murdochs usually lay low. however, they do occasionally speak to wall street analysts trying to impress investors, that's how eyebrows were raised. he said msnbc was the biggest beneficiary of the trump years. and then he said that's what fox is going to be in the biden years. >> loyal opposition, right? they're calling out the president when a -- when he needed to be called out. that's what, well, our job is now with the biden administration. and you'll see hour...
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Mar 20, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN3
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the days after murdoch's performance, the poem was published in newspapers across the north. not only the celebrated word, something to stir patriotic emotions of individuals in the north, but it became a political tool for the republican party to garner votes for lincoln among undecided voters. and so without explanation on the day of the election, the new york tribune published the entire poem on the front page. and this was done to serve as a reminder to folks to remind them of the success sheridan enjoyed. everything that happens in the autumn of 1864 prior to the election has the election moving over it. publishing that poem is a very clear, stark reminder of union success. it is a stark reminder that this might not have happened had president lincoln not given the final approval to ulysses s grant to appoint him the commander of the army in shenandoah, but he did. we are going to restore the union, crush the confederacy, and if you are undecided, you need to vote for lincoln. so the importance of this poem is it gives power to sheridan. >> learn more about sheridan's ri
the days after murdoch's performance, the poem was published in newspapers across the north. not only the celebrated word, something to stir patriotic emotions of individuals in the north, but it became a political tool for the republican party to garner votes for lincoln among undecided voters. and so without explanation on the day of the election, the new york tribune published the entire poem on the front page. and this was done to serve as a reminder to folks to remind them of the success...
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Mar 2, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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murdoch's news corp.k both threatened to withdraw| their business entirely, rather than breach what they said . was their business model and the open internet, i google eventually came - to the table and struck some one—on—one deals with my company, with news corpl and seven our arrival. and facebook was playing i footsie with the companies. it was negotiating all - the time, up to the minute, where it said, "no, we're going to pull out of australia." - as of this morning, i still can post on my facebook page i and each news links- was up, so facebook... i come back to the government and said, "if you make some i minor changes to this code which is basically more - mediation time then we will restore news pages." - and so that is the - situation at play now. i should just trust that under this code, if the tech - companies don't negotiate - their own deals with the media companies it would go to arbitration. - so the tech companies will be forced to it notjust pay sums| of money, the actual. sum would be
murdoch's news corp.k both threatened to withdraw| their business entirely, rather than breach what they said . was their business model and the open internet, i google eventually came - to the table and struck some one—on—one deals with my company, with news corpl and seven our arrival. and facebook was playing i footsie with the companies. it was negotiating all - the time, up to the minute, where it said, "no, we're going to pull out of australia." - as of this morning, i still...
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Mar 30, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN
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eye 78
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at the time i was working for murdoch who was not very well known in australia. and i was, my job at the time was to, was copy desk for t foreign page. something would come up on the ticker on vietnam so i would rip it off and take it over to the desk. i'd also select between the different ones. . and then i had a bit of a leaning towards upi. at that time. but our draftees went out, some of them were under a rain of paint bombs. i couldn't understand really what the world was about -- the war was about. both my parents were academics. and down near the process of post world war ii decolonization was a very alive thing. we were very conscious of india, going its own way. malaya. the fighting in the 1950's, which ended, resulted with mal ayan independence as well as the cultural push against the communists. the alarmic thing of someone who had fought on the ground with the british in world war ii, then leading the communist against the british. so, those paradoxes were very apparent. then indonesia got its independence. and all this sort of paradox of what the col
at the time i was working for murdoch who was not very well known in australia. and i was, my job at the time was to, was copy desk for t foreign page. something would come up on the ticker on vietnam so i would rip it off and take it over to the desk. i'd also select between the different ones. . and then i had a bit of a leaning towards upi. at that time. but our draftees went out, some of them were under a rain of paint bombs. i couldn't understand really what the world was about -- the war...
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and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games life from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you much to city and queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production arm is completely different. you know crystal palace had cheerleaders. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast would start 5 minutes before it got only after the final whistle. now on sky they were dealing with 5 hours of programming on super sunday as they called it and i think a lot of what we see on television today tactics boards and powells of analysts ex players in suits discussing things and. that's all really from so pay t.v. took over in 1902 by the congress follow that example and the 900 consequences things cats have far more money their matches were shown and thailand and brazil they recurse their stadiums and above all. the new era
and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games life from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you much to city and queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production arm is completely different. you know crystal palace had cheerleaders....
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rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games life from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 dollars deal. it's monday only on sky sports. you need to imagine the city of queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace and surely you can use. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast 5 minutes before it got me only after final whistle. now on sky they were dealing with 5 hours of programming on super sunday and they think a lot of what we see on television today tactics or is it an owl's of analysts where is and discussing things and. that's all really from there so pay t.v. took over in 1902 other countries follow that example in the ninety's the consequences fitness clubs had far more money to match a threshold and tile and brazil a refurbished or stadiums and above all. the new era began with the arrival of eric cantona in 92. arsenal signed dennis bergkamp in 95 from inter milan for over 1100
rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games life from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 dollars deal. it's monday only on sky sports. you need to imagine the city of queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace and surely you can use. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast 5 minutes before it...
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media landscapes in the world with a very large share of their publishers being owned by rupert murdoch's company and news corps and that's just not the case in germany i mean we already have several big players here signing on very excited about about the cooperation so while watching spring and seeing what they do will be interesting it's unlikely to turn into the same kind about it we saw in australia christine help us understand this complicated relationship between news organizations on the one side and tech companies on the other side yeah sure so you can imagine before the internet before we had platforms like facebook publishing and news and reporting with it was funded a large part by advertisement in in magazines and newspapers and in print now these companies have really struggled with the transition online largely because a lot of the advertising revenue has gone to platforms like facebook who is making money from clicks from sponsored posts so they're really looking for a new funding model on how how do we how do we fund news how do we fund publications so these this new this
media landscapes in the world with a very large share of their publishers being owned by rupert murdoch's company and news corps and that's just not the case in germany i mean we already have several big players here signing on very excited about about the cooperation so while watching spring and seeing what they do will be interesting it's unlikely to turn into the same kind about it we saw in australia christine help us understand this complicated relationship between news organizations on...
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Mar 20, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 44
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in the days after murdoch's performance, the poem was published in newspapers across the north. it became not only a celebrated work, something to stir the patriotic emotions of individuals in the north, but it became a political tool. for, the republican party to garner votes for lincoln, among undecided voters. without explanation of the day of the election, the new york tribune published the entire poem on the front page. this was done to serve as a reminder to voters to remind them of the success that sheridan enjoyed. as we talked about on our session monday, everything that happens in 1864 prior to the election has the election looming over it. publishing that poem is a very clear start reminder of union success to the valley. >> start. --stark. had lincoln not given permission for sheridan to be the commander, but he did. we are winning that and we are going to restore the union. we will crush the confederacy. if you are undecided, you need to vote for lincoln. the importance of this poem, it transcends the power it gives to sheridan's legacy. >> learn more about sheridan
in the days after murdoch's performance, the poem was published in newspapers across the north. it became not only a celebrated work, something to stir the patriotic emotions of individuals in the north, but it became a political tool. for, the republican party to garner votes for lincoln, among undecided voters. without explanation of the day of the election, the new york tribune published the entire poem on the front page. this was done to serve as a reminder to voters to remind them of the...
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Mar 12, 2021
03/21
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CNNW
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the murdochs. this is different.grubhub perks give you deals on all the food that makes you boogie. told you. (upbeat music) get the food you love with perks from- - [crowd] grubhub. keeping your oysters business growing - grub what you love. has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ hey limu! [ squawks ] how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... oh, sorry... [ laughter ] woops! [ laughter ] good evening! meow! nope. oh... what? i'm an emu! ah ha ha. no, buddy! buddy, it's a filter! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ it's an important time to save. with priceline, you can get up to 60% off amazing hotels. and when you get a big deal... you feel like a big d
the murdochs. this is different.grubhub perks give you deals on all the food that makes you boogie. told you. (upbeat music) get the food you love with perks from- - [crowd] grubhub. keeping your oysters business growing - grub what you love. has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo...
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Mar 26, 2021
03/21
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CNNW
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the murdochs now being targeted for their profits in this dominion lawsuit.erhaps trump is safe at mar-a-lago, but the murdochs have to be very worried about these developments. >> elie honig, brian stelter, thank you both for coming on with this breaking news. >>> cnn's coverage continues next. ♪ ♪ we made usaa insurance for veterans like martin. when a hailstorm hit, he needed his insurance to get it done right, right away. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa are your hr processes weighing down your employees? uon to quarterly projections! we're made for. expense report! if you're using multiple systems, re-entering data over and over time sheet! using email and spreadsheets to manage information and approvals, then your hr systems are a drag on productive time. with paycom, employees enter and manage their own hr data in a single, easy-to-use software. visit paycom dot com and schedule your demo today. do they know this door is locked if you have... ...moderate to severe psoriasis, ... ...little things... ...can become your big moment. that's w
the murdochs now being targeted for their profits in this dominion lawsuit.erhaps trump is safe at mar-a-lago, but the murdochs have to be very worried about these developments. >> elie honig, brian stelter, thank you both for coming on with this breaking news. >>> cnn's coverage continues next. ♪ ♪ we made usaa insurance for veterans like martin. when a hailstorm hit, he needed his insurance to get it done right, right away. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. usaa...
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Mar 30, 2021
03/21
by
CSPAN
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eye 69
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at the time i was working for murdoch who was not very well known in australia. and i was, my job at the time was to, was copy desk for t foreign page. something would come up on the ticker on vietnam so i would rip it off and take it over to the desk. i'd also select between the different ones. . and then i had a bit of a leaning towards upi. at that time. but our draftees went out, some of them were under a rain of paint bombs. i couldn't understand really what the world was about -- the war was about. both my parents were academics. and down near the process of post world war ii decolonization was a very alive thing. we were very conscious of india, going its own way. malaya. the fighting in the 1950's, which ended, resulted with mal ayan independence as well as the cultural push against the communists. the alarmic thing of someone who had fought on the ground with the british in world war ii, then leading the communist against the british. so, those paradoxes were very apparent. then indonesia got its independence. and all this sort of paradox of what the col
at the time i was working for murdoch who was not very well known in australia. and i was, my job at the time was to, was copy desk for t foreign page. something would come up on the ticker on vietnam so i would rip it off and take it over to the desk. i'd also select between the different ones. . and then i had a bit of a leaning towards upi. at that time. but our draftees went out, some of them were under a rain of paint bombs. i couldn't understand really what the world was about -- the war...
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Mar 12, 2021
03/21
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CNBC
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so watch, adt, and now to some big time buys, by the way, ps, was his 90th birthday, yep, rupert murdochworth of news corp. stock. that stock has been rallying nearly every day he's buying into strength, not weakness news corp up 30% this year murdoch buying 12 million this week, and that's the third biggest buy. stock 2, a 13 1/2 million dollars buy by a board member of wayfair, this board member owns a tono of shares a bullish move and that's not even the most the most insider buying this week is a $15.3 million buy at pipeline firm enterprise products partners. epd. board member randall williams buying nearly 678,000 shares, and get this, and this sounds good, williams receives $300 million per quarter as a dividend into the family trust this is the reinvestment of their dividend money wow, must be nice. there's your top five insider buys this week some big names, big dollar amounts. dominion, adt, news corp, wayfair, and enterprise products, some of the biggest numbers and the biggest names that we have seen. and why should you pay attention to all of this you don't have to but an eq
so watch, adt, and now to some big time buys, by the way, ps, was his 90th birthday, yep, rupert murdochworth of news corp. stock. that stock has been rallying nearly every day he's buying into strength, not weakness news corp up 30% this year murdoch buying 12 million this week, and that's the third biggest buy. stock 2, a 13 1/2 million dollars buy by a board member of wayfair, this board member owns a tono of shares a bullish move and that's not even the most the most insider buying this...
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43
Mar 28, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
tv
eye 43
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suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived a surprise visit to his pupils. you know with all the usual good. wasn't. it this. reductive. i'm at the end of the rough and tough you look are you doing. your middle. finger to do a little of voice their way through well you really. think you sort of. go for the right. much feel a little bit. less up a. little. it's understandable that he's reluctant to speak with farnaz the u.s. has accused him of killing torture and gross violations of human rights in chechnya they have frozen his assets and banned him from america. good for millions of fans across russia the politics potent and some entrepreneurs are cashing in. lenient a 35 year old businessman has made his fortune in m.m.a. in the fall or martial arts. business is more interesting for me before fights i do little different try to many different business look at churches sales by kids in sports. and your sister. and her aunt. but they don't have. the truth so i think it's big but then. 9 years ago he launched a street fighting competition that's now held all o
suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived a surprise visit to his pupils. you know with all the usual good. wasn't. it this. reductive. i'm at the end of the rough and tough you look are you doing. your middle. finger to do a little of voice their way through well you really. think you sort of. go for the right. much feel a little bit. less up a. little. it's understandable that he's reluctant to speak with farnaz the u.s. has accused him of killing torture and gross...
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Mar 30, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
tv
eye 39
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suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. mostly you know with well that's the usual good you have a job. wasn't moving into the earth i'm not sure. if this. was up to the bush with all. that on the agenda roughened up the look are you against your doing . your middle. finger to the above world out will avoid their way to the brink oh. but then what you said instead of they're. going. to look they're gonna go for it but i. feel a. bit. left out of a. little. it's understandable that he's reluctant to speak with farnaz the u.s. has accused him of killing torture and gross violations of human rights in chechnya they've frozen his assets and banned him from america. good for millions of fans across russia the politics on team portent and some entrepreneurs are cashing in. lenient a 35 year old businessman has made his fortune in m.m.a. i'm a follower of. jesus more interesting for me before for it's i do live a different try to many different business churches. in sports. new horse to. her and more to. the truth i think it's bec
suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. mostly you know with well that's the usual good you have a job. wasn't moving into the earth i'm not sure. if this. was up to the bush with all. that on the agenda roughened up the look are you against your doing . your middle. finger to the above world out will avoid their way to the brink oh. but then what you said instead of they're. going. to look they're gonna go for it but i. feel a. bit. left...
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Mar 26, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 32
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suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. more than you know with all the usual good. wasn't even into the words i'm not sure if this if we both reductive which we don't. know i'm out there all just rushing into the library against you doing. your little well you know who above was out we'll avoid them way too well you bring. them here you settle for they're. going. to look they're going to go for you don't really know much to look for. a. little. it's understandable that he's reluctant to speak with farnaz the u.s. has accused him of killing torture and gross violations of human rights in chechnya they have frozen his assets and banned him from america. good for millions of fans across russia the politics to important and some entrepreneurs are cashing in. a 35 year old businessman has made his food. shooting in m.m.a. in the fall or martial arts. for business is more interesting for me before fights i do little different try to many different business look at churches. in sports. new york i try to rent. but don't have. the
suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. more than you know with all the usual good. wasn't even into the words i'm not sure if this if we both reductive which we don't. know i'm out there all just rushing into the library against you doing. your little well you know who above was out we'll avoid them way too well you bring. them here you settle for they're. going. to look they're going to go for you don't really know much to look for. a....
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Mar 29, 2021
03/21
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ALJAZ
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suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. more mosquito with a. good of a job. wasn't moving into the earth i'm not sure if this. should all. be on the agenda and the look are you against you doing. your little. thing that has the above world out will avoid their way through well you really know who you are but then when you settle for. going. public they're going to go for it but i. feel a. bit. left out of a. little. it's understandable that he's reluctant to speak with farnaz the u.s. has accused him of killing torture and gross violations of human rights in chechnya they've frozen his assets and banned him from america. good for millions of fans across russia the politics. and some entrepreneurs are cashing in. on a 35 year old businessman has made his fortune in m.m.a. . far. more interesting for me before for it's i do. try to many different business. in. 9 years ago he launched a street fighting competition that's now held all over russia in parking lots or on vacant land he brings amateur fighters together free of cha
suddenly the whole room goes quiet this murdoch has arrived with a surprise visit to his pupils. more mosquito with a. good of a job. wasn't moving into the earth i'm not sure if this. should all. be on the agenda and the look are you against you doing. your little. thing that has the above world out will avoid their way through well you really know who you are but then when you settle for. going. public they're going to go for it but i. feel a. bit. left out of a. little. it's understandable...
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Mar 10, 2021
03/21
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CNNW
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morgan always seem to land on their feet, finding a new job thanks to powerful friends like rupert murdochew network in the uk. alisyn, i know you would never walk off a set the way piers morgan did. >> even when john upsets me in the morning. i mean, john and i host a breakfast show, as it's called in britain, and yes, it can be stressful. but can you imagine waltzing off the set? what would i have to do to make you waltz off the set? >>well we'll find out over the two hours. i have three things to say about this. number one, imagine a television anchor trying to make the story more about him or her. >> appalling. >> that never happens. that never happens. the second thing is, i think you know how i feel about the existence of the royal family in general, right? >> yeah. >> but why are yregulators looking -- what's the problem -- this speaks to the problem with the whole british system. the monarchy is one part of it, but why investigate for a television anchor expressing his opinion? they don't have the same free speech laws that we have in the united states. i find what he said reprehen
morgan always seem to land on their feet, finding a new job thanks to powerful friends like rupert murdochew network in the uk. alisyn, i know you would never walk off a set the way piers morgan did. >> even when john upsets me in the morning. i mean, john and i host a breakfast show, as it's called in britain, and yes, it can be stressful. but can you imagine waltzing off the set? what would i have to do to make you waltz off the set? >>well we'll find out over the two hours. i...
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trauma survivors and those who struggle with posttraumatic stress are actually kids that are special murdoch which . he is a support. how did you guys you know she is number 3 ok. so usually. oh yeah he would tell me with his wake. and you is right and you can confuse this is that you really were drunk man when i was so drunk i was trying to sober him up you would usually usually crack open a beer on the way on the way home from work and when you get to where you wherever you live if you are going to matter if you just start drinking and then a lot of times we have to take a cab or one of the guys you have a trip there and we would all drive out of there there's a lot of testosterone of bars and was allowed there was a lot of fish fights. and they would just throw wads of cash but it felt good it's not like they were receiving anything fact that are all these things and find her trapped if you know there is nothing that they have to swaddle cash and he just wanted to throw it usually only 4 or 5 girls in the bar and most of the. 50 or 60 people everybody was trying to get the same girl thank
trauma survivors and those who struggle with posttraumatic stress are actually kids that are special murdoch which . he is a support. how did you guys you know she is number 3 ok. so usually. oh yeah he would tell me with his wake. and you is right and you can confuse this is that you really were drunk man when i was so drunk i was trying to sober him up you would usually usually crack open a beer on the way on the way home from work and when you get to where you wherever you live if you are...
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Mar 16, 2021
03/21
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KQED
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. >> facebook has reached a deal with wilbert murdoch's news corps in australia to help fund its journalismaw that makes tech platforms pay for news. here is our correspondent in sydney. >> this is a big deal for a number of reasons. the fact that these are two empires signing off on a deal where news corps, which frankly controls a huge chunk of the media market in australia, now has come to an agreement with facebook, is quite significant. we don't know the number, but we can hazard a guess it will be a significant amount. news corps control about 70% of the newspaper circulation, sky news australia, news corps.com, and all of that is shared widely on facebook. that is quite significant. it is significant because of the context of it. the ongoing fallout that has happened ever since australia said it was even proposing this legislation. katty: scientists in iceland are bracing themselves for a volcanic eruption after they recorded tens of thousands of earthquakes in two weeks. this amount of activity can be an indication and eruption is imminent. those scientists are unable to confirm whe
. >> facebook has reached a deal with wilbert murdoch's news corps in australia to help fund its journalismaw that makes tech platforms pay for news. here is our correspondent in sydney. >> this is a big deal for a number of reasons. the fact that these are two empires signing off on a deal where news corps, which frankly controls a huge chunk of the media market in australia, now has come to an agreement with facebook, is quite significant. we don't know the number, but we can...
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and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch sky one the rights to broadcast premier league games lie from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you much the city of queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace and surely it was. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast would start 5 minutes before it got to me only after final whistle. now on sky they were dealing with warm 5 hours of programming on super sunday as they called it and i think a lot of what we see on television today tactics boards and holes of analog. queries and discussing beings and. that's all really different so pay t.v. took over in 1902 other countries follow that example in the ninety's the consequences fitness clubs had far more money their matches were shown in thailand and brazil. the stadiums and above all. the new era began wit
and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch sky one the rights to broadcast premier league games lie from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you much the city of queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace and surely it was....
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murdoch is a planetary science research and she's taken part in international missions like the insight to mission to mars she's also been a consultant for planetary resources. one of the challenges if i interacted with asteroids is that the gravity is not necessarily constant across the surface so what that means is there might be some regions of the asteroid where you're lighter and how the regions where you would be heavier on some asteroids there's even the possibility that iran and the equator because they're spinning very fast the centrifugal force actually balanced. the gravity. we have evidence that the surface material is moving across the surfaces of these bodies there avalanches on these bodies. are going to need to understand how a spacecraft will interact with the surface so here at the very superior we've taken an existing drop terror that was used for a crash test and we've rigged it up with this system of pulleys and counterweights and you have a box and you let it fall inside that box we can have small amounts of gravity to take projectile and we let it go and we're goi
murdoch is a planetary science research and she's taken part in international missions like the insight to mission to mars she's also been a consultant for planetary resources. one of the challenges if i interacted with asteroids is that the gravity is not necessarily constant across the surface so what that means is there might be some regions of the asteroid where you're lighter and how the regions where you would be heavier on some asteroids there's even the possibility that iran and the...
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facebook has reached a deal with rupert murdoch's news corp to license news in australia the agreement comes 3 weeks after the australian government passed laws that require digital giants to help cover the cost of journalism displayed on their platforms and used deal follows a similar agreement with google last month. chinese tech stocks have fallen off the regulators find a dozen companies over what they called monopole istic practices tense and shared $60000000000.00 in market value while alibaba signaled may have to sell off some assets under the crackdown. and the e.u. has launched a legal action against the u.k. over an alleged breach of the northern ireland protocol it's a major part of the brics a deal which aims to avoid a hard border between northern ireland and the republic of ireland. talent state owned power utility wants to promote renewable energy with floating solar plants currently renewables account for about 15 percent of the kingdom's electricity makes by 2036 this share is expected to more than double. floating solar parks each one the size of 10 soccer fields and
facebook has reached a deal with rupert murdoch's news corp to license news in australia the agreement comes 3 weeks after the australian government passed laws that require digital giants to help cover the cost of journalism displayed on their platforms and used deal follows a similar agreement with google last month. chinese tech stocks have fallen off the regulators find a dozen companies over what they called monopole istic practices tense and shared $60000000000.00 in market value while...
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murdoch is a planetary science research and she's taken part in international missions like the insight to mission to mars she's also been a consultant for planetary resources. one of the challenges of interacting with asteroids is that the gravity is not necessarily constant across the surface so what that means is there might be some regions of the asteroid where you're lighter and how the regions where you would be heavier on some asteroids there's even the possibility that iran and the equator because they're spinning very fast the centrifugal force actually balances. the gravity. we have evidence that the surface material is moving across the surface of these bodies there are avalanches on these bodies. we're going to need to understand how a spacecraft will interact with the surface so here at the very superior we've taken an existing drop terry that was used for a crash test and we've rigged it up with this system of pulleys and counterweights and you have a box and you let it fall inside that box we can have small amounts of gravity to take a projectile and we let it go and we'r
murdoch is a planetary science research and she's taken part in international missions like the insight to mission to mars she's also been a consultant for planetary resources. one of the challenges of interacting with asteroids is that the gravity is not necessarily constant across the surface so what that means is there might be some regions of the asteroid where you're lighter and how the regions where you would be heavier on some asteroids there's even the possibility that iran and the...
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and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games live from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you imagine a city in queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace had cheerleaders. previously a football game on t.v. . you know the broadcast would start 5 minutes before god and immediately after the final whistle. now on sky they were dealing with 5 hours of programming on super sunday as they called it and i think a lot of what we see on television today tactics boards and howls of analysts x where is and suits discussing things and. that's all really from so pay t.v. took over in 1902 by the congress follow that example in the ninety's the consequences biggest cuts had far more money their matches were shown in thailand and brazil they recurse their stadiums and above al
and australian media mogul saw a chance to make english football a global brand rupert murdoch's sky won the rights to broadcast premier league games live from 1902 by closing a 5 year 300000000 pounds deal. it's monday only on sky sports. good evening to you imagine a city in queens park rangers tonight marking the start of a whole new era suddenly it was a whole different as they said a whole new ball game. the production values completely different. you know crystal palace had cheerleaders....
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Mar 14, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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for well over an hour, in huge detail about his old career, the real reason he fell out with rupert murdochreal reason he left the bbc and loads more. it's a very long and interesting conversation and it will be available for the media show, subscribers to the media show podcast, so if you look on bbc sounds you can find the long interview. jane, you were nodding your head vigorously throughout much of that, why? i've heard some of it before, i have to say. the argument that this is purely about economics, it's about choice, it's about the "left behind", i don't think he called them the left them behind, but the current media — he normally says if you've got channel 4 on the left, why can't we have gb news on the right? what's wrong with that argument? well, i think it's a very reductive argument, and it was really interesting that he said there was no market for fox news. but to answer your point, i think it's because actually channel 4, you know, are still bound by a level of impartiality. so is gb news. they will be, but as you say, the output will all be about news presenters, it'll be
for well over an hour, in huge detail about his old career, the real reason he fell out with rupert murdochreal reason he left the bbc and loads more. it's a very long and interesting conversation and it will be available for the media show, subscribers to the media show podcast, so if you look on bbc sounds you can find the long interview. jane, you were nodding your head vigorously throughout much of that, why? i've heard some of it before, i have to say. the argument that this is purely...
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Mar 16, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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facebook has reached a deal with rupert murdoch�*s news corp in australia to help fund itsjournalism two empires, basically, signing off on a deal where news core, which controls frankly a huge trunk of the media market here in australia has now come to an agreement with facebook. it�*s quite significant. we don�*t know the number, but we can hazard a guess that it�*s going to be a significant amount, news corp controls about 70% of newspaper circulation here. they own sky news australia, and all of that is shared by the on facebook. if they�*re getting paid for that, that is quite significant. of course it�*s significant. of course it�*s significant because of the context of it. the ongoing fallout that has happened ever since australia said it was even proposing this legislation... scientists in iceland are bracing themselves for a volcanic eruption after the island recorded tens of thousands of earthquakes in two weeks. this amount of activity could be an indication that an eruption is imminent, though scientists are unable to confirm when exactly it might happen. our europe corre
facebook has reached a deal with rupert murdoch�*s news corp in australia to help fund itsjournalism two empires, basically, signing off on a deal where news core, which controls frankly a huge trunk of the media market here in australia has now come to an agreement with facebook. it�*s quite significant. we don�*t know the number, but we can hazard a guess that it�*s going to be a significant amount, news corp controls about 70% of newspaper circulation here. they own sky news...
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Mar 18, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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since 2015, rebekah brooks has been the boss of the sun's publisher, rupert murdoch's news uk, and wasof phone hacking. page nine of her first written witness statement to the enquiry, dated 2011, said of private investigators, "the industry cracked down on the use of investigators until, i believe, their use is now virtually extinct". we're going to look at privacy and harassment law... - four years after leveson in 2016, meghan markle was working as an actor in the legal drama, suits. shortly after meghan�*s relationship with prince harry was revealed, a private investigator based in california, now retired, was paid by the sun to get detailed personal information about her and her family. he believes some of what he then did was unlawful. in accessing a particular one—stop database as a licensed private investigator, and giving a false statement about what he was using the data for, danno hanks breached federal law. pretty much anything i have found out, they could find out themselves, using legal means, with the exception of the social security numbers. when you have that informati
since 2015, rebekah brooks has been the boss of the sun's publisher, rupert murdoch's news uk, and wasof phone hacking. page nine of her first written witness statement to the enquiry, dated 2011, said of private investigators, "the industry cracked down on the use of investigators until, i believe, their use is now virtually extinct". we're going to look at privacy and harassment law... - four years after leveson in 2016, meghan markle was working as an actor in the legal drama,...
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Mar 26, 2021
03/21
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CSPAN3
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jason murdoch in 1999 saw this program and he had a great time and followed us. every time and every moment that we have an opportunity to be in front of people, we can either help people or hurt people. sometimes it's the language that we use when we talk about the story, how gauge and facilitate this brave space. at this point in time now, i'm an advocate and i'm doing some work now on the types of things we need to be considering. how do we take museums and historic sites and our interpretations and programs, experiences, exhibits, how do we shift that and more fit into something that will help people cope with whatever it is that they have going on? let's be clear. it's february 9th right now. within the last year, every single person in this country has endured this traumatic circumstance of the covid-19 or circumstances like george floyd and many others. we are dealing with that and. our kids are dealing with it. we've got to really come to a point of understanding, how do we not make them worse? how do we try to position our resources and the things that w
jason murdoch in 1999 saw this program and he had a great time and followed us. every time and every moment that we have an opportunity to be in front of people, we can either help people or hurt people. sometimes it's the language that we use when we talk about the story, how gauge and facilitate this brave space. at this point in time now, i'm an advocate and i'm doing some work now on the types of things we need to be considering. how do we take museums and historic sites and our...
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Mar 14, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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i think ever since rupert murdoch arrived here the gloves were off in terms of how the tabloids treatere was a measure of respect and he just threw that away and said we willjust go for every lowdown bit of gossip we can find. that altered the name of the game. but the royals have to have a relationship with the press. some sort of trading does go on all the time, "you can have this picture, we will give you that, if you leave us alone here," but, you know, celebrity is what royalty is. i think for harry and meghan, the story might be different and they may find in five or ten years�* time nobody is much interested in them any longer. if they are no longer plugged into the royals they become like the poor old duke and duchess of windsor, retired in paris, not quite enough money, very bitter and miserable and absolutely not in the public eye. they may not like that either. mark, that reference of the duke of windsor, who was briefly the king but insisted on marrying an american divorcee and had to give up the crown and went into effectively exile. i mean, that was all 70 years ago. one
i think ever since rupert murdoch arrived here the gloves were off in terms of how the tabloids treatere was a measure of respect and he just threw that away and said we willjust go for every lowdown bit of gossip we can find. that altered the name of the game. but the royals have to have a relationship with the press. some sort of trading does go on all the time, "you can have this picture, we will give you that, if you leave us alone here," but, you know, celebrity is what royalty...
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Mar 16, 2021
03/21
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BBCNEWS
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companies, this is the tech and social media giant facebook making a deal to pay news corp, the report murdochontract, but news corp holds or controls almost 70% of the newspaper circulation here in the country, owning the likes of the australian, the daily telegraph, sky news australia, so they have a huge chunk of the market, so even though we don't have the exact numbers, it is going to be a significant amount. there are other reasons why it is big, because it comes off the back of that huge fallout that happened when facebook blocked news here in australia last month, because of the dispute about the legislation that now passed through parliament, the news media bargaining code, which forces tech giants like facebook and google to pay for news content on their platforms. at the time, facebook was against it. they spoke against it time and again. they made threats and came good on that threat. but because of that backlash, they went back on that, restored news in australia and agreed to come into negotiations with media companies and we are seeing the first big one now. just briefly, news c
companies, this is the tech and social media giant facebook making a deal to pay news corp, the report murdochontract, but news corp holds or controls almost 70% of the newspaper circulation here in the country, owning the likes of the australian, the daily telegraph, sky news australia, so they have a huge chunk of the market, so even though we don't have the exact numbers, it is going to be a significant amount. there are other reasons why it is big, because it comes off the back of that huge...